Wednesday, June 8, 2022
AUDUSD, H4 | Potential Bullish Continuation
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S&P500, H4 | Potential Bullish Continuation
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Tuesday, June 7, 2022
CHFJPY: How high will it rise?
BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said that a weak Yen is beneficial for the Japanese economy if the moves are not too sharp. He stressed that moves in the currency market should reflect fundamentals and that central banks are carefully watching their impact. The Japanese economy is still recovering from the pandemic and facing downward pressure from rising commodity prices, he said, and therefore monetary tightening is not at all the right step. These dovish comments on Monday further weakened the Yen.
The comments came as the Yen was broadly selling off, fuelled by a spike in 10-year T-note yields to a 3-week high on Monday. The yield on the German 10-year bond also jumped to as low as 1.323. USDJPY hit a high on Monday, up +0.77%, posting fresh 2-decade highs. The central bank divergence is the main bearish factor for the Yen, as the Fed is in the middle of a rate hike cycle, the ECB is poised for a hike, and the RBA has just raised rates, while the BOJ is still chasing QE and keeping rates at record lows.
Technical Overview
CHFJPY – Another currency with negative interest rates which is often used as a hedge currency, as uncertainty over the world’s prospects spreads. The BOJ is at -0.10% and the SNB is at -0.75%, but the Yen is often in the spotlight compared to the Swiss franc. Switzerland with its calmer monetary policy is far from the spotlight, while the BOJ, with its ultra-easy policy, has often been in the media spotlight and has built a negative stigma on the Yen since the pandemic hit. The CHFJPY currency pair has soared, printing a 7-year high, gaining more than 25% from its May 2020 low. Confirmation of the long-term trend has been in place since the pair broke a multi-year high of 118.59 in April last year. The move to the upside has even surpassed the 61.8% FR retracement level of the 2015 peak draw and 2016 low. A move to the upside should test the 78.6% FR (140.00-140.50) level if the move continues north.
CHFJPY, H8In the intraday period this morning, Tuesday (07/06), the pair surpassed the resistance at 136.17. A move to the upside is projected for FE 61.8% at 139.01 (from pullback lows 117.52–136.17 and 127.49). As long as 127.49 holds as support, the outlook remains on the upside. The price returning below the 136.17 move will confuse the outlook and the bias will settle down for a while.
Click here to access our Economic Calendar
Ady Phangestu
Market Analyst – HF Educational Office – Indonesia
Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distribution.
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Global Inflation Pressures Build up as oil Braces for a Breakout of key Technical Level
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Market Spotlight: CADJPY Long Hits Target
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Gold Futures (GOLD1!), H1 Potential For Bullish Bounce
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Soybeans Futures ( ZS1! ), H1 Potential For Bearish Drop
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SILVER FUTURES (SILVER1!), H1 Potential For Bullish Momentum
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Daily Market Outlook, June 7, 2022
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Monday, June 6, 2022
ECB:How Big The July Rate Rise Will Be?
The focus is fully on the ECB meeting on Thursday and in particular President Lagarde’s press conference. Rate settings are expected to be held steady for now, and while there are some members who see the urgency to act sooner rather than later as inflation goes through the roof, the ECB’s timetable for the phasing out of stimulus effectively excludes a move on rates this week. Net asset purchases need to end first and Lagarde is expected to confirm that this will happen early in July, which would pave the way for a rate hike in July.
Lagarde has already mapped out two moves in July and September and the basic scenario is for “gradual” 25 bp steps, although the discussion on a bolder kick off with a 50 bp boost in July has already started. We suspect that Lagarde will stick with a focus on “gradualism” for now. But she will not rule out a 50 bp step as the need to maintain credibility and assert the Bank’s commitment to price stability and the 2% inflation target seem increasingly urgent.
Eurozone HICP inflation hit a new record high of 8.1% y/y in preliminary readings for May — a sharp jump from the 7.4% y/y reading in April and yet another upside surprise. The renewed overshoot will further undermine confidence in chief economist Lane and the forecasting ability of his staff. That may have partly prompted Lagarde’s move out of Lane’s shadow last week, and her apparent decision to override the chief economist’s caution on policy normalization and his renewed focus on the dampening impact of the rise in prices on consumption trends.
To be fair a large part of the current inflation picture is due to factors that lie outside of the control of the ECB and which won’t be changed by a hike in policy rates. Energy price inflation remains THE most important part — reaching 39.2% y/y in May and accounting for two percentage points of the annual rate. The Ukraine war, sanctions against Russia, and ongoing virus disruptions in China have meant ongoing and/or renewed supply chain disruptions and a sharp pick-up in imported inflation that is largely outside of the central bank’s remit.
Hence ,without decisive action the ECB now is at risk of losing control of the situation and letting inflation expectations go through the roof. Preventing second round effects has to be the order of the day. While wage growth has looked modest so far, this is a lagging indicator, and the start of warning strikes in Germany’s steel sector are a sign that the ECB may come to regret not moving earlier on rates. The IG Metall union is calling for pay increases of 8.2%, and employers are unlikely to get away with the one-off payment they have been offering thus far. The difference is crucial of course, as a one-off payment doesn’t lift wages permanently.
The markets meanwhile, also are looking ahead to the ECB meeting Thursday and the CPI report Friday, both seen bearish for fixed income. Trading was on the quiet side with few catalysts and with the Pentecost holiday in much of Europe. The 2-year rate is up 2.3 bps at 2.675%, with the wi 3-year and wi 10-year each 1.5 bps cheaper at 2.895% and 2.960%, respectively. European rates have pared earlier losses and are slightly richer, with the exception of the Gilt where the rate is up 2 bps at 2.172%, playing catch-up after the long Jubilee weekend. There are also jitters ahead of a no-confidence vote on PM Johnson. The Bund is now fractionally in the green at 1.266%, and Italy’s BTP is down 3.3 bps at 3.357%. Stocks are rallying with the S&P future and the NASDAQ up 1.0% and 1.37%, respectively, with the Dow 0.78% firmer. The FTSE is up 1.16% and the DAX is 1.0% higher.
EURUSD
So far the confirmation that the ECB is on course to hike rates has helped to put a floor under the Euro and put an end to talks of parity against the US Dollar – at least for now. EURUSD has settled around the 1.0630- 1.0786 mark, the past 2 weeks. Although the Ukraine war and the tensions with Russia will likely cap the upside for the single currency, especially as the risk that Russia will cut off gas supplies remains on the table and could see the Eurozone heading for a recession over the next year.
Against that background, this week’s round of data releases is unlikely to really change much, as the data are mostly backward looking. The calendar is virtually empty on Monday, with public holidays in parts of Europe likely to make for somewhat lower volumes, even if most markets are open.
Click here to access our Economic Calendar
Andria Pichidi
Market Analyst
Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
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SILVER1!, H4 Potential For Bullish Continuation
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Oat Futures ( ZO1! ), H1 Potential For Bullish Bounce
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USDCHF, H4 | Potential For Bearish Continuation
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Recession talk is a red herring – here’s what investors should focus on instead
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