Tuesday, September 13, 2022

US inflation data in the spotlight

The Dollar drifts since last week as investors awaited the August inflation data due to be released today from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Month-over-month change in consumer price measures Source: wsj.com

Eventhough, US CPI is the near-term focus, comments from the hawks Bullard and Waller suggest even signs of slowing in price pressures are not likely to alter their leanings toward another aggressive 75 bp boost next week. On the other hand, several other officials have noted concerns about over-tightening amid the long lags in policy effects. There, other data this week including retail sales, production, and manufacturing may support their views if the data are weaker than expected.

HFM economic calendar Source: https://www.hfm.com/sv/es/trading-tools/economic-calendar

As for the data, headline August CPI should dip -0.1%, along with a 0.4% increase in the core. Those would result in a slip in the headline 12-month rate to 8.0% y/y from 8.5% in July, with the core picking up to 6.1% y/y from 5.9% previously, and respective 40-year highs of 9.1% y/y and 6.5% y/y in March. For retail sales we are forecasting no change in either the headline or ex-auto metrics for August. Production should also be flat, while the Empire State and Philly Fed indexes should be in contractionary territory.

The previous month saw the largest reduction in the cost of transport due to the strong drop in oil. On the other hand, there was an increase of 1.1% for food and beverages now at 10.5% y/y (for August an increase of 1.6% is expected to leave it at 12.1%) and 0.5% in housing, household goods and medicine, now at 7.4%, 10.1% and 4.8% respectively. The change in consumer spending habits (which fell from 1.8% to 1.5% in the second quarter (2-3% pre-pandemic)) was focused on necessary expenses.

CPI United States July 2022 Source: datosmacro.expansion.com

In the meantime, the FED continues its strong commitment to reduce inflation, which has led to the continuous tightening of monetary policy with strong rises in interest rates, the last ones at 75 bp, and as Powell rightly mentions, “it will continue with a restrictive stance for some time” until the 2% target is reached.

In general, the expected data would signal that the Fed’s efforts have been successful in reducing inflation. However, despite the fact that it is very possible that it will decrease a little more in August, it is not known if it will continue since the decrease was not total, since there were also increases in some sectors and it is unlikely that the FOMC will loosen its monetary policy until reaching the target level (which is still far away), for which we could expect a third consecutive increase of 75 bp on the 21st of this month.

Rate Change History Source: Forbes.com

Technical analysis

USDIndex D1 – $108.23

The USDIndex has maintained a steady uptrend with small pullbacks and large bullish spurts following previous interest rate hikes (marked with red verticals). The price hit highs at 110.76, levels not seen since 2002, however it failed to hold the 110.00 level and has dropped to 107.77 today marking the lowest level this month. However, the Greenback remains strong.

With bearish divergence on the MACD and with the price history after the last rate hikes, the price is in retracement awaiting the FED decision, now at immediate support at 108.00 while testing the 20-day SMA at 108.62, followed by the 50-day SMA at 107.38. There is stronger support at the psychological level of 105.00.

On the flipside, if the bullishness continues, it should recover and maintain 110.00, followed by resistance at the 78.6% monthly Fibo at 110.54. A breakof it could open the doors to 112-114 teritorry.

USDIndex D1

Other assets:

  • US500 +1.06% – US100 +1.27% – US30 +0.72%
  • XAGUSD +5.12% – XAU/USD +0.43%
  • USOil +2.15% – UKOil +2.14%

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Aldo Zapien and Andria Pichidi

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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Investment Bank Outlook 13-09-2022

BNY MellonHousehold Debt Drags G10 Commodity FXOne of the most stable groups of positive holdings in iFlow this year has been the G10 commodity currency trio of CAD, NOK and AUD. From initial fears of global stagflation to more recent support from interest-rate hikes, those currencies have understandably been held on an absolute or relative-value basis as a defensive position against the supply headwinds facing other assets. However, momentum in flows has begun to wane.Positioning undoubtedly is playing a role, especially if on a marginal basis softer global growth will reduce marginal gains for commodities and its derivative asset classes. More importantly, in our view, is domestic factors coming to the fore. After several years of increases in real estate prices arising from demographic demand, as well as low real rates encouraging household leverage, the process is starting to reverse. Beside the obvious implications for FX positioning, how these currencies fare over coming quarters will hold many lessons for non-commodity economies in developed and emerging economies alike where housing and household leverage are similarly moving up the agenda.The chart below illustrates household debt-to-income ratios for Canada, Norway and Australia over the past two decades. The most striking aspect of the evolution of leverage is that there was no adjustment during the Global Financial Crisis. For comparison, the US and UK equivalents have declined by 35ppt and 25ppt, respectively, since the 2007 peak; the US is now barely above 100%, which would arguably not qualify as high household leverage at all, despite relatively robust levels of home ownership. There are many structural reasons behind the gains in these countries, a critical one being supply unable to catch up with demand – especially in regions with high demographic growth and household formation.Central banks often stress that demographics are out of their control, and don’t feature anyway in their monetary policy horizons which normally don’t exceed three years. However, demographic trends in these nations will likely impact potential growth and estimates of neutral rates. In this context, Australia and Canada should already have a demographic premium due to historical reliance on migration for population growth. Norway’s migration policies differ but there will also be pull effects from the rest of the European Union, whose citizens enjoy freedom of movement in Norway. Simply in a regional context, Norway’s population has increased by almost 15% since 2007; Germany's is only up 2.8%.Norges Bank recently produced a paper signalling real neutral rates between -0.5% and 0.5%. With an inflation target of 2%, neutral nominal rates should have fallen into the 1.5%-2.5% range. Even if we take 2.0% as the threshold, Norges Bank's base rates have only been above that for five months since the end of the GFC. Canada’s record is even starker: a base rate below 2% in the entire post-crisis environment until recently.

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Daily Market Outlook, September 13, 2022

Daily Market Outlook, September 13, 2022 Overnight Headlines US Benchmark CPI Set To Ease, Core Rate Poised For Increase Biden Seeks To Make Economy An Election Asset -- If Prices Ease Fed Set For Another 75-Basis-Point Rate Hike; Early Pivot Unlikely Chinese Premier Stresses Policy Implementation To Stabilize Econ Analysts Expect China MLF Rate To Remain Unchanged - Daily China Firms Face High Exchange Risk Hedging Costs, Paper Says Australian Consumer Confidence Rises For First Time In 10 Months Australia Household Spending Starts To Weaken On Inflation UK's Kwarteng Tells Treasury To Aim For 2.5% GDP Growth - FT US Dollar Steadies Tuesday As Eyes Turn To U.S. Inflation Data China Sets Stronger-Than-Expected Yuan Fix For Fourteenth Day Oil Swings After Three-Day Advance On Demand Concerns, Dollar Morgan Stanley Cuts Brent Oil Forecast By $12 To $98/BBL For Q3 Asian Equities Extended Global Rally Tuesday Into US CPI Report Goldman Cautious On European Assets Until Clear Signs Of Trough JPMorgan Says Soft Landing, Not Recession, Base Case For Markets Oracle Reports 18% Revenue Growth After Cerner Deal Closes Most Twitter Shareholders Vote In Favour Of Sale To Musk - RTRSThe Day Ahead Asian equities are up this morning as the ‘risk on’ rally continues. Reports of Ukrainian territory gains in the war with Russia appear to be helping to fuel the rally. US Secretary of State Blinken said that the negative Iranian response to an EU proposal on a nuclear deal made a near-term agreement unlikely. In the UK, reports suggest that a ‘fiscal statement’ by the new Chancellor of the Exchequer may be scheduled for Thursday or Friday next week. Data for the UK labour market showed that employment rose by a lower-than-expected 40k in the three months to July. Despite that, the unemployment rate fell to 3.6% from 3.8% previously. Meanwhile, annual average earnings growth ex bonuses picked up to 5.2% in the three months to July from 4.7%. Vacancies in the three months to August fell by 34,000, a possible early sign that labour market pressures are easing. Today’s August US CPI data will provide an important update on the inflation picture ahead of next Wednesday’s Federal Reserve policy meeting. Annual headline inflation is expected to drop for the second month in a row to 8.1% compared with 8.5% in July and June’s peak for the year of 9.1%. However, the slowing is expected to mostly reflect lower oil prices, while ‘core’ inflation is forecast to rise to 6.1% from 5.9% previously. Recent comments from Fed officials suggest ongoing concern that inflationary pressures may remain elevated and so seem likely to announce yet another sizeable interest rate rise next week. Today’s German ZEW survey will provide one of the first indications of Eurozone economic trends in September. Last month’s results saw a further fall in both current conditions and expectations readings, to their lowest for this year, with further declines expected this month. August UK inflation data are scheduled to be released early Wednesday. Look for a marginal fall in headline inflation to 10.0% from 10.1% in July, due to lower petrol prices. Core inflation, however, is forecast to edge up to 6.3% from 6.2%. The government’s announcement last week that it will freeze household energy bills for two years implies that the previously expected sharp rise in inflation during autumn will now not happen. However, the Bank of England in setting monetary policy will need to weigh that up against the risk that significant additional fiscal support may add to domestic inflationary pressures.FX Options Expiring 10am New York Cut EUR/USD: 0.9850 (431M), 0.9900 (323M), 0.9915 (242M), 1.0050 (1.4BN), 1.0100 (727M), 1.0125-35 (656M), 1.0170-80 (1.21BN), 1.0200 (373M) USD/JPY: 141.85 (210M), 142.00 (670M),142.50 (250M) GBP/USD: 1.1500 (647M), 1.2000 (335M) AUD/USD: 0.6855 (228M), 0.6900 (200M) USD/CAD: 1.3110 (207M) Technical & Trade ViewsEURUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.0250 EURUSD moves higher in LDN trade EUR/USD opens +0.76% as USD and JPY selling continued ahead of US CPI EUR/USD broke above key resistance levels, but failed to follow-through It traded to 1.0198 to 61.8 fibo at 1.0176 The pullback from the highs resulted in a close below those prints A pessimistic German IFO report took some of the shine off the EUR EUR/USD support at yesterday's 1.0060 low with bids ahead of that level More support is at 1.0018 and 1.0008 EUR/USD will likely consolidate ahead of key US CPI later today 20 Day VWAP bullish, 5 Day bullishGBPUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.19 Bid as the USD retreats – jobs data adds further support Steady in Asia after closing up 0.85%, as long USD positions unwind Positioning and USD flows dominated weak, recessionary UK data Sustained break of the 1.1570 10 day moving average was positive 1.1759 pivotal - close above bullish targeting 1.2053 upper VWAP band This would repeat the rising pattern seen in July and August 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullishUSDJPY Bias: Bullish above 139 USD/JPY inside day yesterday, today too pre – US CPI? USD/JPY inside day yesterday, 142.05-143.50 after 141.51-144.10 Monday Asia so far today 142.55-80, quiet ahead of US CPI tonight Expectations for US CPI to fall back to 8.1% from 8.5% previously US yields remain firm nonetheless on hawkish Fed expectations Treasury 2s to 3.586%, 10s up more to 3.377%, USD/JPY supportive Japanese importer, spec bids on dips, exporters up top, especially 143.00+ Despite Japanese jaw-boning, no indication of actual FX intervention That said, USD longs cautious, some position paring yesterday Option expiries in area today - 142.00 $670 mln, 142.35-65 total $501 mln Large option barriers still up at 145.00, specs sights still on test 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bearishAUDUSD Bias: Bearish below .70 Under pressure due to AUD selling on crosses AUD/USD drifting lower in Asia and is down 0.33% at 0.6865 AUD/JPY is down 0.50% and EUR/AUD is up 0.40% since the NY close Talk of a decent selling order at 0.6900 is encouraging longs to pare back It is testing 0.6865 and break targets 0.6808 AUD/USD weakness surprising as risk assets are generally buoyant in Asia The NAB business survey released earlier also was positive news Market is positioning for the US CPI to be released later today 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullishBTCUSD Bias: Bearish below 25.3K Bitcoin rebound rally might fizzle unless 23.3K breaks USD consolidating slightly higher before US CPI data ETH merge expected Thursday; may attract new investors But impact of the energy-saving move mostly priced in Below 21,227 VWAP band marks exit from bullish channel Through 25.3k will expose much more room till $30k psych barrier 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullish

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Market Update – September 13 – Cooler USD & Stocks Higher ahead of CPI

  • USDIndex – Slips (108.00 tested) for a 5th straight day, lifting EUR & GBP lift.  Fed Funds Futures back to 90% chance of 75 bp (third consecutive) hike. 10-yr Bond Auction was weak, only filled after it hit 3.33% (2.76% last time). “Higher for longer” mantra from Reuters Poll¹. has Inflation peaked ?
  • EUR – Trades at 1.0135 now from a test of 1.0200 yesterday.
  • JPY markets not convinced of BOJ intervention is imminent. Although Yen up today against others vs. USD still weak, touched 143.50 yesterday and holds 142.30 now.
  • GBP Traded over 1.1700 yesterday and holds 1.1723 now, following good jobs data. London remains muted (politics suspended) but open ahead of Queen’s funeral September 19 (Bank Holiday).
  • Stocks US stocks moved higher again as Dollar & Yields cooled (S&P500 +1.06% 4110) FUTS trade at 4121. Nasdaq best performer (APPL +3.85%, PTON +7.18%). Asian stock markets have rallied too, and European FUTS are higher pre-open.

  • USOil topped at $89.00 on Monday on more chatter of supply issues and possible easing of geopolitical tensions. Trades at $86.75 now. 20-day moving average sits at $89.00.
  • Gold – also rallied to $1735 and holds over $1720 now.
  • BTC – rallied higher too and holds at $22.3k.

Overnight & Today UK Jobs, (Wages beat & Unemployment rate fell back, but claimant count reversed sharply (+20.8k) German HICP (steady at 8.8%). To come German ZEW and US CPI.

Biggest FX Mover @ (06:30 GMT) AUDJPY (-0.51%) Signs the 6-week rally from 90.00, maybe colling.  Topped at 98.45 earlier back under 98.00 to 97.76 now. MAs aligning lower, MACD histogram & signal line positive but falling, RSI neutral 43.20, H1 ATR 0.174, Daily ATR 0.972.

 

https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/fed-set-another-75-basis-point-rate-hike-early-pivot-unlikely-2022-09-13/

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Stuart Cowell

Head 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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Monday, September 12, 2022

Upcoming IPOs in 2022: which companies are planning to list this year?

Rupert Hargreaves explains what an IPO is, how public and private companies differ, and picks out some of the more notable companies set to list on the stock exchange this year.

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Weekly Market Update – 12 September 2022

Dollar is in the spotlight this week as key inflation data could see the FED begin the early stages of a pivot.

Dollar

The Dollar begins the week on the back foot after its first weekly loss in a month against a basket of 6 other major currencies. Downside momentum can be attributed to investors seeing the recently easing signs of inflation, leading to an increased risk tolerance that has benefited other currencies as well as equities and commodities.

However, key data is in sight as August CPI numbers are due to be released this week, and if there is a significantly softer inflation print, the Dollar could continue to sell off as the market awaits the FED’s next move regarding interest rate decisions and any signs of how soon a dovish pivot could begin.

Technical Analysis (H4)

In terms of market structure, price moved correctively towards the 110.65 level in the form of an ascending channel which formed a reversal pattern of the minor trend. Since then, price has moved impulsively away from the high towards the 107.79 area where significant buy-side liquidity resides. Regarding the major trend, it will remain bullish until the key 104.00 level is breached by the bears.

Euro

The Euro kicks off the week on the front foot as dollar demand decreases significantly. Contributing factors are an increased risk sentiment in the market as well as the continued rhetoric coming from the ECB. Remarks over the weekend from Executive Board member Frank Elderson allude to the bank increasingly looking like it will follow the FED on their hawkish stance of hiking interest rates again in October, amid the risk of a recession as well as historically high energy prices, to bring inflation back to acceptable levels.

Technical Analysis (H4)

In terms of market structure, price moved correctively towards the 0.986 level in the form of a descending channel which formed a reversal pattern of the minor trend. Since then, price has moved impulsively away from the low towards the 1.019 area where significant sell-side liquidity resides. The trend will remain bearish until the key 1.037 level is breached by the bulls.

Pound

Sterling begins the week on solid ground on the back of increased dollar selling bias in the market and hit a two-week high after moving from a low last seen in 1985. Most of this momentum seen in the Pound is a direct result of the market already having priced in the possibility of a 75-basis point rate hike at the next FED meeting this month, and the effect that this has on the risk-on sentiment can be seen in relation to how other currencies as well as equities across the board have rallied.

However, the gains made by Sterling could be capped by an increasingly dampened outlook on the UK economy, with disappointing economic data being released earlier today coming in at 0.2% growth versus the 0.5% that was expected. Further upside potential will increasingly be linked to dollar dynamics as we get into a week where US inflation data is due.

Technical Analysis (H4)

In terms of market structure, price moved towards the 1.140 area in a corrective wave, forming a reversal pattern (falling wedge) of the minor trend. Since hitting the low, price has moved impulsively towards the 1.167 area and is now trading at a level where significant sell-side liquidity could enter the market. Regarding the major trend, price is still in a technical downtrend and this move could potentially represent a correction to form a new Lower-High in the trend until the bulls breach the 1.186 area impulsively.

Gold

Gold heads into the new week with investors keenly eyeing the August inflation data due to be released on Tuesday. Any significant move from the yellow metal will be intrinsically linked to how soft the inflation data is because that will affect the probability of a 75 versus a 50-basis point rate hike from the FED at their next meeting this month. A 75-basis point rate hike is likely to keep gold southbound, but a 50-basis point rate hike could be the catalyst for the beginning of a recovery and a sustained run back towards levels on the north side of current price.

Technical Analysis (H4)

In terms of market structure, current price action has printed out a rising wedge corrective pattern with the peak formation located at the $1 729 level. A significant break above this area could put bulls in charge of price to challenge the $1 741 area. Conversely, a failure to break above this corrective pattern would result in bears taking control of price and yielding a subsequent impulsive wave that could challenge the $ 1 681 area.

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Ofentse Waisi

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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Dollar sell-off may not be Over and here is why

Equities kickedoff the week with a rally and greenback dropped another 1% as investors tend toprice in a bearish CPI report. The dollar index briefly fell below 108 points,the lowest level in a month. The flight of investors from the dollar comes despitecontinuing appreciation of Treasury yields - the yield to maturity of two-yearbonds rose to a new yearly high on Friday (3.57%), which may indicate apositive reassessment of economic prospects outside the US which is alwaysdollar negative. In other words, the demand factor for the dollar as adefensive asset could change sign :The European currency is leading among major currencies in strengthening against the dollar, as ECB policymakers signal that markets may need to brace for more significant rate hikes, the next of which could occur as early as October. The head of the Bundesbank said in an interview over the weekend that if inflation remains unresponsive to the actions of the Central Bank, then the tightening will have to continue. However, the size of the increase will depend on incoming data, primarily on the dynamics of consumer prices. Nagel believes that EU inflation will peak at 10% by the end of the year.At the same time, Fed officials are also not easing up on hawkish rhetoric. A number of policymakers on Friday attempted to communicate a hawkish message that the easing of inflation in August would not be a reason to slow down the pace of rate hikes. Waller, for example, said that if unemployment stays below 5%, then the response to inflation could be more aggressive. The official stressed, therefore, the importance of the data on the labor market. Amid hawkish rhetoric, two-year bond yields set a new yearly high on Friday.Key for this week is the US inflation report due on Tuesday. The headline reading is expected to slow down to 8%, while core inflation, on the contrary, is expected to accelerate. In fact, this will be the most “favorable” combination for further aggressive rate hikes. Interest rate futures price in 75 basis point rate hike with a chance of 88%, so the bar to surprise the market with a hawkish decision should be high. A weak inflation report tomorrow could raise the chances of a 50bp outcome and a reduction of the expected interest rate differential between the US and the rest of the world may drive bigger dollar sell-off. Despite the rapid retreat of the dollar, the risks of a further move are skewed towards a downside. The key bearish goal may reside at the lower bound of the current bullish uptrend on the Dollar index (DXY):

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The MoneyWeek Podcast: The Butcher, the Brewer, the Baker and Merryn Somerset Webb

In this week’s MoneyWeek Podcast we join Merryn and guests at her Edinburgh Festival show at Panmure House, the last home of Adam Smith, where they discuss the relevance of Smith’s work to today’s politics and economics – taking in many a tangent along the way. Guests include John Stepek, formerly MoneyWeek’s executive editor; financial historian Edward Chancellor; comedian Simon Evans; and Alex Chartres, investment director at Ruffer.

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Market Spotlight: EURGBP Testing Key Resistance Level

EURGBP On Watch EURGBP is once again starting to look interesting following months of choppy, hard-to-trade price action. The market has rallied firmly off the June lows and is now testing major resistance at the .8719 level. This has been a key resistance level in the pair since early 2021 and a break here would be firmly bullish. Zooming out onto the weekly chart (easier to view given how choppy recent price action has been on the daily), we can see that price is carving out a large inverted head and shoulders pattern. With the retail market heavily short (roughly 85%), there is plenty of room for a breakout higher here.Keep an Eye OnGBP is weakening today following a set of poor data this morning, headlined by weaker-than-forecast monthly GDP. Later this week, we’ll receive the latest UK CPI reading which is forecast to remain unchanged at 10.1%. Given the broader backdrop, the release is likely lose-lose for GBP as an upside surprise will raise further growth concerns, weighing on GBP and a downside surprise will keep the focus on narrowing policy divergence between the ECB and the BOE, lifting the pair further.

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EURUSD: Week Ahead 12-16 September 2022

EURUSD on Friday was up +0.43% to close at 1.0035, slightly below the 26-day EMA. The pair rose to a 3-week high by posting 1.0113 (50.0%FR) on positive carry-over from Thursday, when the ECB raised its key refinancing rate by 75bp to 1.25%, with indications of further rate hikes.

The ECB’s hawkish comments at the weekend pushed German 10-year bond yields to 2-month highs and strengthened euro rate differentials. ECB Governing Council member Knot said Thursday’s 75 bps rate hike by the ECB was a strong and big signal, but more steps should be followed, while another colleague Kazimir said the ECB needs to continue with firm hikes to cope with very high price hikes. Muller warned that delaying a rate hike was riskier.

European gas prices continue their gradual, but protracted correction from historic record levels reached two weeks ago, as European energy ministers are considering new mechanisms to limit unreasonably high prices, or at least try to mitigate the negative impact of these prices on the larger economy.

Technical Analysis

EURUSD has not shown significant changes, after the interest rate hike by the ECB. The pair is still in the bear’s control. The intraday bias at the beginning of the week tends to be neutral. On the downside, the price movement will test the parity level again, before there is a significant change in regional economic sentiment. Below parity there are 2 intraday supports to consider at 0.9930 and a low of 0.9086. Consolidation trading is likely to continue in the price range 0.90861.0113, before any change. A move above 1.0113 could test the 61.8% level of 1.0368 and 0.9086 draws near the 1.0200 round-figure mark. However, the outlook will remain bearish as long as the resistance at 1.0368 remains intact.

A divergence bias is seen from the oscillation indicator, but requires confirmation of the descending trendline break first.

Related article :/513161/ 

 

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 distributed without our prior written permission.



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Daily Market Outlook, September 12, 2022

Daily Market Outlook, September 12, 2022 Overnight Headlines ECB Governors See Rising Risk Of Rate Hitting 2% To Curb Inflation More Clear ECB Steps Needed If Inflation Lingers, Nagel Says ECB’s Knot Urges More Hikes To Tackle ‘Big’ Inflation Risk ECB’s Centeno Urges Cautious Next Steps After Historic Rate Hike US Inflation Showed Signs Of Easing In Several Industries In August Biden To Hit China With Broader Curbs On U.S. Chip And Tool Exports BoJ Set To End Covid-Relief Scheme, But No Change To Loose Policy New Zealand Economists See Growth Slowing Through to 2024: NZIER Xi To Meet Russia's Putin In First Trip Outside China Since Covid Began Sweden Opposition Overtakes Premier’s Bloc In Election Tally Russian Defenses Crumble as Ukraine Retakes Key Territory Back Euro Jumps Amid Hawkish ECB Signals, Dollar Heavy Before U.S. CPI Oil Opens Week Lower As Traders Weigh Demand, US Price-Cap Plan Asia Stocks Rally, Dollar Restrained Before Inflation Test - China Closed Crash-Obsessed Traders Splurge On Options At Two-Decade HighThe Day Ahead Despite expectations of further outsized interest rate moves from some of the major central banks around the world, equities across the Asia-Pacific region are largely trading higher this morning. In Japan, sentiment is being supported by news that the country is planning to scrap a 50,000 people per day limit on the number of foreign arrivals by October, a sign that it is further relaxing its Covid restrictions. The hawkish messaging of most major central banks remained in place over the past week as officials signalled their continued commitment to act to lower inflation. That maintained general upward pressure on global government bond yields, with benchmark US 10year Treasury yields, for instance, rising back above 3.3%. The European Central Bank (ECB), which only started raising interest rates in July, increased them again last Thursday, this time by a record 75bp. With inflation remaining “far too high”, President Lagarde pledged to hike rates further in the next few meetings despite forecasting a marked economic slowdown next year. The possibility of another 75bp rise next month has not been ruled out. Similarly, remarks from US Federal Reserve Chair Powell also suggest that another 75bp increase is on the table at their meeting next week (20/21 September). Powell stated that “we need to act now forthrightly”. Meanwhile, on the domestic front, markets continued to see a strong possibility of a 75bp hike from the Bank of England at its next meeting, which has been pushed back from this Thursday to the 22nd of September – a day after the Fed meeting. A busy UK data slate this week is likely to provide key inputs into the MPC’s decision. Earlier this morning, the latest monthly GDP report for July showed a smaller-than-expected rise of 0.2% m/m, with weakness in industrial (-0.3% m/m) and construction (-0.8% m/m) activity tempering the impact of a strong rebound in services activity (0.4% vs -0.5% in June). As a guide, if the level of economic activity was unchanged in August and September, GDP growth in Q3 would be flat, versus the Bank of England’s forecast of a 0.4% rise. The rest of the day is void of any major data with comments from two ECB officials (Guindos and Schnabel) providing the focus for markets. Following the ECB’s decision to hike by 75bp at its meeting last week, the market will be watching for clues that the Governing Council will be following up with a similar move at its next meeting in October. Early tomorrow morning at 7am, a tight UK labour market is expected to be reaffirmed in the latest release, supporting further policy tightening. There were some tentative signs of softening in last month’s report, including falling (but still high) levels of unfilled vacancies. Despite expecting some softening in employment growth, markets expect the unemployment rate to fall to 3.6% in the three months to July due to rising inactivity and regular pay growth (excluding bonuses) to accelerate to 5.0%. Later in the week, UK inflation and retail sales reports for August are due.CFTC Data USD long grows despite EUR bid sub – parity; GBP, JPY sellers out in force USD net spec long rose in Aug 31-Sep 6 period, $IDX +1.38% EUR specs +11,327 contracts on dip to 2022 low, now short 36,349 JPY specs -16,658 amid $JPY +2.88%, now long 58,189 contracts GBP$ -1.15% in period, specs -21,262 contracts now short 50,432 AUD specs buy tiny on dip, CAD specs -6,629 contracts now +17,910 BTC +1.38% in period specs +26 contracts long increased to 1,322 Source: Reuters DataFX Options Expiring 10am New York Cut EUR/USD: 0.9925 (429M), 0.9950-55 (453M), 1.0000 (760M) 1.0010-20 (881M), 1.0050 (473M), 1.0065-75 (715M) 1.0080 (352M), 1.0100 (758M), 1.0150 (274M), 1.0200 (387M) USD/JPY: 141.50 (555M), 142.00 (280M), 142.50-52 (711M) 143.00 (760M) USD/CHF: 0.9600 (600M) GBP/USD: 1.1500 (310M), 1.1875 (955M) AUD/USD: 0.6900 (228M), 0.6940 (365M), 0.7000 (201M) USD/CAD: 1.2850 (260M)Technical & Trade ViewsEURUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.0250 Sharp early spike to 1.0130, but remains bid, up 0.2% from 1.0046 NY close Positive knee jerk reaction to Ukrainian forces weekend success Attention swings to the Russian response to events in Ukraine 20 day VWAP bands contract - no strong bias - consolidation phase Close above 1.0017 was a positive signal Targets a test of 102.50 1.0050 472mln 1.0070/80 681mln and 1.0100 759mln close strikes on Monday 20 Day VWAP bullish, 5 Day bullishGBPUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.19 Bid – glimmer of hope for a Northern Ireland deal +0.25%, towards the base of a 1.1602-1.1681 range - busy early Volatility early linked to knee jerk response to Ukraine gains FT - Brussels offers to reduce Northern Ireland border controls If PM truss is flexible, a N.Ireland deal viable - potential GBP positive Close above 1.1560 was a positive Targets a test of 1.1725 pivotal 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullishUSDJPY Bias: Bullish above 139 USD/JPY as low as 141.51 EBS Friday before steadying, back to 142.80 Asia 142.05-91 bounce Japanese importers definitely looking to buy current 'dip' from 144.99 Specs too looking to put on more longs for now but with caution More key retracements levels lower, Fibo 38.2% of 130.40-144.99 139.41 Recent August 2-September 7 move up very fast, 14.59 yen Feeling JPY weakness not excessive till closer to 150 Option expiries in area today - 142.50-65 total $831 mln, 143.00 $760 mln Large option barriers still up at 145.00, specs sights still on test 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bearishAUDUSD Bias: Bearish below .70 AUD/USD gapped down to 0.6797 early Asia after closing Friday @ 0.6846 Move appeared to be cross driven as EUR/USD gapped higher at the same time EUR/AUD short covering may have been tied to Ukraine military success AUD/USD quickly filled the gaps when market became more liquid It traded back to 0.6844 before easing again later in the morning EUR/AUD remained bid and was up 0.60% into the afternoon The AUD/USD settled around 0.6825/30 0.6870 and break would be bullish The next level of resistance is at the 50% of the 0.7136/0.6699 at 0.6917 Support is at 0.6801 and a close below would ease upward pressure 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullishBTCUSD Bias: Bearish below 25.3K Bitcoin rebound rally might fizzle unless 23.3K breaks BTC trades 22.2K early Mon Mon close below 21.9k may overturn rally Below 21,227 VWAP band marks exit from bullish channel Through 25.3k will expose much more room till $30k psych barrier 20 Day VWAP is bullish, 5 Day bullish

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/daily-market-outlook-september-12-2022"
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The rollercoaster ride of mortgage interest rates

The pricing of fixed-rate mortgage deals shows that markets are still betting on a return to low inflation and low rates, says Cris Sholto Heaton.

from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/personal-finance/mortgages/605311/the-rollercoaster-ride-of-mortgage-interest-rates
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Investment Bank Outlook 12-09-2022

BNY MellonUSD Strength Not Due to Interest RatesAlthough it faltered somewhat at the end of last week, the US dollar has been on a tear since the middle of August. The US Dollar Index (DXY) was up almost 5% between Aug. 11 and Sept. 6, reaching 110.2, its highest level the beginning of the 21st century.The Federal Reserve’s hawkish policy setting (including our expectation of a 75bp hike on Sept. 21) seems like an ideal candidate to explain this recent bout of dollar strength. However, we think it has less to do with interest rates and more to do with growth differentials, idiosyncratic factors in other currencies (like the euro and sterling) and stagflation risk around the world. Relative to the growth outlook across the world, the US is probably better-placed than most of its DM peers, making the dollar the clear winner.Interestingly, since the beginning of the year, the dollar has appreciated almost twice as much against advanced economy currencies as it has against emerging economy currencies. The Fed’s trade-weighted dollar index is up around 11% this year against DM currencies but up only around 4.5% against EM currencies. To us this reflects a relative worsening of growth and inflation prospects in the developed versus emerging worlds.Overall DM growth in 2022 is expected to be 2.3% according to consensus forecasts, down from 3.8% at the beginning of the year. EM growth forecasts for this year have also been revised lower, to 3% from 5%. More revealingly, 2023 forecasts have been ratcheted down much more for DM economies, 1.1% vs. 2.4%, than for EM economies, 4.4% vs. 4.8%.Credit AgricoleThe USD has been seen as the key beneficiary of the unfolding global economic slowdown: (1) the US economy is seen as more resilient than its European and Asian counterparts that are plagued by geopolitical or pandemic headwinds; (2) the Fed has emerged as one of the more hawkish G10 central banks in a boost to the USD’s (real) rate appeal; while (3) risk-averse investors continue to seek refuge in high-yielding USD cash. We still think that the longer-term risks for the USD could be on the downside, however. A severe global growth slowdown is not our central scenario and, with the Fed potentially past its peak hawkishness while other G10 central banks are still tightening, we could see the USD underperforming high-yielding proxies if the global economy heads for a soft landing. Even in the case of a global economic hard landing, however, the USD could underperform the likes of the JPY, CHF and EUR, which could be boosted by repatriation flows.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/investment-bank-outlook-12-09-2022"
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Market Update – September 12 – USD slips again, EUR lifts, Stocks firm

pdate – September 12 – USD slips again, EUR lifts, Stocks firm

 

  • USDIndex – Slips again as EUR and YEN see demand. Final FedSpeak remained Hawkish as news blackout starts. 88-90% chance of 75 bp hike up from 57% last week.
  • EURECB looking at 2% interest rates (currently 0.75%) to bring inflation to 2% target (currently 9.1%). 2024 exceptions 2.4% and 2% by 2025. Market expects 2-3 more rate hikes into December. Trades at 1.0100 now.
  • JPY Govt spokesman (Kihara) – need to take steps to curb “excessive” Yen declines, stopped short of calling for BOJ intervention. However, USDJPY rallied from test of 142.00 Friday to 143.25 now.
  • GBP Trades at 1.1643 despite miss for GDP earlier. London remains muted (politics suspended) but open ahead of Queen’s funeral next Monday (bank holiday).
  • Stocks US stocks moved higher again as Dollar & Yields cooled (S&P500 4067) FUTS trade at 4076. Asian stock markets have rallied too, and European FUTS are higher pre-open.

 

  • USOil topped at $87.50 on Friday on more chatter of supply issues. Trades at 86.30 now. 20-day moving average sits at $90.00.
  • Gold – also rallied to $1728 and holds the key $1700 at $1720 now.
  • BTC – rallied higher again, touching $22.2k earlier from $18.5k lows last week. Trades at 21.7k now.

Overnight & Today UK Monthly GDP missed (0.25 vs 0.5%), ECB Survey of Analysts, Speeches from ECB’s Schnabel & de Guindos.

Biggest FX Mover @ (06:30 GMT) EURJPY (+1.01%). Continues to rally from a test of 142.75 on Friday, trades at 144.80 now. MAs aligning higher, MACD histogram & signal line positive & rising, RSI 72.56 & OB, H1 ATR 0.00142, Daily ATR 0.00850.

 



from HF Analysis /513683/
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Don’t count resources out

Commodities have performed poorly over the past year, but they tend to move in long and volatile cycles. from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://m...