JPY and EUR find support

Rising risk aversion is supporting the JPY but the currency may also be finding some support from the misplaced view that the Bank of Japan may not need to be any more aggressive in its policy stance to reach its 2% inflation target, with Japan’s finance minister noting that deflationary conditions have almost ended. Such talk looks premature.

Japan still has a long way to go to reach and sustain inflation at its target. The risk is that without any structural reforms (jobs market, manufacturing sector, immigration) deflation and slower growth could quite easily take hold again. In any case, the Bank of Japan is likely to embark on more aggressive policy in the months ahead in order to achieve the 2% target. In the near term USD/JPY looks supported around 102.50.

The EUR found some additional support from a strengthening in manufacturing confidence in the region, which highlighted that economic recovery continues to take shape. Fitch’s affirmation of Germany’s credit ratings at AAA has also helped sentiment towards the currency.

In the near term much of the same tone is likely although the relatively stronger US economic performance and tapering expectations will mean the USD will not fall too far. EUR/USD will face technical resistance around its 2014 high at 1.3776.

Lower US yields undermine the US dollar

A drop in US yields has undermined the USD over recent days against major currencies although emerging market currencies remain under varying degrees of pressure. US 10 year Treasury yields have fallen by around a quarter of a percent since the end of last year, acting as a real drag on the USD.

A rise in risk aversion over recent days (the VIX fear gauge has risen by over 13% since its low on 10 January) appears to have resulted in increased demand for Treasuries and weaker equities, with markets ignoring generally firmer than anticipated US economic data this week including weekly jobless claims and existing home sales.

Emerging market currencies have come under strong pressure while the usual safe havens have strengthened most against the USD in particular CHF and JPY. The EUR has also made up some ground. Fortunately for the USD expectations of Fed tapering continue to fuel some buying of the currency, constraining any downside. Nonetheless, until US Treasury yields resume their upward movement the USD’s upside momentum will be limited.

AUD oversold, GBP running into resistance

AUD/USD has faced a significant bout of pressure since testing a high of around 0.9087. A dismal jobs report in December piled on more pressure on the currency and since then it has failed to recover. Consequently short speculative positioning has increased as sentiment has deteriorated. Yesterday’s slate of Chinese data failed to dent the AUD however, with the currency encouragingly showing some resilience.

Attention will now turn to tomorrow’s CPI inflation data. The release of the TD Securities inflation gauge which printed higher than consensus, highlights upside risks to the release of Q4 CPI and in this respect I believe market expectations of any RBA policy rate cuts look overdone. My quantitative model estimate for AUD/USD suggests that the currency is oversold, with short term fair value seen at around 0.9226.

GBP/USD is edging back up to its year highs around 1.6526 recorded at the turn of the year, a level that is likely to prove to be a tough resistance level. In spite of softer data including manufacturing and service sector confidence readings as well as industrial production the currency was buoyed by a strong December retail sales report at the end of last week.

Jobs data and the Bank of England MPC minutes will be on tap on Wednesday providing more direction for the currency. The minutes are likely to reveal few surprises but there is no doubt that the Bank is moving towards some sort of change in language on its forward guidance. GBP will find little further support over coming days, with consolidation likely. However, market positioning does not appear to be particularly stretched, suggesting limited downside risks.

USD firm versus EUR but not against JPY

Finally back in the office after two weeks of traveling and it appear that the upside momentum for equity markets has definitely waned. Concerns about the pace of growth, earnings and valuations finally appear to have caught up with stocks. Meanwhile US Treasury yields have remained under downward pressure since the release of the disappointing US December jobs report despite some encouraging data since. In Asia China’s GDP release for Q4 reveaked some loss of momentum, with growth decelerating to 1.8% QoQ. Nonetheless, the annual pace of growth looked reasonably healthy at 7.7%, suggesting a limited reaction in markets today.

A US holiday today will likely keep a cap on market activity today but there will be plenty of Q4 earnings reports over coming days to give further direction. In terms of policy decisions the Bank of Japan and Bank of Canada will likely keep policy unchanged following their policy decisions this week. The BoC is faced with inflation well below target while the BoJ continues to battle to push inflation towards its 2% target. Both central banks will maintain easy policy.

On the data front there is very little of note in the US to focus on, with the main release the December existing home sales report on Thursday where a rebound of 1% is expected. European data releases may prove to be more interesting, with the release of flash purchasing managers indices on tap. Further gradual gains are likely to be registered in January although there will be attention on France which has lagged other countries.

Ratings decisions by Moody’s and Fitch on Germany and France, respectively, will also garner some attention. Rumours of a German downgrade are likely to prove unfounded. In the UK the Bank of England MPC minutes will be is likely to reveal an unchanged outcome of voting to keep policy unchanged although the BoE is likely to adjust its guidance soon reflecting the quicker than anticipated fall in the unemployment rate.

The USD looks well placed to extend last week’s gains, especially against the EUR, with a drop below 1.3500 on the cards. Disinflation pressures and relatively soft growth highlight the potential for easier monetary policy. A variety of options for the ECB are on the cards but the EUR will struggle to make headway given expectations of more ECB action. Additionally the EUR appears to be benefiting less from reserves recycling flows, especially given that Asian central bank reserves accumulation has likely to have slowed. The deterioration in speculative positioning reflects the deterioration in sentiment for the currency.

In contrast USD/JPY will struggle too push higher given the drop in US Treasury yields. Additionally weaker Japanese stocks will not help given the correlation between the Nikkei and JPY. The Bank of Japan meeting this week will not give much support for a further move higher in USD/JPY given expectations of an unchanged outcome. Some consolidation around 104.00 is likely over the short term, with upside limited to technical resistance around 104.92.

I fly off to Mumbai tonight for the last leg of our Asia roadshow presentation series. Hopefully my next post can shed some light on the recent stability of the Indian rupee.

When good is bad and bad is bad

When good is bad and bad is bad.

The BAD: Data today in Australia revealed a much worse than expected outcome for the Jobs market last month. Australia cut 22.6k jobs compared to consensus expectations of a 10k increase. The impact was swift. The AUD was hit losing a significant amount of ground settling around 0.88 versus USD. Clearly there has been a worsening in job market conditions over recent months and while I am still constructive on AUD the trend in jobs is sending a worrying signal.

The GOOD: Japan machinery orders rose strongly up 9.3% in November compared to the previous month. This was cited as evidence that Abenomics is working although I’ll only believe this when we see evidence of structural reforms. Nonetheless, it was sufficient to be bad for the JPY with USD/JPY pushing eventually back towards 105. I remain negative on the yen and ultimately see higher US bond yields pushing USD/JPY even higher.