Lots of events / data to chew on

US Labor Day holidays should keep trading relatively subdued over the course of today. Even the prospects of a military strike in Syria have paused following the decision by US President Obama to gain approval from Congress. Given that Congress does not return from summer recess until September 9 any action is not going to be quick. Consequently risk appetite may improve in the near term. Additionally Asian markets will benefit from a rise in China’s manufacturing confidence in August to a 16 month high. ,

Markets will have plenty of data and events to chew over as the week progresses. Overall US data will maintain its less impressive trend, with a drop in the August US ISM manufacturing confidence survey expected, while the July trade deficit is set to widen and non farm payrolls are likely to come in at a softer pace of around 160k. Negative US data surprises will likely see a further bullish retracement in US Treasuries and in turn a loss of upward momentum for the USD.

Elsewhere the four key major central bank decisions on tap this week will likely prove to be non-events, with the Bank of Japan, European Central Bank, Bank of England and Reserve Bank of Australia set to keep policy rates unchanged. The BoJ is likely to take comfort from the improvements in domestic data and rising inflation reducing any pressure for any further easing in the near term. The ECB will likely repeat its forward guidance and reveal updated staff forecasts.

On the data front final Eurozone PMI manufacturing survey readings, July German industrial activity and UK manufacturing PMI will garner attention. Some likely improvement in risk appetite will likely see a further spread narrowing for Eurozone peripheral bonds while the EUR will find some support. In Australia aside from the RBA, retail sales and the federal election this weekend will be in focus. Improving risk appetite will be constructive for the AUD.

In Asia attention will remain on the INR and IDR this week, with both currencies gaining some ground in the wake of USD swap measures with oil companies in India and a policy rate hike in Indonesia. Stability may prove temporary but a slightly firmer tone to risk appetite at the start of this week may give more room for upside in these currencies in the short term. Further out, it is difficult to see any sustained reversal given the prospects for higher US yields, more capital outflows and domestic fundamental fragilities.

USD edges higher

There appears to be some prevarication over possible military strikes on Syria resulting in less angst in markets over an imminent strike. Consequently risk appetite edged higher overnight while US Treasury yields also rose. Potential military strikes have also led to firming oil prices. Pressure on vulnerable emerging market assets has continued unabated however, with tapering worries and domestic vulnerabilities resulting in ongoing capital outflows.

In Asia the INR and IDR remain under considerable pressure. However, INR forwards recovered somewhat overnight and the spot rate strengthened in the wake of the introduction of a forex swap window for Indian oil firms. The measure will help to alleviate some of the demand/supply pressures for USDs but is however, unlikely to arrest the decline in the INR for long. In Indonesia the central bank may increase policy rates by 50bps today which ought to help the IDR in the short term.

The USD gained a little ground as US yields rose. The USD may benefit as markets fret about possible military action against Syria resulting in an attendant rise in risk aversion. Nonetheless, a series of negative data surprises over recent days contrasting with positive surprises in Europe leaves the USD rather vulnerable against major currencies. In contrast the USD is set to continue to remain firm against many emerging market currencies given the ongoing outflow of capital in the wake of higher US yields and tapering fears.

AUD’s tentative recovery in early August has proven to be an abject failure. Like many other high beta currencies AUD has suffered as risk aversion has intensified recently. Additionally speculation of further policy easing has also dampened the AUD. Consequently speculative sentiment remains weak. In reality, further rate cuts may depend on whether the AUD can rally following an over 15% fall since April. Any failure for the AUD to gain ground may stay the hand of the RBA. Although it has found some support today, further downside pressure is likely with a breach of the 5 August low at 0.8848 expected.

GBP underwent some volatility in the wake of BoE governor Carney’s speech. Initial weakness was bought into as shorts were covered however, leaving the currency back where it started. Carney’s speech was interpreted as dovish, with the governor noting that the BoE was read to loosen policy if higher market rates impacted the economy. Nonetheless, there was little immediate implication for policy. Overall GBP is likely to be constrained around resistance at 1.5590, with gains limited ahead of the BoE policy meeting next week.

Respite for Asian currencies

Pressure on policymakers in developed economies to orchestrate more predictable exits from unconventional monetary policies has intensified as reflected in comments at the Jackson Hole symposium the wake of the intense volatility in emerging market assets over recent weeks. While it is unlikely that a crisis is looming there is no doubt that mixed messages and lack of clarity over exit policies is having a demonstrable impact on EM assets.

Such clarity is unlikely to come this week. However, a pull back in core bond yields from recent highs will likely contribute to a calmer tone to markets at the turn of the week and some further near retracement in a positive direction for risk assets. Whether this lasts will depend on the clarity of the message from central bankers and in this respect speeches by four Fed officials over coming days, ECB’s Weidmann today and BoE governer Carney on Wednesday, will be scrtutinized.

The data slate is not particularly heavy but looks skewed towards relatively more positive Eurozone releases. In the US a likely drop in July durable goods orders today and pull back in consumer confidence tomorrow will provide little support to US asset markets including the USD while the trend of positive data surprises in Europe including likely gains in August economic sentiment indices and German IFO will add further evidence that growth will turn positive in Q3.

In Japan labor market data will reveal relative strength, with a low unemployment rate, helping to support the consumer. Inflation is set to rise further too, suggesting that policy measures are garnering some success. However, the upward trend in inflation is by no means guaranteed and ultimately renewed aggressiveness on the JPY will be needed as inflation tops out.

How will this leave currency markets? The USD is likely to continue to fare poorly against the EUR and GBP especially given the less than impressive data releases expected this week while the JPY is likely to remain on the back foot, pressured in part by firmer risk tone.

On the Asian currency front, further short term retracement is likely, especially for those currencies that have been beat up the most, namely INR and IDR. However, gains will likely prove limited, with tapering concerns and capital outflows showing little sign of reversing. Additionally, a likely disappointing Q2 GDP release in India at the end of the week will be unhelpful for the INR.

US dollar buoyed by higher yields, Asian currencies hit

Efforts by the European Central Bank and Bank of England to disassociate themselves from Fed policy actions were overwhelmed by the US June jobs report which revealed a bigger than consensus 195k increase in payrolls and upward revisions to previous months. The data reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve would begin tapering in September while the data also pushed US yields sharply higher (close to 23 basis points increase in US 10 year yields following the data) and fuelling further USD strength.

In fairness attempts by the ECB and BoE to introduce ‘forward guidance” may eventually garner some success but US yields will continue to dictate market direction, at least until the markets successfully transition to the reality of Fed tapering, which could take several weeks. During the interim expect transitional volatility to continue, with risk assets globally remaining under pressure.

Further detail on Fed policy will be looked for from within the minutes of the June FOMC meeting to be released on Wednesday although it is unlikely that there will be any real divergence from the message delivered by Fed Chairman Bernanke and a host of other Fed officials over recent weeks. Consequently the USD is likely to retain a broadly firm tone as it reacts to the sharp move higher in US yields at the end of last week.

The Bank of Japan will likely be emboldened in its ultra easy monetary policy stance following last week’s ECB and BoE announcements although no further policy action is likely at this week’s meeting as attention shifts to Japan’s Upper House elections on 21 July. The JPY in particular will remain susceptible to USD strength and widening yield differentials, with potential to test USD/JPY resistance around 102.45 this week.

European attention will centre on Greece and Portugal as the former will be the focus of discussions at the Eurogroup / Ecofin meetings today and tomorrow, with officials set to deliberate Greece’s bailout. Attempts in Portugal to resolve political differences between the main coalition parties appears to have garnered some success in a deal which could stave off fresh elections. None of this will help the EUR which is set to remain under pressure as it edges towards support levels at 1.2744 versus USD.

USD strength will also continue to be exhibited versus Asian currencies this week. Equity fund outflows continue to damage regional currencies lower. Since the end of May Asia has recorded around USD 15.4 billion in equity outflows. Total inflows this year have dropped to only around USD 3.6 billion. A renewed fall in the JPY will added pressure to more JPY sensitive currencies such as TWD and KRW but the overwhelming influence is higher US yields and capital outflows which will continue to have particularly negative impact on currencies with external funding needs, especially the INR and IDR.

Catching a falling knife

USD/JPY’s pull back is proving short lived as Japanese Economy Minister Amari attempted to backtrack from his earlier comments that warned about the negative impact of a weaker JPY on “people’s lives”. His comments today suggest that Japan’s stance on a weaker JPY has not changed.

Nonetheless, there may be some consolidation in the near term as likely inaction from the Bank of Japan at it policy meeting this week will mean no new stimulus. While no policy change ought to be unsurprising given recent aggressive actions it appears that the market has become addicted to stimulus.

In any case US Treasury yields will need to be eyed for further USD/JPY direction, with a break of the psychologically important 2% level in the 10 year Treasury a likely trigger for a further up move in the currency pair.

GBP has held up well on the crosses while like many other currencies has faced a resurgent USD. Little impact on GBP is expected from today’s April CPI inflation data especially given that any expected decline is set to prove temporary (Bloomberg consensus 2.6% YoY).

More importantly a likely more optimistic set of Bank of England MPC minutes on Wednesday and rebound in April UK April retail sales on Thursday will provide GBP will further support although we suggest looking for any upside on the crosses rather than versus USD.

Is it time to buy AUD? While I don’t want to be accused of catching a falling knife AUD looks reasonably good value especially against other commodity currencies, especially NZD and CAD. While there have been plenty of negative factors pressuring the currency including prospects for more RBA rate cuts, weaker commodity prices, and softer domestic and Chinese data, much of this is in the price.

My AUD/USD quantitative model estimate based shows that it is oversold relative to its short term fair value estimate. Moreover, speculative positioning according to the CFTC IMM data has turned negative for the first time in almost a year. The RBA May meeting minutes (the meeting during the RBA surprisingly cut its cash rate to 2.75) reelased today did not change this perspective given that markets have already priced in one more rate cut in the cycle.

Asian currencies will likely continue to retrace some of their recent losses in the near term. However, domestic factors and growth worries will provide an importance influence, with the IDR for instance failing to benefit from any USD pull back as the government continues to wrestle with a fuel subsidy cut. Meanwhile, weaker than expected growth in Thailand in Q1 2013 cast a shadow over many Asian currencies as concerns of a wider growth slowdown in Asian intensify.