The first two and a half weeks of the new year saw persistent selling of
equities, commodities, and emerging markets. In the foreign exchange
market, the dollar-bloc and sterling were crushed. The yen was the single
biggest beneficiary, and speculators in the CME are net long the yen in the
futures market for the first time since late 2012.
It was as if many equity sellers returned from the year-end holidays, and
got the jump start on the buyers. Some of the selling was passive as stops were triggered and money
management considerations drove the liquidation. The buyers are most notable by their absence.
However, the middle of last week, some buyers made a stand, and had reverberations throughout the capital
markets.
The rubber band was stretched far
and snapped back violently. There was a dramatic role
reversal. The Canadian dollar, for example, had lost 4.6% in the year through
January 20. In the final two sessions of last week, the Canadian dollar
was the strongest major currency, rallying 2.5%. The yen, which had been
the strongest of the majors, gaining 2.8% through the middle of last week, gave
back 1.25% in the last two sessions.
The price action seems to have become unhinged from fundamentals, arguably as much on the
rebound as it was on the decline. Consider sterling. It lost 3.7% through the middle of last
week. Despite a fall in retail sales that was three times
larger than the consensus expected, sterling rallied around 0.75% before the
weekend, making it the second strongest currency on Friday behind the Canadian
dollar. Given when seems to be an enhanced role for
psychology and sentiment, the technical condition of the foreign exchange
market may be more important than usual, and the break in the prevailing
momentum makes it particularly timely.
The euro has remained stuck in the
$1.08-$1.10 trading range since the ECB cut rates and extends its asset purchase program in early December.
There have been a few false breaks, and the euro closed the week a few ticks below the range. The technical indicators we use are
not generating strong signals. With Draghi kicking the door open to March
action, there may be some interest in trying to push the euro lower.
However, the risk is for a dovish FOMC statement that recognizes the increased
market volatility and the decline in market-based measures of inflation
expectations (break-evens) to new lows. This
means that a potential push lower in the euro at the start of next week
could be reversed after the FOMC.
The low from earlier this month is near $1.0710-15.
The technical indicators appear to be generating a stronger signal on the
yen. The JPY116.20 low from late-August was frayed but ultimately held (on
a closing basis). Those lows were not
confirmed by the RSI, which now shows a dollar-bullish divergence.
The MACDs have crossed higher from oversold levels.
The dollar finished the week near its 20-day moving average, the middle
of its Bollinger Bands for the time since the BOJ met December.
A move above JPY119.00 could spur a move toward JPY120. Our note of
caution is not only the risk of a less than hawkish Fed statement and the
likelihood that the BOJ disappoints those who expect it to ease policy.
From late-December through the January 21, sterling sold-off almost 10
cents. It posted a key reversal on January 21. After making new
multi-year lows, it rebounded and closed above
the previous day's high. There is a sterling-bullish divergence in
the RSI, and the MACDs are poised to cross higher. Technically, sterling can move toward $1.4400-20 without
much resistance. The $1.4500-$1.4525 appears more formidable. We
would peg initial support near $1.4200.
Following the Bank of Canada's decision not to cut rates in the middle of
last week, the Canadian dollar reversed
higher and saw strong follow through gains into the weekend. The US
dollar finished the week below its 20-day moving average against the Canadian
dollar for the first time in three months. The greenback tested a
trendline drawn off the early December and January lows. It was near
CAD1.4110 before the weekend and rises toward CAD1.4225 by the end of next
week. It retraced 61.8% of the gains since the start of the year at
CAD1.4150. Technical indicators suggest scope for US dollar
weakness. Provided external markets permit, the US dollar could fall
toward CAD1.40.
The Australian dollar carved out a low near $0.6830, off which it launched an advance of more than
two cents. Technical indicators suggest scope for additional
gains. The first barrier is the $0.7065-$0.7075. The price
action before the weekend was uninspiring. It could warn of a test lower,
perhaps $0.6950, before testing higher again.
The Mexican peso has been crushed
in the first few weeks of the year. Its 7% decline was the largest
not only in Latam but among the emerging market currencies as a whole.
And this is after its 1.2% recovery before the weekend. Given
the recovery in oil prices, equities, and
other emerging markets, the peso's firmer tone was underwhelming. The RSI
has turned lower, but the MACDs are still, at
least, several days away from crossing.
Initial dollar support appears to be near MXN18.25-MXN18.30 area at the start
of next week
March light sweet oil rebounded from the push below $28 to approach $32
ahead of the weekend. The 38.2% retracement of this year's decline is
found a little above $32. Technical indicators are constructive, and there is potential toward
$33.50.
The US 10-year yield fell from 2.30% on New Year's Eve to 1.94% in the
middle of last week. The decline in yields appears over,
barring new market turmoil. There looks to be potential toward
2.15%. The March note futures ran out of steam above 129-00 and finished
the week near 128-08. The RSI has turned,
but the MACDs haven't yet. A break of 127-25 would lend credence ideas
that a high is in place, but a break of 127 may require encouragement from
other markets.
Similarly, the RSIs have turned in the S&P 500, but the MACD is
lagging. It looks set to turn higher early next week. Although
it closed lower in the middle of the week, it recovered more than 2% of session lows (~1812). Follow
through buying, some of which was likely short-covering lifted the S&P 500
above 1900 before the weekend. A move above 1915 could spur a move toward
1945, and possibly 1980. A break of 1875 warns that the low may have to be retested.
Disclaimer
FX Outlook: New Phase has Begun
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
January 23, 2016
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