This Great Graphic shows sterling's monthly performance
since 1971, according to Bloomberg data. There have been several powerful trends.
The rally from
$1.40 to $1.50 in the week following Cox's murder was understandable to us. The assassination broke the momentum
that we also recognized had been building in
favor of Brexit. But to catch that move meant leaning the wrong
way on the Brexit results.
Sterling
approached $1.3120 in North America on Monday. It closed last week near $1.3680. It had hit a
low of nearly $1.3230 in Asia as the referendum's results became obvious. Some had blamed the magnitude of
sterling's drop to thin market
conditions. The steep loss today to new lows warns something more ominous
may be afoot.
The only think
that seems to compare with the Tory Party's seeming cluelessness on how to proceed is the disarray of the Labour Party. The 229 Labour MPs will have a confidence vote in
their leader Corbyn. The results
will likely be know toward the end of the business day in London tomorrow. The
vote is advisory in nature, but the more vote against Corbyn, of course, the
more precarious his position.
Barring
Corbyn's resignation, which seems highly unlikely, a way to ensure a leadership
challenge is for at least 20% of the Labour MPs (45) to sign a letter endorsing
another candidate. In such a challenge Corbyn will
likely run again, and he could win. Last year Corbyn won a landslide from party members. The
rank and file was to the left of the elected Labour MPs. However, reports
suggest that between the poor showing in the early-May local elections and the
passionless effort to campaign for the Remain camp, Corbyn's support has
eroded. Several shadow cabinet members have resigned, and reports suggest
as many as 40 people for Corbyn's team have quit.
The advantage
goes to the first mover. Who can mend their party's fissures
and offer strong leadership during a particularly challenging time? Labour cannot force a general
election. The Tory's secured a majority a year ago.
Technical and
economic analysis use different language to talk about the same thing. What technicians call support an economist might see
as the emergence of demand. What a technician may call resistance and economist may identify supply.
There are numerous ways participants can anticipate supply (resistance)
and demand (support). They are often based
on historical patterns of one type of another.
Sterling has
not been at these levels since 1985. It is difficult to
extrapolate what price will bring in supply or demand. We must
imagine that any long position that had a
stop in the market was stopped out. Of course, not all positions are protected with stops. In addition, those who sold calls as a hedge
have maxed out as the call will not trade below zero (different than interest
rates).
There may be
some levels that have psychological significance like $1.30 or $1.20 or even
$1.00. At $1.30, sterling would have declined by about 13% from its pre-result high. While we thought since Cox's murder, the Remain camp would win, we
recognized that a vote to leave would send sterling sharply lower. We
anticipated a 15%-20% slide sterling. From the $1.50 level that would target $1.2750 (15%) and $1.2000 (20%),
which still seems reasonable.
Disclaimer
Great Graphic: Sterling Monthly Chart and Outlook
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 27, 2016
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