What Happens to FX During the Holiday Season?


Market Drivers December 19, 2014
BOJ statement shows no change
UK Public Sector Net Borrowing 13.4B vs. 14.8B
Nikkei 2.39% Europe 0.51%
Oil $54/bbl
Gold $1196/oz.

Europe and Asia:
NZD Business Confidence 30.4 vs. 31.5
EUR Current Account 20.5B vs. 27.8B
GBP UK Public Sector Net Borrowing 13.4B vs. 14.4B

North America:
CAD Retail Sales 8:30

It's been a very choppy consolidative session on the last trading day of the week as many dealing desks have started to close their books for year end and the economic calendar has thinned appreciably.

Most of the majors have spend Asian and early European trade marking out 30-40 pip ranges in lackluster directionless trading. The one exception was USD/JPY which popped above the 119.00 level and moved all the way towards 119.50 on the back of BOJ meeting announcement that showed no policy change but nevertheless reaffirmed the central bank's commitment to more stimulus.

With holiday season nearly upon us it may be worthwhile to examine FX scenarios during this upcoming period. Generally markets tend to become very quiet at the end of the year, with most of the key participants away from their desks as liquidity dries up considerably. Under such conditions any geopolitical or economic shocks tend to overstate the price movements as reactions can quickly overextend.

This year however, most of the key geopolitical and economic surprises have occurred in the first two week of the month, with decline in oil, collapse of the ruble and negative rates from SNB all driving trade and volatility. With markets having now reacted to all the various dislocations, chances are that price action will remain subdued for the rest of the year as most of the risks have been priced in.

With very little fresh economic data planned for the next two weeks, the risk to the market lies primarily from some political surprise from rogue nations such as North Korea. Barring such unforeseen development the global news cycle is likely to be placid over the next few weeks and prices will most likely reflect that decline in volatility.

Finally a note on the high yielding comm dollars like the Aussie and kiwi. Some analysts have noted that the move to negative rates by the SNB should only increase demand for the high yielders as European monetary authorities do everything in their power to generate liquidity and depreciate exchange rates. Certainly for a Swiss denominated investor it is far more lucrative to keep his capital in high yielding AU instruments rather than pay negative carry.

Yet so far the market has not flocked to the high yielders, fearing that the economic slowdown in the Asia Pacific region will eventually force the authorities to cut rates next year.Yet both Australian and New Zealand policy makers have shown no inclination to cut rates in 2015 with the New Zealand authorities taking a particularly hawkish view on rates. If conditions in Asia show some stabilization and even a modicum of improvement, market sentiment will change quickly and both the Aussie and the kiwi could once again find a bid as yield hungry bargain hunters plow back into those currencies.

I will be out until January 5 - Happy holidays to all.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD hovers around 0.6500 amid light trading, ahead of US GDP

AUD/USD hovers around 0.6500 amid light trading, ahead of US GDP

AUD/USD is trading close to 0.6500 in Asian trading on Thursday, lacking a clear directional impetus amid an Anzac Day holiday in Australia. Meanwhile, traders stay cautious due ti risk-aversion and ahead of the key US Q1 GDP release. 

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, near 155.50

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, near 155.50

USD/JPY keeps breaking into its highest chart territory since June of 1990 early Thursday, testing 155.50 for the first time in 34 years as the Japanese Yen remains vulnerable, despite looming Japanese intervention risks. Focus shifts to Thursday's US GDP report and the BoJ decision on Friday. 

USD/JPY News

Gold price lacks firm intraday direction, holds steady above $2,300 ahead of US data

Gold price lacks firm intraday direction, holds steady above $2,300 ahead of US data

Gold price remains confined in a narrow band for the second straight day on Thursday. Reduced Fed rate cut bets and a positive risk tone cap the upside for the commodity. Traders now await key US macro data before positioning for the near-term trajectory.

Gold News

Injective price weakness persists despite over 5.9 million INJ tokens burned

Injective price weakness persists despite over 5.9 million INJ tokens burned

Injective price is trading with a bearish bias, stuck in the lower section of the market range. The bearish outlook abounds despite the network's deflationary efforts to pump the price. Coupled with broader market gloom, INJ token’s doomed days may not be over yet.

Read more

Meta Platforms Earnings: META sinks 10% on lower Q2 revenue guidance Premium

Meta Platforms Earnings: META sinks 10% on lower Q2 revenue guidance

This must be "opposites" week. While Doppelganger Tesla rode horrible misses on Tuesday to a double-digit rally, Meta Platforms produced impressive beats above Wall Street consensus after the close on Wednesday, only to watch the share price collapse by nearly 10%.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures