|

A week of headline hullabaloo: TGIF

Headline nonsense

The advent of headline reading robots is changing the marketplace and likely causing capital market traders to react first and check later( fact-finding ) for fear of missing out. So with the volumes of spurious headlines over the last 24-48 hours, the challenges now facing traders in the age of information overload is assessing the wheat from the chaff when it comes to ” fake news.” But unfortunately, these factious headlines are becoming all to commonplace in 2018.

Oil

Brent climbed to the critical $70 per barrel for the first time since 2014 and Oil is  having its usual far-reaching influence on cross-asset markets as Wall Street soars to new record territory

The market was caught a bit short when Suhail al-Mazrouei, UAE energy minister and current OPEC president, said Thursday that OPEC remains “committed to maintaining strong compliance.” which spurred a wave of short covering rather than topside buying.

By all appearances at the future open, the market is showing signs of finally succumbing to that anticipated correction.

Gold

Gold put in another strong showing after the Hawkish ECB minutes weighed on USD sentiment. But there appears to be a broader move afoot as the USDJPY zeroed in on the critical 111 level amidst BoJ tapering speculation.

Indeed, the weaker dollar narrative amidst increased demand for equity market hedges suggests the near-term outlook for Gold is glittering.

G-10

The Euro

The Euro exploded higher after a hawkish glean from the ECB minutes caught trader flat-footed as most had shallow expectations from the release. But as usual when it comes to Mario and gang its best to expect the unexpected especially when fissures within the ECB board are starting to appear.

As usual, traders couldn’t  help but trip over themselves getting topside exposure at the thought of catching a significant policy shift. The Euro Bulls are now banking on a possible change in ECB language as early as March.

Of course, this feels like ” Deja Vu all over again ” as traders consider the merits of parlaying the minutes versus another dovish surprise from Draghi. But with the bullish fundamental narrative solidly intact, it’s hard to argue against warehousing some form of Euro proxy trade on the back of the ECB’s apparent hawkish shift.

The Canadian Dollar

Speaking of fake news, after the imminent demise of NAFTA was denied the Loonie had retraced about 60 % of yesterday’s panicked move, but the fact it has not fully recovered is probably due to overextending shorts ahead of Bank of Canada announcement. In the where there’s smoke their fire category and as far as the broader North American trade picture is concerned. In a WSJ interview this morning, President Trump reiterated he would terminate NAFTA unless he gets a fair and “Trump deal” but added to “leaving it a bit flexible” until after the Mexico election. Predictably USDCAD gapped higher some 35 pips in low liquidity before coming back.

The Japanese Yen

Given the general dollar malaise, USDJPY is struggling against the backdrop of BoJ taper overhang and another strong US 10 year Treasury auction. The bid to cover ratio came in at 2.74, which is the highest level seen since December 2014.  The markets were convincingly dollar offered overnight, but so far in early trade, APAC traders are showing a higher propensity of cover shorts heading into the weekend probably looking to put this silly week of headline hullabaloo in the rearview mirror.

The Australian Dollar

The Aussie dollar benefited from of all things iPhone sales after the release of data showing better-than-expected retail spending in November.

The currency continued to gather steam overnight influenced by external drivers as the weaker US dollar and surging commodity prices led the charge.

 

Asia FX

Thankfully local EM Fx traders remain calm while doubting the validity of the China treasuries story and were rewarded for their patience when China’s FX authority SAFE was quick castigate those reports as ‘false news and predictably USDAsia sold off in tandem with US Bond Yields.

The Yuan

Regional currency markets are finding themselves in a much happier spot this morning with USDCNH trading sub 6.50 unwinding both the Treasury headline nonsense and Counter-Cyclical squeeze.

The Ringgit

The Ringgit made the highlight reel once again after a substantial industrial production number yesterday which cemented the markets BNM rate hike view. While we’re likely to enter a healthy correction on oil prices, WTI is at such a lofty levels, and any sell-off is unlikely to have any sustainable adverse effect on the MYR.

Fed Speak

A late NY speech delivered my Dudley is attracting some attention where he sounds very optimistic regarding the US economy reaching its inflation targets but doesn’t expect “transitory” factors to fade out until after Spring 2018. USDJPY came off the 111.05 low, but there was little significant broader based USD impact

Cryptocurrencies

The barrier for Bitcoin to be considered a viable asset class continue to mount. The threat from increased regulatory oversight in the wake of South Korea imposing a ban on Crypto trading could spread and severely dent sentiment. But also the excessive volatility makes trading Crypto coins a fool’s errand with only two discernable strategies investors are apparently using. 1) Buy on dips, sit on your hands and hope it rises or 2) Sell at the current tops and pray it fall. Probably not a quantified methodology for managing risk and suggests the product in its infancy will not be sold as a viable investment grade product by Major investment houses.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

More from Stephen Innes
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD holds firm above 1.1900 as US NFP looms

EUR/USD holds its upbeat momentum above 1.1900 in the European trading hours on Wednesday, helped by a broadly weaker US Dollar. Markets could turn cautious later in the day as the delayed US employment report for January will takes center stage. 

GBP/USD remains above nine-day EMA near 1.3650

GBP/USD recovers its recent losses from the previous session, trading around 1.3680 during the European hours on Wednesday. The technical analysis of the daily chart indicates a sustained bullish bias, as the pair trades within an ascending channel pattern.

Gold sticks to gains near $5,050 as focus shifts to US NFP

Gold holds moderate gains near the $5,050 level in the European session on Wednesday, reversing a part of the previous day's modest losses amid dovish US Federal Reserve-inspired US Dollar weakness. This, in turn, is seen as a key factor acting as a tailwind for the non-yielding yellow metal ahead of the critical US NFP release. 

US Nonfarm Payrolls expected to show modest job gains in January

The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the delayed Nonfarm Payrolls data for January on Wednesday at 13:30 GMT. Investors expect NFP to rise by 70K following the 50K increase recorded in December.

S&P 500 at 7,000 is a valuation test, not a liquidity problem

The rebound from last week’s drawdown never quite shook the sense that it was being supported by borrowed conviction. The S&P 500 once again tested near the 7,000 level (6,986 as the high watermark) and failed, despite a macro backdrop that would normally be interpreted as supportive of risk.

Bitcoin price slips below $67,000 ahead of US Nonfarm Payrolls data

Bitcoin price extends losses, and trades below the lower consolidating boundary at $67,300 at the time of writing. A firm close below this level could trigger a deeper correction for BTC. Despite the weakness in price action, institutional demand shows signs of support, recording mild inflows in ETFs so far this week.