• USDJPY back at 7 year high as USD rallies after payrolls

  • JPY also weak on speculation of snap election by Abe

  • EURCHF falls towards 1.20 floor, bets on intervention increasing

  • Russian Central Bank abandons peg with EUR and USD to allow free float

Dollar seems to have found a bottom in its post-payrolls sell-off. Yesterday afternoon, investors began to pare their bets and buy the dip in the USD that had started on Friday afternoon. The dollar index is a shade lower from its four year high that it reached last week. It is a quiet week for US data but the beauty of currency markets means that one currency can be dragged higher by another’s weakness.

That is exactly what happened in USDJPY overnight as speculation intensified that the next injection of Abenomics into the Japanese economy would be delayed. The new Japanese stimulus from the Bank of Japan is not the final move and must come in concert with additional fiscal measures. We had been looking for an additional sales tax increase in Japan following this April’s bump from 5% to 8%. We saw the impact of this year’s sales tax within the Q2 output numbers – the Bank of Japan will want to prevent another round of double-digit percentage losses in consumption spending while creating lasting inflation.

Risk around the yen has also been created by thoughts that the Japanese Prime Minister may call a snap election in December. Much like most developed economy leaders, Shinzo Abe’s approval ratings have been slipping for a while now and a snap election may guarantee another term as PM while the local opposition is disorganised.

Dollar has also moved higher on a shade of increased yield support as the yield on the ten year bond ran to 2.37% following a letter from the San Francisco Fed that said that many members of the FOMC may have overemphasised the effect of weak growth on dampening down interest rates in the future.

Elsewhere, markets were fairly relaxed yesterday outside of goings on in Russia. The Russian Central Bank is now a step closer to a free floating currency after abolishing its dual currency peg versus the USD and EUR. Previously the Bank had managed the currency round a representative value of both currencies but will now only intervene in case of “threats to financial stability”. RUB has gained around 2.5% on the announcement. It remains close to record lows versus the euro, dollar and pound.

While we are on intervention, it looks like we could see the Swiss National Bank have to take action on its currency soon to protect its 1.20 floor in EURCHF. Weakness in the European single currency has dragged the pair continually lower through the year. Recently, the Swiss National Bank President fired a shot across the bows of those who believe that the SNB will flinch on its policy of weakening the Swiss franc. President Thomas Jordan said the Bank has the ability to supplement its cap “immediately” should it feel it threatened. We think the SNB will cut rates into negative territory if recent deflationary pressures are sustained. There is no reason to suggest that they won’t given import price shifts from the Eurozone.

We still have a constructive view on GBPCHF – it is essentially GBPEUR with a free bet on intervention. EURCHF has opened at 1.2025.

Ahead of tomorrow’s inflation report, sterling remains very much in focus. I put out a full preview in yesterday’s Sterling Update and I remain balanced towards sterling weakness from the report’s publication.

The data calendar is quiet today.

Have a great day.

Disclaimer: The comments put forward by World First are only our views and should not be construed as advice. You should act using your own information and judgment. Although information has been obtained from and is based upon multiple sources the author believes to be reliable, we do not guarantee its accuracy and it may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute the author’s own judgment as of the date of the briefing and are subject to change without notice. Any rates given are “interbank” ie for amounts of £5million and thus are not indicative of rates offered by World First for smaller amounts.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD tests lows near 0.6550 after dismal Aussie Retail Sales, mixed China's PMIs

AUD/USD tests lows near 0.6550 after dismal Aussie Retail Sales, mixed China's PMIs

AUD/USD is testing lows near 0.6550 after Australian Retail Sales dropped by 0.4% in March while China's NBS April PMI data came in mixed. Upbeat China's Caixin Manufacturing PMI data fails to lift the Aussie Dollar amid a softer risk tone and the US Dollar rebound. 

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY rebounds to 157.00 after Monday's suspected intervention-led crash

USD/JPY rebounds to 157.00 after Monday's suspected intervention-led crash

USD/JPY is trading close to 157.00, staging a solid rebound in the Asian session on Tuesday. The pair reverses a part of heavy losses incurred on Monday after the Japanese Yen rallied hard on probable FX market intervention by Japan's authorities. Poor Japan's jobs and Retail Sales data weigh on the Yen.

USD/JPY News

Gold prices soften as traders gear up for Fed monetary policy decision

Gold prices soften as traders gear up for Fed monetary policy decision

Gold price snaps two days of gains, yet it remains within familiar levels, with traders bracing for the US Fed's monetary policy decision on May 1. The XAU/USD retreats below the daily open and trades at $2,334, down 0.11%, courtesy of an improvement in risk appetite. 

Gold News

BNB price risks a 10% drop as Binance founder and ex-CEO Changpeng Zhao eyes Tuesday sentencing

BNB price risks a 10% drop as Binance founder and ex-CEO Changpeng Zhao eyes Tuesday sentencing

Binance Coin price is dumping, with the one-day chart showing a defined downtrend. While the broader market continues to bleed, things could get worse for BNB price ahead of Binance executive Changpeng Zhao sentencing on Tuesday, April 30.

Read more

FX market still on intervention watch

FX market still on intervention watch

Asian foreign exchange traders will be particularly attentive to any signs of Japanese intervention on Tuesday, following reports of Tokyo's involvement in the market on Monday. This intervention action propelled the yen upward from its 34-year low of 160 per dollar, setting off shockwaves of volatility.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures