The Greenback continued moving higher on Tuesday on the back of supportive US home sales data, which came in 619k versus just 523k expected, one of the best level seen since 2008.

 

The Aussie – topsy-turvy times

There was a moderate nosedive in the Aussie overnight on the back of the RBA’s Glen Stevens, who was making his first appearance since the RBA surprise rate cut. During his prepared speech, he stated inflation is probably a little bit too weak. He also highlighted that the fallout risk from China referencing that its ‘’economic transition is on a scale that no-one has ever done before”.  RBA Stevens comments did provide some clarity to the mixed signals the markets was running with after the RBA slashed its forecasts for inflation. They also hinted its board needed some persuading to cut interest rates.

While the Governor provided little in the way of forward guidance, the China reference was enough to get the Aussie bears looking lower which accelerated in London as commodity prices, particularly gold, continued to slide. However, with oil prices rebounding mid-session in New York and US equity markets buoyant with the S&P500 + 1.4%, the Aussie found strong support at .7160. It has since rebounded to just below the .7200 handle in early APAC trade.

There was very constructive price action on equity markets overnight despite traders pricing in a greater likelihood of a summer Fed hike. Shifting investor sentiment suggests the market is viewing a likely Fed move optimistically inferring a rate hike would imply the Fed are very confident about the US economy.

Oil prices rallied when the American Petroleum Institute reported that U.S. crude supplies fell by 5.1 million barrels for the week ended May 20. The market was wrong-footed as expectations were running in the region of a 3.3 million draw.

 

YEN – getting a little support

The USDJPY found solid footing on the back of upbeat US economic data, improving global risk sentiment as well as growing support for the summer rate-hike camp. April’s Fed policy minutes revealed that four voting members (Cleveland, San Francisco, Richmond and Kansas City) supported an April rate hike.

With Fed speak ratcheting up the hawkish rhetoric, the significance of April’s policy minutes should not be understated. Specifically, rate hike support is up by two additional voting members (originally it was just Richmond and Kansas City) from the prior meetings. With current US data suggesting economic conditions are improving, the likelihood of a summer rate hike continues to gain momentum.

USDJPY has accelerated through the 110 resistance level in early APAC trade on positive USD momentum from  overnight markets.

 

 

Yuan – PBOC guessing game

There is lots of noise in the market surrounding the RMB reaction to a Fed hike. In particular, a reference to the leaked report suggesting the PBOC has moved off a market-based fix and setting the fix to suit their needs. This report has thrown a wrench into analyst CFETS models and partially explains the muted CNY reaction to a possible June rate hike. This revelation implies that the PBOC is driving the path of depreciation with stability in mind. So much for a market-based fixing mechanism,

I guess it’s back to the drawing board trying to decipher the PBOC’s exchange rate policy

 

Ringgit – at the mercy of the Fed (and oil)

 

The ‘’buy USD sell EM’’ macro theme has started to slow down suggesting markets are closer to a balance heading into June’s Fed decision.  For the MYR fortunes, it all boils down to the Fed and oil prices over the short term. Over the long run, the MYR will continue to face hurdles as the market re-prices the pace of the Fed hikes. The likely shift in the Fed hike trajectory curve will negatively affect Malaysia’s US-denominated borrowing costs, and a possible domestic interest rate cut if economic growth continues to deteriorate.


 

SPI Asset Management provides forex, commodities, and global indices analysis, in a timely and accurate fashion on major economic trends, technical analysis, and worldwide events that impact different asset classes and investors.

Our publications are for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell securities.

Opinions are the authors — not necessarily SPI Asset Management its officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. Losses can exceed investments.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to gains near 1.0750 ahead of US jobs report

EUR/USD clings to gains near 1.0750 ahead of US jobs report

EUR/USD clings to modest gains at around 1.0750 after closing the previous two days in positive territory. Investors eagerly await April jobs report from the US, which will include Nonfarm Payrolls and Unemployment Rate readings.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD advances to 1.2550, all eyes on US NFP data

GBP/USD advances to 1.2550, all eyes on US NFP data

The GBP/USD pair trades on a stronger note around 1.2550 amid the softer US Dollar on Friday. Market participants refrain from taking large positions as focus shifts to April Nonfarm Payrolls and ISM Services PMI data from the US.

GBP/USD News

Gold remains stuck near $2,300 ahead of US NFP

Gold remains stuck near $2,300 ahead of US NFP

Gold price struggles to gain any meaningful traction and trades in a tight channel near $2,300. The Fed’s less hawkish outlook drags the USD to a multi-week low and lends support to XAU/USD ahead of the key US NFP data.

Gold News

XRP edges up after week-long decline as Ripple files letter in reply to SEC’s motion

XRP edges up after week-long decline as Ripple files letter in reply to SEC’s motion

Ripple filed a letter to the court to support its April 22 motion to strike new expert materials. The legal clash concerns whether SEC accountant Andrea Fox's testimony should be treated as a summary or expert witness. 

Read more

US NFP Forecast: Nonfarm Payrolls gains expected to cool in April

US NFP Forecast: Nonfarm Payrolls gains expected to cool in April

The NFP report is expected to show that the US economy added 243,000 jobs last month, sharply lower than the 303,000 job creation seen in March. The Unemployment Rate is set to stay unchanged at 3.8% in the same period.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures