Market Brief

In Japan, the BoJ kept unchanged its asset purchased program at ¥80tn per year and maintained its assessment of the economy, saying that the economy has continued to recover moderately. The Nikkei extended gains and reached 20,174, up 0.92%. USD/JPY is currently testing the resistance lying at 123.20. On the medium-term, we expect USD/JPY to weaken further against the backdrop of disappointing US economic data. Yesterday, data from the US were mixed. The Philadelphia Business Outlook index rose to 15.2 in June versus 8 expected and 6.7 prior read. The index of US leading indicators surprised markets to the upside, jumping 0.7% in May after a similar performance in April. On the dark side, May CPI figures printed at 0.4%m/m versus 0.5% expected while Core CPI came in at 0.1%m/m – the smallest increase this year - versus 0.2% median forecast. In our opinion, the latest development in inflation trend indicate that the Fed will have to increase rate at a very moderate pace. Moreover, if the cost of living doesn’t increase in the US, it will force the Fed to start the tightening cycle from a later date. EUR/USD traded range-bound between 1.14 and 1.1350 in Tokyo after the sharp moves from yesterday. The euro will find support around 1.1220 (Fib 61.8% on May debasement) while the closest resistance can be found at 1.1467 (high from May 15).

In Brussels, EU officials called for an emergency summit after no agreement has been reached on Thursday between Greece and its creditors. European futures stabilised this morning with the DAX is 0.18%, the CAC down -0.07%, the Footsie down -0.01% and the SMI up 0.25%.

In Asia, mainland Chinese equities are in correction mode and dropped another 4% today as investors wonder whether the stock bubble is going to burst soon. The Shanghai Composite is down -3.97% while its tech-heavy counterpart, the Shenzhen Composite retreats -4.20%. In Australia, equities gain 1.31% after having lost 1.21% during the previous session. AUD/USD failed to stay above the 0.7814 support level (Fib 38.2% on May-June sell-off). The Aussie is now back into its 4 weeks range between 0.76 and 0.78. Next week, we expected AUD/USD to be mainly driven by the US dollar as the economic calendar will be very light.

In Switzerland yesterday, the SNB held its June monetary policy meeting and the outcome was mostly in line with expectations. The central bank maintained the 3-month Libor target range at between -1.25% and -0.25% and interest on sight deposit at -0.75%. The SNB also kept unchanged the negative interest exemption rule. On the data front, the bank expects inflation to reach the lowest point in Q3 2015 at -1.2%; they also revised the inflation forecast higher for the subsequent period to -1% in 2015 and -0.4% in 2016; positive inflation figures should make its comeback in 2017. On the monetary policy front, the SNB reiterated its view that the Swiss franc was overvalued and warned the markets that some foreign exchange market interventions are not ruled out. However, we don’t think that the SNB will take the risk to intervene actively in the Forex market as the Bank is playing against bigger players – the ECB and its QE program.

Today’s calendar is light with only some economic data from Canada (CPI, retail sales) and IBGE inflation from Brazil. Fed’s William and Mester will receive high attention after Yellen’s dovish speak.

Snap Shot

This report has been prepared by Swissquote Bank Ltd and is solely been published for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any currency or any other financial instrument. Views expressed in this report may be subject to change without prior notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by Swissquote Bank Ltd personnel at any given time. Swissquote Bank Ltd is under no obligation to update or keep current the information herein, the report should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgment.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD weakens further as US Treasury yields boost US Dollar

AUD/USD weakens further as US Treasury yields boost US Dollar

The Australian Dollar extended its losses against the US Dollar for the second straight day, as higher US Treasury bond yields underpinned the Greenback. On Wednesday, the AUD/USD lost 0.26% as market participants turned risk-averse. As the Asian session begins, the pair trades around 0.6577.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD stuck near midrange ahead of thin Thursday session

EUR/USD stuck near midrange ahead of thin Thursday session

EUR/USD is reverting to the near-term mean, stuck near 1.0750 and stuck firmly in the week’s opening trading range. Markets will be on the lookout for speeches from ECB policymakers, but officials are broadly expected to avoid rocking the boat amidst holiday-constrained market flows.

EUR/USD News

Gold price drops amid higher US yields awaiting next week's US inflation

Gold price drops amid higher US yields awaiting next week's US inflation

Gold remained at familiar levels on Wednesday, trading near $2,312 amid rising US Treasury yields and a strong US dollar. Traders await unemployment claims on Thursday, followed by Friday's University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment survey.

Gold News

President Biden threatens crypto with possible veto of Bitcoin custody among trusted custodians

President Biden threatens crypto with possible veto of Bitcoin custody among trusted custodians

Joe Biden could veto legislation that would allow regulated financial institutions to custody Bitcoin and crypto. Biden administration’s stance would disrupt US SEC’s work to protect crypto market investors and efforts to safeguard broader financial system.

Read more

US inflation data in the market purview

US inflation data in the market purview

With next week's pivotal US inflation data looming, we're witnessing a stall in stock market momentum and an uptick in US Treasury yields. This shift comes amid murmurs of hawkish sentiment from Fed speak. Indeed the mind games intensify even further as investors cling to their rate cut hopes.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures