Next report will be published on 4th January, 2016

Outlook:

Today we get the US trade deficit, Case-Shiller home prices for Oct and consumer confidence. Home prices, despite the huge lag, are probably the most interesting. Bloomberg reports the forecast is a rise of 5.6% y/y, about the same as September (5.45%). For the previ-ous year, the rise was 4.35%, so we will still have a modest improvement. At least it’s not rabid infla-tion, nor a drop.

We are not going to ask you to suffer through a look back at 2015 or a set of predictions about next year that will almost certainly turn out to be dead wrong. At this point, it looks like oil prices will continue to be a driving force and probably to the downside, maybe even to $25. But Saudi Arabia could change its self-destructive policy or some other supply constraint could come along. Equity market analysts say further oil price drops will be negative for equities, as we have seen this year, but we confess we don’t see why. Lower energy costs should boost economic activity and put more money in various pockets, including consumer pockets, so why it’s equity-negative is a mystery.

The FT’s smart editor Authers frets today about ETF’s becoming the font of market turmoil in other are-as after we saw the junk bond ETF meltdown, but for once we wonder if Authers has it right. He usually does but at a guess, it’s excess leverage behind an Event turning into a Crisis, and we don’t have that in ETF’s, although the size alone is pretty scary ($3 trillion).

And next year will be awful for those who follow US politics. It’s embarrassing that the leading political figure today is a vulgar, crude, bigoted huckster. Other countries have their embarrassments, too (think Berlusconi), but that’s cold comfort. The other leading figure is not likeable and not trusted by a majori-ty of those polled, and besides, she’s married to Bill Clinton. Bill is a talented politician but honestly, we don’t want Hillary because of Bill and we certainly don’t want Jeb! because of W. That pretty much leaves Bernie and Chris Christie.

Going into Q1, we expect the shorter-term yields to continue to firm, data willing, and the dollar to re-cover, perhaps to the 1.0500 and parity we had expected for year-end. That scenario has not yet been killed—just delayed. And keep your hands off emerging market assets and currencies. As we have been noting all year, the EM’s are mismanaged and over-indebted in rising currencies. It cannot end well.

Holiday Schedule: This is the last morning report until Monday, Jan 4. Happy New Year!

CurrentSignalSignalSignal
CurrencySpotPositionStrengthDateRateGain/Loss
USD/JPY120.42SHORT USDNEW*WEAK12/28/15120.480.05%
GBP/USD1.4824SHORT GBPSTRONG11/06/151.51372.07%
EUR/USD1.0969LONG EUROWEAK12/08/151.08581.02%
EUR/JPY132.12SHORT EURONEW*WEAK12/04/15132.380.20%
EUR/GBP0.7399LONG EUROWEAK10/23/150.71942.85%
USD/CHF0.9885SHORT USDWEAK12/08/150.99730.88%
USD/CAD1.3938LONG USDWEAK10/28/151.32355.31%
NZD/USD0.6865LONG NZDWEAK12/04/150.66413.37%
AUD/USD0.7270SHORT AUDWEAK12/18/150.7137-1.86%
AUD/JPY87.53SHORT AUDWEAK12/10/1588.801.43%
USD/MXN17.2347LONG USDSTRONG12/07/1516.72583.04%

This morning FX briefing is an information service, not a trading system. All trade recommendations are included in the afternoon report.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD: Further losses retarget the 200-day SMA

AUD/USD: Further losses retarget the 200-day SMA

Further gains in the greenback and a bearish performance of the commodity complex bolstered the continuation of the selling pressure in AUD/USD, which this time revisited three-day lows near 0.6560.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD: Further weakness remains on the cards

EUR/USD: Further weakness remains on the cards

EUR/USD added to Tuesday’s pullback and retested the 1.0730 region on the back of the persistent recovery in the Greenback, always against the backdrop of the resurgence of the Fed-ECB monetary policy divergence.

EUR/USD News

Gold flirts with $2,320 as USD demand losses steam

Gold flirts with $2,320 as USD demand losses steam

Gold struggles to make a decisive move in either direction and moves sideways in a narrow channel above $2,300. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield clings to modest gains near 4.5% and limits XAU/USD's upside.

Gold News

Bitcoin price dips to $61K range, encourages buying spree among BTC fish, dolphins and sharks

Bitcoin price dips to $61K range, encourages buying spree among BTC fish, dolphins and sharks

Bitcoin (BTC) price is chopping downwards on the one-day time frame, while the outlook seen in the one-week period is a horizontal trade. In this shakeout moment, data shows that large holders are using the correction to buy up BTC.

Read more

Navigating the future of precious metals

Navigating the future of precious metals

In a recent episode of the Vancouver Resource Investment Conference podcast, hosted by Jesse Day, guests Stefan Gleason and JP Cortez shared their expert analysis on the dynamics of the gold and silver markets and discussed legislative efforts to promote these metals as sound money in the United States.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures