A Risk Rally In Spits And Spurts Amid Cautious Optimism On Coronavirus

 | Feb 12, 2020 08:23

h2 Market Overview/h2

The risk improvement spluttered somewhat yesterday, but there are signs that the market is beginning to take a view that the Coronavirus is past its worst. With the number of new cases at its lowest daily rise since the end of January, there is a sense of optimism that whatever methods that China has employed to get a handle on the situation, they may be working (even if they may appear somewhat severe). However, with the economic fallout yet to be determined on how manufacturing and supply lines have been hampered and growth negatively impacted, the optimism is slightly cautious still.Fed chair Powell notes the FOMC is “closely monitoring” the situation but the economic impact on the US seems to be rather slight at this stage. Interestingly also today, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand held monetary policy steady (no change at 1.00% expected), but also removed its easing bias as it only expected a short term impact of Coronavirus before growth picks up in the second half of the year. The switch out of safety means that Bond yields continue to rise. The US 10 year yield is another +2bps this morning, whilst gold and the yen are slipping.On the risk side, there is a continued sign of Chinese yuan recovery, the Aussie is also gaining ground, whilst the oil price is also showing signs of recovery. However, in equities, which has been a real place to see the risk rally, there is something of a move with the handbrake on, as Wall Street limped into the close last night. There is not the outright bullish response yet and futures are just slightly higher today. Cautious optimism seems to be the strategy.Wall Street closed mixed last night with the S&P 500 +0.2% at 3358, but with US futures another +0.2% higher today, there has been some decent support on Asian markets (Nikkei +0.7%, Shanghai Composite +0.9%). In Europe this translates to mild gains in early moves, with FTSE futures +0.2% and DAX futures also +0.2%.There is a further recovery in risk appetite across forex majors. The RBNZ decision has certainly helped NZD to outperform today which is over 1% higher against the dollar, whilst AUD and GBP also continue their recent rebounds. JPY is the underperformer increasingly.In commodities, the drift lower on gold is into a second day, whilst the recovery is once more having a go this morning on oil which is around +1.5% higher.It is a quiet day for the economic calendar today. The only real data point of the European morning is the Eurozone Industrial Production at 1000GMT which is expected to continue to deteriorate with a -1.6% decline in the month of December (after growing by +0.2% in November), which would mean a year on year decline of -2.3% (-1.5% in November). With little of note in the US session, the EIA Crude Oil Inventories at 15:30 GMT are expected to show stocks building by +2.9m barrels (+3.3m barrels last week).It is day 2 for Fed chair Powell Congressional testimonies this time to the Senate Banking Committee at 1500GMT. The written testimony is the same as yesterday, but the questions he fields will clearly be different and may pull some surprises out of the chair. There is another Fed speaker today with Patrick Harker (board member voter, who leans slightly hawkish) is speaking at 1330GMT.

h2 Chart of the Day – USD/CAD /h2
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Risk appetite is improving and with the oil price picking up, this should help the Canadian dollar. The signs of renewed correction on USD/CAD are growing. Last week we discussed the potential of the market finding resistance in the key band between 1.3300/1.3350 and yesterday’s bearish candle opens the prospect of the market starting to correct again. A broken three week uptrend comes with the RSI crossing decisively back below 70. This is the first time the RSI has done this since January 2019, and in each of the six occasions since the beginning of 2017 when the RSI has crossed back under 70, the market has engaged a decisive correction. MACD lines are slowing their advance and Stochastics are also rolling over now (not yet a confirmed bear cross). The hourly chart suggests the support at 1.3260 will be key to generating downside momentum initially and a breach would open 1.3100/1.3200 which both seem to be mid-range pivots. Yesterday’s bear candle has now left resistance at 1.3330 under 1.3350 which is key. This reversal needs confirmation still, but the signs are growing.