As Equity Markets Remain Fearful, Forex Is Relatively Stable

 | Feb 09, 2018 11:01

Market Overview

Fear is a terrible affliction in markets. Right now there is a fear that inflation is showing signs of running away in major economies and there will need to be a response by major central banks to combat the negative impact. Suddenly the market is waking up to the fact that the era of ultra-loose monetary policy is over.

The Bank of England does not normally garner too much attention outside the shores of the UK, however in signalling the need to hike rates sooner and possibly for longer in order to combat the impact of inflation, this is yet another central bank positioning itself for tightening quicker than the market had anticipated. However, the fear has been most keenly felt in equity markets which have for so long been the major beneficiaries of loose monetary policy.

The big headline move was a four figure drop for the Dow into the close last night (in percentage terms just over 4%). Safe haven assets have benefited, with the yen and gold positive. However the interesting move is a lack of real drama on Treasuries. Perhaps this is because every time yields start to rise, the fear floods into equity markets and subsequently the safe haven status of Treasuries leads to investors buying bonds again. However, this is meaning a relatively stable reaction across major forex pairs.

This morning we see risk sentiment actually improving again, with the euro and sterling higher, the commodity currencies also finding a degree of support, whilst the yen is weaker. Overnight, in Congress the Senate has passed the short term funding bill that should help to avert the US government shutdown, whilst it is interesting to see European markets mixed rather than drastically lower in early moves. Chinese inflation was fairly much in line, save for a slight miss on the PPI overnight, but that meant inflation is still falling in China . China CPI dropped to +1.5% (+1.5% exp, +1.8% last) with the China PPI at +4.3% (+4.4% exp, +4.9% last).

Wall Street had another day of precipitous selling with the Dow dropping 1032 ticks, and the S&P 500 -3.8% at 2581. Asian markets followed suit with sharp losses across the board (Nikkei -2.3%), however European markets seem to be holding up relatively well so far, only marginally lower in early moves as US futures suggest a bounce of over 1% currently.

In forex, there is actually a reasonable degree of support for positive sentiment, with the yen and the Swiss franc both underperforming, whilst commodity currencies are doing well.

In commodities, {{8830|gold}} is stable, whilst oil remains under corrective pressure, down over half a percent again.

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The market focus for the day comes largely with the UK Industrial Production numbers at 09:30 GMT, with the December monthly expected to fall by -0.9% which would drag the year on year data back to +0.3% (from +2.5%) which would continue the recent decline and would be the lowest since April 2016.

Canadian Unemployment is at 13:30 GMT which is expected to show the rate ticking slightly higher to 5.8% (from 5.7%).

Watch out also for the comments from the Bank of England’s MPC member Jon Cunliffe who is speaking at 16:45 GMT.

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

The euro seems to be positioning for strength against the commodities currencies (the Aussie and Kiwi). On EUR/NZD for the past few weeks the euro has struggled to breakout above 1.7080 which has become a key pivot level. The market tested it last week only to pull back, whilst also once more the market tested the resistance during yesterday’s session. An intraday pullback prevented a breakout, but the bulls are increasingly gaining control at higher levels and the market is poised for a move. Early gains today add to this assertion. A small uptrend channel is in process now with a series of higher lows, the latest of which have been at 1.6780 and this week at 1.6840. Momentum indicators are finding more positive configuration, with the 45/50 area having previously been an area where resistance had formed during December and January, is now an area where the bulls look to return. The hourly chart suggests that there is still a ranging look to the market but a positive bias within the range. This all suggests continued pressure on 1.7080. Initial support today comes in at 1.6915 with corrections within the uptrend channel seen as a chance to buy. A breakout above 1.7080 opens 1.7265/1.7480.