Euro Looks For Support Amid Potential Italian Budget Compromise

 | Oct 03, 2018 12:06

Market Overview

The dollar outperformance of the past week have not been due to dollar strength, but more to do with concerns in the Eurozone over Italian debt and the negative impact on the euro. The risk averse impact has sent the dollar higher. However, there are question marks over how sustainable this move is. Treasury yields are almost exactly where they were prior to the FOMC rate hike a week ago.

The Fed hiked and remained confident, whilst Fed chair Powell remained very confident in a speech yesterday. However, the Italian politician who questioned Italy’s participation in the euro backtracked yesterday and this appears to be stabilising the euro now. Furthermore, overnight reports in Italian media suggest that a compromise could be met to reduce the budget deficit back to 2.0% in the coming years back from 2.4% next year.

If the fears surrounding the Italian budget can begin to subside then Eurozone yield spreads will unwind (Italian 10 years over German bunds spread is back from a five year high of 3.0% this morning) then the euro will regain its poise once more. Italian yields are 10 basis points lower this morning which is encouraging in early moves.Risk appetite is relatively stable today and equities are finding a degree of support.

Wall Street closed mixed yesterday, with the Dow higher, S&P 500 all but flat at 2923 and the NASDAQ mildly lower. Futures are looking to form support with the pick-up in sentiment today.

In forex, there is support for the euro today and sterling is being dragged with it. The yen is a mild underperformer along with the Kiwi.

In commodities, the rebound on gold is holding well, whilst oil is into a second day of consolidation after the recent run higher.

Traders will be on the lookout for services PMIs today in addition to a potential steer for Friday’s payrolls. The final Eurozone Services PMI is at 0900BST which are expected to be confirmed at 54.7 54.7 flash reading, up from 54.4 in July). There is also the final Eurozone Composite PMI which is expected to be back at 54.2 (which would be a shade down from the 54.5 last month).

The UK Services PMI at 09:30 BST s expected to drop back a shade to 54.0 (from 54.3 last month), whilst the US ISM Non-Manufacturing at 15:00 BST is expected to fall back to 58.1 (from 58.5 last month). There is also the ADP Employment change today at 13:15 BST and a forecast of 187,000 (163,000 last month) is close to the current payrolls expectations for Friday.

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The EIA oil inventories are 15:30 BST are likely to cause some intraday volatility on the oil price, with crude stocks expected to build by +1.5m barrels (+1.9m barrels last week) with distillates expected to drawdown by -1.7m barrels (-2.2m barrels last week) and gasoline stocks with a build of +1.2m (+1.5m last week). Finally there are a couple of FOMC speakers to watch out for, with Lael Brainard (permanent voting dove) at 1900BST and Loretta Mester (voting hawk) at 19:15 BST.

Chart of the Day – EUR/CHF

The euro has been under pressure across the majors in recent sessions with fears over Italian debt. However, one major that does not seem to have made much of an impression in this time has been the Swiss franc (which has also been slammed against the dollar). We spoke about a base pattern on EUR/CHF last week and this is still a work in process. A couple of sessions have been somewhat choppy with long downside tails on the candlesticks but it is interesting to see the market continues to buy into the weakness. This is forming a recovery uptrend channel over the past couple of weeks and if this move continues, then a test of the 1.1450 August resistance should be seen. A broken two month downtrend has improved the near to medium term outlook and the market is now supported by a rising 21 day moving average (at 1.1305) which was previously resistance.