Forex Markets Lacking Conviction; U.S. Yields Lose Direction

 | Jun 27, 2018 08:55

Market Overview

With the dollar starting to claw back some of the lost ground of the past week, forex markets have begun to look increasingly uncertain.

Market sentiment remains bogged down in concerns over trade wars which have seen 10-Year Treasury yields lose direction and meant that conviction has gone out of the market.

Other factors helped to support the dollar overall yesterday though and the rise in Italian bond yields ahead of a key bond auctions later in the week have weighed on the euro (although the Bund/Treasury spread is still pointing towards support for the euro on the yield differentials).

Sterling has been hit as incoming Bank of England policy committee voter, Jonathan Haskel, seemed to suggest he is fairly dovish in his first real indication of stance yesterday. However, as we near the end of the quarter there is little real direction of not today across the forex majors.

The oil price has been boosted as the US is urging its allies to boycott Iranian supplies after November whilst a surprisingly large draw-down in the API crude inventories is also supportive.

Equity markets are being buoyed by the support for oil, although after the somewhat listless rebound yesterday, if the lack of conviction continues there is little to drive any decisive rally.

Wall Street closed marginally higher with the Dow marginally positive and the S&P 500 +0.2% higher at 2723. However, with US futures suggesting a pulling back on these gains today, the Asian markets have struggled (Nikkei -0.3%). European markets are basically flat and once more lack the conviction in a recovery.

In forex, there is a mixed picture developing for the dollar as yesterday’s gains are consolidated. The euro has ticked marginally higher, whilst the yen has also clawed back some ground, however the New Zealand dollar is the big underperformer eve ahead of tonight’s RBNZ meeting announcement.

In commodities, it seems as though there is little respite for gold which is once more lower, by around $3, whilst oil is consolidating the strong gains from yesterday.

The main data point of the day for traders to be interested in is the US Durable Goods Orders release at 13:30 BST which is expected to see core (ex-transport) grow by +0.5% for the month of May (+0.9% in April). Pending Home Sales are at 15:00 BST and are expected to growth by +0.5% on the month (last month was a fall of -1.3%).

The EIA oil inventories are at 15:30 BST and are expected to show crude stocks in drawdown by -2.5m barrels (-5.9m barrels last week) whilst distillates are expected to build by +1.0m barrels (+2.7m last week) and gasoline stocks build by +1.0m (+3.3m last week).

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Very late in the session we have the Reserve Bank of New Zealand monetary policy at 22:00 BST which with little real data changing since the May meeting is expected to hold the Official Cash Rate steady at +1.75%. New Zealand inflation is still subdued and should mean that a dovish tone should persist in the statement.

Markets are currently not expecting an increase in the OCR until Q3 2019. Aside from the data, traders will also be interested in the comments of the “unreliable boyfriend” Bank of England Governor Mark Carney who speaks at 09:30 BST at the Financial Stability Report press conference. FOMC voting member Randall Quarles (centrist/hawk) speaks at 16:00 BST.

Chart of the Day – Brent Crude

With such variation in the spread between WTI and Brent Crude, the technical analysis of Brent can be significantly different to its US oil peer. There has been a very well-defined downtrend on Brent Crude in the past five weeks as the market has corrected back towards the old key breakout at $71.30 only to find a basis of support at $72.40 which is also above a 12 month uptrend. With the support also building in the wake of the OPEC meeting, this near to medium term correction within the longer term uptrend looks to be another chance to buy. The momentum indicators have stabilized from the corrective phase, with the RSI bouncing above 50, whilst the Stochastics have broken out to four week highs and the MACD lines are on the brink of a bull cross today. Yesterday’s bull candle broke the five week downtrend but also took the market above initial resistance at $75.85 which is a first lower high of the correction. This effectively completes a small base breakout implying around $3 of further recovery and means the June high at $77.60 comes back into play. There is now support around $75.85 with the post OPEC low of $73.75 adding further support.