Risk Still Positive As U.S. Removes China From Its Currency Manipulator List

 | Jan 14, 2020 08:24

Market Overview

The decks are being cleared for the signing of “phase one” of a trade agreement between the US and China. With translations done, both sides are ready for the signing in Washington tomorrow. The US has even sweetened the deal by removing China from its “currency manipulator” list (which it was put on back in August). This was an easy win for both sides as no reasonable assessment of the yuan would suggest that the PBoC has been manipulating it (if anything the opposite). So for the US to magnanimously remove this status is simply good optics in front of the deal which helps relations, but effectively achieves little other than improve relations between the two.

Market sentiment has taken a leap forward early this week, but there is a risk that it could become a “buy on rumour, sell on fact” moment. There is much to question about how much extra of US agricultural products that China can buy to make a difference. The most important part of the agreement is over forced technology transfers, however, something that again will be difficult to immediately measure. On market moves, the yen is under pressure at seven month lows against the dollar. However, this move is something of a disconnect to yield differentials and needs to be watched. Gold also remains under pressure. Once the dust settles on “phase one” and the difficulties of subsequent phases come out, will markets be so ebullient.

Adding to today’s risk appetite is that China’s trade data showed signs of positivity as the surplus increased in December to +$46.8bn (from +$37.9bn in November). Although this was not as much as the $48.0bn expected, China did see exports increasing by +7.6% and imports increasing by +16.3%, both of which were better than forecast.

Wall Street closed solidly higher once more with the S&P 500 +0.7% at 3288 for another all-time high. Although US futures are a shade lighter this morning (-0.1%) Asian markets have been broadly positive (Nikkei +0.7%, Shanghai Composite -0.3%). In Europe, there is a mildly positive open in prospect with FTSE futures and DAX futures +0.1% higher.

In forex, there is limited real direction across the majors, although recent weakness for both JPY and GBP continues.

In commodities, gold and silver have continued lower early today, whilst oil is all but flat.

It is a quiet European morning on the economic calendar until US inflation into the afternoon. The US CPI for December is at 13:30 GMT and is expected to show headline CPI increasing by +0.3% on the month to +2.3% YoY (from +2.1% in November). Core US CPI is expected to grow by +0.2% and leave YoY at +2.3% (+2.3% in November).

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Also be on the lookout for Fed speaker John Williams (NYSE:WMB) (voter, centrist) who gives a speech at 1400GMT.

Chart of the Day – Silver

The accelerated rise of silver has come under decisive retracement pressure in the past week, but could the move go further? The pullback from a four month high of $18.85 has already unwound to the 50% Fibonacci retracement (of $16.50/$18.85) at $17.68. What is interesting is that this basis of support is also around what is now a neckline of a head and shoulders top at $17.75. With renewed corrective pressure from yesterday continuing today, the pattern is close to completion. Momentum indicators have been unwinding in the past week, with the Stochastics and RSI falling around their neutral points. However, this comes as the MACD lines are now posting a bear cross. The near term outlook is still very uncertain but the $17.75 neckline support will now be seen as an important near term gauge. If this is breached on a closing basis whilst being confirmed by RSI below 50, it would be a key breakdown which would also imply a much deeper corrective move. The next pivot support is $17.20/$17.30 area as an initial target, with 61.8% Fib at $17.40. Resistance is at $17.95 (38.2% Fib) and the key lower high at $18.15.