Safe Haven Bias Remains, But Are There Signs Of Stability Forming?

 | Aug 09, 2019 10:24

Market Overview

The degree of panic that had been spreading throughout major markets in the earlier part of the week has begun to show signs of stabilisation. Treasury yields which had spiked lower seem to be consolidating, as the 10 year yield hovers around 1.70%. It would seem that traders are now becoming more accustomed to shock of Dollar/Yuan trading above 7.00. The daily fixing from the PBoC has now been above 7.00 for the past few days but was again today lower than the market had been anticipating (at 7.0136 versus an expectation of 7.0222). There is still a safe haven bias in markets with gold holding gains above $1500 (although there are signs of a consolidation) and the yen still strong below 106 versus the dollar. However there is also less indiscriminate selling across the higher risk commodity currencies for now. The key for risk appetite to sustainably improve would now be for yields to continue to stabilise and start to track back higher. We have seen Wall Street rebounding and the VIX falling sharply in the past couple of sessions. US futures are back lower again today and this will be a test of whether this opens the door to renewed selling, or there is more of an appetite to buy. Our chart of the day, Aussie/Yen tends to be a decent indicator of risk appetite and has been showing good signs of stability in recent sessions.

Wall Street closed with strong recovery gains yesterday as the S&P 500 bounced by +1.9% to 2938, but the bulls are being tested again this morning with early US futures showing a -0.5% decline. Asian markets were mixed the Nikkei +0.4% whilst the Shanghai Composite was -0.7%. In Europe there is a cautious start to trading, with both FTSE futures and DAX futures a shade lower at -0.1%. In forex, there is a minor USD slip across the majors, with JPY performing well still but also an improvement in the commodity currencies too with AUD and NZD rebounding. In commodities the gold price remains above $1500, whilst oil has started the day steady.

There is a UK focus on the economic calendar today. The prelim reading of Q2 UK GDP is at 0930BST with the market expecting zero growth for the quarter (Q1 final reading was +0.3%). Traders will also be looking out for the UK Trade Balance for June which is expected to slip further into a deficit of -£11.8bn (back from -£11.5bn in May). Also the UK Industrial Production for June is expected to have deteriorated to -0.2% for the 12 month period (down from +0.9% in May). Factory gate inflation for the US PPI is at 1330BST and is expected to remain at +1.7% for the headline PPI in July (+1.7% in June), whilst core PPI is expected to tick slightly higher to +2.4% (from +2.3% in June)

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

We continue to hold a strong medium to longer term yen outlook, but there are signs that a near term retracement of some of the recent strength could be showing against the Aussie. After a run accelerated lower in recent weeks, AUD/JPY is beginning to form a series of positive candlesticks, which imply a potential rebound looking to form. Wednesday’s rally into the close all but formed a bull hammer candlestick and with bull confirmation yesterday, the market is edging back higher. Seemingly intraday weakness is being bought into again this morning. There is room for a retracement but momentum indicators still have plenty to do to convince. There are buy signals hinting but still unconfirmed, with the RSI and Stochastics ticking higher. The bulls will be looking for a close above initial resistance at 72.68 to suggest a rally is really gathering momentum. If this can be seen, then there is plenty of room to run for a bounce into 73.93 which is the resistance of the old June low. Ultimately, we would continue to see the yen as a long term outperformer on forex majors and especially against the Aussie. Any failing technical rally is a chance to sell, with initial support at 71.60 needing to hold now otherwise the market will slip back towards 70.75 again.