FX Daily Planet: New York Open
FX Daily Planet: New York Open
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View for the day
The
overnight rally in risk markets led by the Nikkei report on
BoJ’s possible extension in QE continued into the European
session. European equities made modest gains and commodity
currencies continued to grind higher with CAD lagging
behind. That said, without any market moving news or
release, G-10 currencies trade in tight ranges ahead of
payrolls, moving less than 0.5% The long-awaited meeting
between the Greek Prime Minister Papandreou and German
Chancellor Merkel ended as a non-event. Notably, the 2yr
Greek bond yield sharply dropped 74bp (but began rising as
the result of the meeting hit the wires albeit still 49bp
lower on the day).Despite the tightening in German-Greek
spreads, EUR continued to range trade along with other
majors. The odd disconnect in EUR reflect a reluctance to
take positions ahead of payrolls.
In Asian morning, the Nikkei Newspaper reported that the BoJ is now considering a further implementation of QE in April. While the news contributed to the rally in the Nikkei and underperformance in JPY, this should not come as a surprise. Indeed, our Japanese economics team has been highlighting the possibility of further easing in the face of further deterioration in the stock market and appreciation in JPY. We believe that it should not have any significant impact on JPY due to following reasons: (1) experience in the previous QE period (Mar 01 to Mar 06) suggests that downward pressure on JPY from QE would be limited, (2) current real interest rate in Japan is higher than the level during the previous QE period, and (3) the MoF is highly unlikely to conduct JPY-selling intervention (during the previous QE period, the MoF sold JPY42 trillion in total between 2001 and 2004).
The main focus in the US session will be on the payrolls
release. Our economics team expects a more
bearish-than-consensus drop of 90K (consensus: -68K). That
said, any downside surprise from today’s payrolls should
not be as harmful to risk markets as they would be in the
usual time, given the most weakness will be attributable to
weather. In addition, White House Summers has already
signaled that the recent snowstorms may shave approximately
100K from the payrolls number. Therefore, the near-term
risks seem to be skewed towards the strong payrolls further
lifting risk markets at the cost of USD and JPY.
Overnight news
EUR:
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Greek Prime
Minister George Papandreou has “taken the bull by the
horns” with the government’s announcement of additional
budget-deficit cuts. The Greek program is showing results
and the bond issue yesterday “gives us cause for
optimism,”
EUR: Juncker, who heads the group
of European Union euro-area finance
ministers, said
he’s “very happy” with Greece’s proposals to reign
in its budget deficit
EUR: ECB President
Trichet said a “very large majority” of Greeks is
backing the government’s plans to cut spending. He said,
“It’s very important that the Greek government took this
decision, which was courageous but absolutely
necessary”.
EUR: January Germany factory orders
4.3%m/m vs 1.3%.
GBP: February PPI input 7.8% vs
6.9%, PPI output 4.0%oya vs 4.1%.
GBP: The U.K.
government may chose to hold an election on April 15, almost
a month earlier than most strategists have forecast, the
Scotsman reported, citing unidentified people in the ruling
Labour Party.
SEK: February budget balance
recorded surplus of SEK 43.9bn vs prev. SEK
46.6bn.
NOK: January IP 0.3%m/m vs prev.
-0.6%.
JPY: The Nikkei Newspaper reported this
morning that the BoJ is likely to consider further monetary
easing through April.
CNY: Chinese Premier Wen
reaffirmed “appropriately easy monetary stance and active
fiscal policy” and that China would seek to keep CNY
basically steady at a reasonable and balanced level.
USD: Fed’s Evens said that monetary tightening
is still quite a ways away.
USD: Fed’s
Bulllard said that he doubts whether the Fed should continue
to commit to hold rates exceptionally low for an extended
period. He also commented, “I do think the Europeans will
come to a good solution on Greece”.
Today’s
watchlist (all times GMT; +11hrs for Sydney, +9hrs for
Tokyo, -5hrs for New York)
US: Feb
unemployment rate (%, sa) @13:30 (JPM: 9.9, Cons.: 9.8); Feb
non-farm payrolls (ch m/m 000s, sa) @13:30 (JPM: -90, Cons:
-68); Feb average hourly earnings (%m/m, sa) @13:30 (JPM:
0.1, Cons: 0.2); Jan consumer credit (ch m/m, US$bn) @ 20:00
(Cons: -3.8)
Overnight price action
FX: G-10 currencies traded in
tight ranges with high beta currencies outperforming (with
the exception of CAD) and JPY underperforming the most
FX vol: vols remained unchanged across the board
ahead of non-farm payrolls.
Commodities: Oil up
+0.6% to $80.7/barrel, gold up +0.2% to
$1135.8/oz
Bonds: German-Greek 2yr bond spreads
tightened 54bp (10yr bond spread tightened 6bp); bond market
remained quiet elsewhere.
Equities: European
equities made gains of around 0.5%.
Technical View for the day
With the
S&P500 tackling its key-T-junction at 1125 the bulls and
bears are currently in the ring trying to turn the odds in
their favor. Below 1125 and as long as no decisive daily
close above (i.e. above 1130) is displayed the bears remain
in a favorable position as a stronger sell-off inclusive a
potential break below neckline support at 1049 should be the
logical conclusion. A decisive break above 1125 would on the
other hand only be bullish short-term as projected targets
for a major cycle top are already cutting in at 1178 and at
1215/22/28. Taken together, a stronger risk consolidation is
still looming with equivalent consequences for FX markets in
terms of a stronger USD and a mildly stronger JPY. Commodity
currencies look to be set to extend their recent
consolidation whereas EUR/USD and GBP across board seem to
perform a temporary consolidation only. For the latter to
change its nature it would require a break above 1.3840/71
in EUR/USD and above .15354/1.5424 in Cable.
Research
from the region you may have missed
What not to do at 8:35 tomorrow
morning
https://mm.jpmorgan.com/stp/t/c.do?i=C1387-3A1&u=a_p*d_382601.pdf*h_-2jg4e06
China: a fairly balanced government work report as expected; emphasizing policy continuity and flexibility
https://mm.jpmorgan.com/stp/t/c.do?i=C164D-155&u=a_p*d_382819.html*h_2tauoi4b
JPY: The story on the budget has nothing to do
with the possibility of
intervention
https://mm.jpmorgan.com/stp/t/c.do?i=C1357-128&u=a_p*d_382590.html*h_ur91v8j6
Nikkei newspaper reports
further easing by the BoJ. Any implications for
JPY?
https://mm.jpmorgan.com/stp/t/c.do?i=C15F9-128&u=a_p*d_382795.pdf*h_3bdduqnp
ENDS