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Archive for May, 2008

Dollar slips against yen in Asia

Posted by stevefx on May 23, 2008

AP
Dollar slips against yen in Asia
Friday May 23, 3:44 am ET

Dollar slips against yen in Asia but remains supported by falling oil prices

TOKYO (AP) — The dollar slipped against the yen Friday in Asia but held firm as investors cheered a decline in oil prices.

The July crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange hit a record over $135 a barrel on Thursday before later falling back around $4.

“The dollar moved in a narrow range but held steady on positive factors such as a fall in oil prices and overnight gains on Wall Street,” said Hidekazu Tsujimoto, a dealer at Mizuho Bank.

The greenback was quoted at 104.06 yen midafternoon in Tokyo, slightly down from 104.14 yen in New York late Thursday.

Overall sentiment for the dollar remained positive in Tokyo as traders welcomed the fall in global oil prices and better-than-expected U.S. employment-related data.

In electronic trading, the July crude oil contract on Nymex was around $131.50 a barrel midafternoon in Singapore.

The U.S. Labor Department said Thursday the number of workers seeking unemployment benefits declined by 9,000 last week to 365,000. The market had expected a slight increase.

Meanwhile, the euro was quoted at $1.5738 midafternoon in Tokyo, up from $1.5724 in New York.

In other Asian currencies, the dollar was quoted at 32.08 to the Thai baht, up from 31.92, and at $1.3601 to the Singapore dollar, down from $1.3606.

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Top Currency Trading Ideas for the Week of May 19, 2008

Posted by stevefx on May 20, 2008

Top Currency Trading Ideas for the Week of May 19, 2008

Monday, 19 May 2008 13:09:20 GMT

Written by Jamie Saettele, Technical Currency Strategist

The USD likely continues to fall this week.  From a reward/risk standoint, the GBPUSD is probably the best opportunity over the next few months.

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It remains possible that a large 4th wave (IV) is underway towards the 1.43/1.47 area but we presented an alternate last week as market psychology was indicative of a bottom. The alternate (in red) treats the recent decline as wave iv in a 5 wave advance from 1.4310. Wave v would complete wave III within the 5 wave advance from 1.2482 and give way to the larger correction back to the mid 1.40s.

Visit our recently updated Euro Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

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The push through 1.5570 confirms that our bullish stance is correct (and also completes an inverse head and shoulders). The rally from 1.5283 could be a series of 1st and 2nd waves or wave i of a diagonal. Either way, look higher near term. Risk can moved to 1.5396, but support should be strong in the 1.5533/55 zone.

STRATEGY: Bullish, against 1.5396, target TBD

Visit our recently updated Euro Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

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The USDJPY count that treats the rally from 95.72 as a 4th wave is valid as long as 107.20 remains intact. The structure of the rally from 95.72 and weakness last week support our bearish argument. The bear case is strong below 107.20 although price ideally remains below 105.70.

Visit our recently updated Yen Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

05-19-08techs5

We remain bearish as long as the USDJPY is below 105.70 (which has come close to being breached seemingly this entire week). The potential for a sizeable decline in a 3rd of a 3rd wave within the bear cycle from 105.70 does exist.” The count described remains favored but the alternate treats the consolidation since 105.70 as an X wave (probably will form into a triangle), which will lead to a new high in wave Z before the larger decline resumes.

Visit our recently updated Yen Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

STRATEGY: Bearish, against 105.70, target TBD

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Bigger picture, a 5 wave advance from 1.7047 is complete at 2.1160. Therefore, a large 3 wave correction is underway from 2.1160. The first leg of that correction (A) is complete at 1.9337. We previously favored the idea that the B wave top was in place at 2.0397 but the way in which the decline has unfolded from there gives more weight to the alternate count; that treats wave B as a complex correction that will not end until above 2.0397. The rally should be strong. Most final legs of corrections are strong moves and serve to convince the majority of market participants that the previous trend (in this case, up) is back underway.

Visit our recently updated British Pound Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

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It is likely then that a complex correction (W-X-Y) is unfolding since the 1/22 low at 1.9337. Within wave X, the two legs of the decline would be equal at 1.9228. This does not mean that Cable will reach that level but it is an area to expect support. In summary, we expect a larger rally to begin in the next few days (there is the possibility that a low is in place at 1.9364). A bullish bias is warranted against 1.9362

Visit our recently updated British Pound Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

STRATEGY: Bullish, against 1.9362, target above 2.04

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The drop from 1.1105 was wave 5 within a 5 wave drop from 1.3295. Under this count, a major low is in place and the USDCHF is working higher towards Fibo resistance; which does not begin until 1.0840. Former support at 1.0728 may provide resistance as well.

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We view the rally from .9674 as an A-B-C advance (corrective) but this does not mean that the larger downtrend is back underway (similar to the EURUSD). The advance may well be the first leg in a larger, more complex upward correction but a sizeable decline is expected regardless (probably into parity).

STRATEGY: Bearish, against 1.0624, target below 1.0389

05-19-08techs10

The decline from the 2002 high at 1.6189 may be complete as a long term double zigzag corrective decline. If this count is correct, then a multi-year low is in place for the USDCAD.

Visit our recently updated Canadian Dollar Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

05-19-08techs11

The USDCAD count is tracking well. We had mentioned in recent days that “the decline is expected then to continue until measured support, which begins at .9945 and extends until .9841. The larger bullish bias is valid against .9710.” The pair is nearing support from the 61.8% of .9710-1.0324 at .9945. The next level of potential support is just below there at .9903 (100% extension of 1.0324-.9987/1.0241).

Visit our recently updated Canadian Dollar Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency

05-19-08techs12

Longer term, the AUDUSD is in the process of forming a major multi year top. We view the advance from the 2001 low as an A-B-C advance. The rally from the 2004 low at .6771 is wave C. The rally through the November 2007 high at .9400 satisfies minimum expectations for wave 5 of C from .8512. The longer term implications are that a multi-year top will form near 1.00 and the AUDUSD will decline significantly.

05-19-08techs13

The rally from .8952 is wave C of a 5 of the diagonal that was discussed above. This break to the upside could lead to a test of a target near 1 (.9936) before the larger reversal. Near term support is at .9440/80.

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The break of a support line drawn off of the 8/17/07 and 1/22/08 lows strongly suggests that the wave C decline has started. The long term count calls for this C wave to eventually end below .5927.

05-19-08techs15

Kiwi has reversed in impressive fashion. The break through .7727 negates the near term bearish bias. The Fibo zone at .7783/.7850 is potential resistance. There are 5 waves up from .7536, indicating additional bullish potential. Look for support at .7682.

Tell us what you think about this report: contact the strategist about the article at jsaettele@dailyfx.com

[1] STRATEGY is a quick summary of our best technical ideas. The ideas are subjective and are subject to change everyday although trades are typically held for at least a few days and sometimes a few weeks or more. Ideas are also included for crosses throughtout the week; these are published at separate articles at DailyFX.

[2] TREND ANALYSIS is based on a rolling pivot model. LONG TERM TREND is determined by the last 3 months of price data (high, low, close). SHORT TERM TREND is determined by the last 4 weeks of price data (high, low, close). R3, R2, R1, PL, PH, S1, S2, and S3 are provided to aid in identifying entries and exits. These are objective measures and our subjective analysis (STRATEGY) may differ.

[3] ELLIOTT WAVE VIEW is our assessment of both the longer term (DAILY BARS) and shorter term (60 MINUTE BARS) EW structure. This is the basis for our STRATEGY

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Will This Be A Dollar Positive Week?

Posted by stevefx on May 20, 2008

Will This Be A Dollar Positive Week?

Monday, 19 May 2008 21:20:14 GMT

Written by Kathy Lien, Chief Strategist

• Is the Euro Becoming Immune to Hawkish Comments?
• British Pound Resumes Weakness Despite Stronger Housing Market Data

Will This Be A Dollar Positive Week?

The US dollar has started the week strong thanks to the better than expected leading indicators report. For the second month in a row, leading indicators increased, suggesting that the US economy may not be in a recession. Although the numbers are definitely encouraging, we believe that recession or no recession is just a matter of semantics. The bigger question is whether or not the current downturn will be shallow. With the Fed signaling an intention to pause when they meet to discuss monetary policy in June, the market is looking for any data that would confirm that stability is the new course for the US economy. The LEI numbers are certainly encouraging even though we are slightly suspicious of whether the improvements are more than just a rebound. Building permits, stock prices and the interest rate spread were the biggest gainers, but the two former components saw a big decline the prior month. The US economy is still at risk for slower growth, but that should not draw away from the fact that the market perceives the news as dollar bullish. This strength should continue into tomorrow’s producer price report. Not only have food and oil prices increased last month, but the import price report also surprised to the upside. The dollar should remain firm in the beginning week as there is nothing to threaten its rise until Friday when we are expecting the existing home sales report. Traders still need to be cautious of what they buy because even though we believe that the dollar should strengthen against the Euro this week, it could continue to sell off against the Canadian dollar.

Is the Euro Becoming Immune to Hawkish Comments?

The Euro weakened against the US dollar today despite hawkish comments from ECB President Trichet. The central bank head reminded the markets about the danger of letting second-round effects get out of hand and compared the recent rise in food and energy prices with the 1970s oil shock. He said that cutting interest rates now could lead to more serious problems in the future. Yet the Euro has barely budged on the comments, suggesting that traders are starting to become immune to the hawkish rhetoric. Part of the reason for this lack of response is the recent turn in Eurozone economic data. Everyone is beginning to wonder how much longer the ECB will be able to remain hawkish given the gradual deterioration in the Eurozone economy. This week will be a big test with the ZEW survey, the IFO report and the PMI numbers due for release. The market is actually expecting analyst sentiment to improve and business confidence to deteriorate. Germany factory orders and industrial production have all declined, confirming that activity is slowing; it would be a surprise if analysts’ sentiment actually managed to improve. In addition to the ZEW survey, German producer prices are due for release tomorrow morning. The rise in wholesale prices suggest that producer prices will surprise to the upside, lending credibility to the ECB’s inflation battle.

Visit the Euro Currency Room for resources dedicated specifically to the Euro.

British Pound Resumes Weakness Despite Stronger Housing Market Data

Good news rarely comes out of the UK housing market these days and therefore we are surprised to see the lack of a response to the stronger housing market numbers. This may be partially due to the fact that even though online property search firm Rightmove reported 1.2 percent rise in house prices during the month of May, they also criticized UK homeowners for raising prices in the current market environment. Even Bank of England Governor King has warned that prices are set to fall further, but sellers have refused to adjust their prices to more realistic levels. If this trend continues, housing market inventory will build and eventually prices will have to come down. Either way, a rate cut by the BoE is not in the cards right now according to the interest rate market. The spread between 2 and 10 year gilts are at the brink of inverting for the first time in 6 months, which means that no one expects the Bank of England to cut interest rates anytime soon. We expect this same concern about inflationary pressures to be reflected in Wednesday’s release of the minutes from the latest Bank of England meeting.

Visit the British Pound Currency Room for resources dedicated specifically to the British Pound.

Australian Dollar Hits 24 Year High, Canadian Dollar Continues to Rise

The Australian dollar hit a fresh 24 year high at the open of the Asian trading session, but those gains were quickly erased following weaker Australian and New Zealand economic data. Imports decreased 3.0 percent in the month of April, reflecting the softer demand for external goods by Australians. The New Zealand dollar on the other hand is suffering from yet another piece of disappointing economic data. The service sector PMI index slipped from 50.8 to 48.9 in the month of April, indicating that activity is now contracting. Last week, we saw a decline in retail sales and based upon the latest the drop in the employment component of the PMI report, the labor market and domestic demand should remain weak. The Canadian dollar on the other hand was the only currency that managed to strengthen against the greenback today. There was no economic data released, but we do expect stronger Canadian CPI on Wednesday.

Tell us what you think on the Canadian dollar Forum.

Bank of Japan Expected to Keep Interest Rates Unchanged

With no major economic numbers other than the US leading indicators report released this morning, carry trades have moved in lockstep with the Dow. US stocks were up more than 150 points intraday, triggering a sharp rally in carry trades. However other than USD/JPY and CAD/JPY, none of the Japanese Yen crosses managed to hold onto their earlier gains. The Bank of Japan is expected to leave interest rates unchanged tonight, which should be a nonevent for the Japanese Yen.

Visit the Japanese Yen Currency Room for resources dedicated specifically to the Yen.

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Daily2_5-19


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Oil above $127, OPEC says world has enough oil

Posted by stevefx on May 19, 2008

Reuters
Oil above $127, OPEC says world has enough oil
Monday May 19, 7:39 am ET
By Jane Merriman

LONDON (Reuters) – Oil rose back above $127 a barrel on Monday, after OPEC’s president said the producer group will not call an early meeting and even at its September gathering was unlikely to boost supply as the world had enough oil.

U.S. light crude for June delivery was up $1.16 at $127.45 a barrel by 8:24 a.m. EDT.

It closed at $126.29 a barrel on Friday after touching a record peak of $127.82 earlier that day after publication of a bullish price forecast from investment bank Goldman Sachs.

London Brent crude was up 67 cents at $125.66 a barrel.

Chakib Khelil, president of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, said oil markets were well supplied and blamed high prices on speculation, a weak dollar and geopolitical problems.

“As for OPEC, indications shows that there is no shortage (of supply),” he said in Algiers

Khelil said OPEC would not meet before its next scheduled gathering in September and that this meeting was unlikely to result in an output increase.

“All in all, there is little indication that we are on the verge of a major price breakdown,” said Edward Meir, analyst at broker MF Global.

He said a production increase from Saudi Arabia, revealed on Friday, was only “token” in terms of extra production.

Saudi Arabia has boosted oil output by 300,000 barrels per day to meet demand and compensate for other producers’ lower output, Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said on Friday.

U.S. President George W. Bush said on Saturday he was pleased with the Saudi move, but it was not enough to solve problems in the top energy consumer the United States.

OPEC COMMENTS

But comments OPEC oil ministers on Monday all highlighted that global oil supplies are enough to cope with demand.

Qatar oil minister Abdullah al-Attiyah also said there was no need to boost oil supplies to global markets. “The market doesn’t need more oil,” he said, pointing to a cut in forecast oil demand growth by the International Energy Agency.

“There is more oil in the market than consumers want,” said Iraqi oil minister Hussain al-Shahristani.

Iraq aims to boost total oil exports to 2.3 million barrels per day from 2.0 million bpd by the end of the year, he said.

Oil prices have risen six-fold since 2002 and doubled since last year as rising demand from China and other developing nations stretched spare production capacity, adding pressure on the U.S. economy already hard hit by a housing slump.

Diesel has taken centre stage in the world energy crunch as tight power supplies in China, South Africa, Chile, Argentina and parts of the Middle East triggered a boom in demand for middle distillates for electric generators, lending support to oil prices.

Chinese demand for imported diesel is expected to rise even further in June after last week’s earthquake disrupted gas supplies to major cities and as companies built stockpiles ahead of the summer Olympics.

Broker Lehman Brothers warned that record-breaking commodities prices that were drawing in hundreds of billions of dollars in new investments threaten to create an asset bubble.

(Reporting by Jane Merriman in London and Fayen Wong in Perth)

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Dollar: Another Test of 1.60?

Posted by stevefx on May 19, 2008

Daily FX
Dollar: Another Test of 1.60?
Sunday May 18, 4:54 pm ET
By Boris Schlossberg, Senior Currency Strategist with John Kicklighter, David Rodriguez, Ilya Spivak and John Rivera, Currency Analysts strategist@dailyfx.com

For most of the week the EURUSD traded in a tight consolidation moving 50 points either side of 1.5500. In fact early Friday morning we noted that, “[a week from last Friday] the pair was trading at 1.5481 and as write this now five days later it is trading at the exact same spot. The currency markets are at standstill with 1.5500 representing the line of balance between the bulls and the bears. Neither camp has enough ammunition to push price away from that level. In EZ the data this week has shown surprising buoyancy in the GDP numbers forestalling any consideration of monetary easing for the time being, while in US the bounce in Retail Sales suggested that the consumer may be wounded but is still alive. Thus prices remain in equilibrium.”

TOF 05-18-08 1

TOF 05-18-08 2

Dollar – Another Test of 1.60?

For most of the week the EURUSD traded in a tight consolidation moving 50 points either side of 1.5500. In fact early Friday morning we noted that, “[a week from last Friday] the pair was trading at 1.5481 and as write this now five days later it is trading at the exact same spot. The currency markets are at standstill with 1.5500 representing the line of balance between the bulls and the bears. Neither camp has enough ammunition to push price away from that level. In EZ the data this week has shown surprising buoyancy in the GDP numbers forestalling any consideration of monetary easing for the time being, while in US the bounce in Retail Sales suggested that the consumer may be wounded but is still alive. Thus prices remain in equilibrium.”

The equilibrium was quickly broken by the horrid U of M consumer confidence numbers which dipped below 60 for the first time in 28 years as $4/gallon gasoline depressed consumer attitudes to levels not seen since the early days of Reagan administration. The key question going forward for currency market however is whether dour sentiment will translate into negative action causing US consumer spending to contract sharply.  Certainly, stubbornly high oil prices offer no relief in sight. However,  we believe that it is the job market that could deliver the knock out punch to the US consumer. Up until now consumer spending has been relatively resilient despite the challenging economic climate, in part due to soft, but not debilitating  labor market  conditions.  However, if jobs losses skyrocket at the same time as gasoline remains above $4/gallon – that deadly combination will likely destroy whatever consumer demand is left, pushing US into a clear cut recession while driving the dollar back to its lows.

Next week the US data calendar is relatively sparse, so some of these macro economic questions may have to wait to be resolved until the month over. Aside from PPI which most market analysts expect to decline sharply, the one report that is likely to garner interest will be the Existing Housing release due on Friday. Although the housing sector is  in a severe contraction with annual run rate now consistently below the important 5M unit mark,  traders will once again look for any sign of stabilization and if they find it the greenback may get a small boost  from the results. – BS

Visit our recently updated EUR/USD Currency Room for more resources dedicated to the US Dollar.

TOF 05-18-08 3

Euro – No Rate Cuts in Sight

Both German and French GDP numbers posted blockbuster results this week with German Q1 GDP rising 2.5%  vs. 1.8% projected while French growth increased 2.2% vs. 2.0% expected. The two main economies of the EZ contributed to a better overall number for the region which also printed at 2.2% vs. 1.9% forecast. The news cast doubt on any notion of a near term ECB rate cut, as Q1 growth proved far stronger than most analysts had forecast.

However GDP data by its very  definition is backward looking and the more recent economic news from the EZ have not been nearly as impressive. In fact the latest reading from both manufacturing and services PMI surveys have signaled a significant deceleration of economic  activity in the region in Q2.  Yet the extent  of the slowdown remains unclear to the market and this week’s ZEW and IFO survey may go a long way towards resolving the confusion. Both reports are expected to decline from the month prior, but if the  market sees another worse than expected reading especially from the IFO, the euro will have a hard time making any headway, even if US data continues to  deteriorate.

The ECB has been coasting on the tailwinds of steady economic growth and buoyant labor market demand. Nevertheless, if this weeks IFO prints another negative surprise like last month European monetary authorities will  have to seriously  reconsider their uncompromising  hawkish stance. If on the other hand, the IFO data proves to be a non event, the euro  could extend its rally as attention once again turns to deteriorating US fundamentals. – BS

Visit our recently updated EUR/USD Currency Room for more resources dedicated to the Euro.

TOF 05-18-08 4

Japanese Yen – Risk Is Back But For How Long?

On Friday Japanese GDP surprised to the upside expanding at 0.8% versus 0.6% expected as growth from emerging markets offset  the downtown in US demand, but the positive impact of the news was short lived, as other more forward looking data points suggested that growth in world’s second largest national economy is decelerating significantly. Japanese Industrial Production declined -3.4% vs. 3.1% forecast, while consumer confidence declined to 35.4 – the lowest reading in 4 years. Even the GDP report contained a measure of bad news as CAPEX fell precipitously declining -0.9% on a quarter over quarter basis which prompted Japanese Finance Minister Fukushiro Nukaga to express concern about the slowdown in capital spending. In short there is little reason to expect any change in Japanese monetary policy anytime soon given these lackluster results and this week’ s BOJ meeting is unlikely to produce any change.

With fundamentals having virtually no impact, the yen will continue to trade on risk assumption/risk aversion flows next week. Before Friday’s U of M Consumer data the pair hit the 105.00 figure, but the sharp decline in consumer sentiment spurred fresh speculation that the worst may not be over for the US economy. If that theme persists and US equities begin to slide USDJPY is likely to follow unwinding most of the gains achieved this week. – BS

Visit our recently updated Japanese Yen Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

TOF 05-18-08 5

Pound Unchanged, Despite Rising Inflation And Hawkish BoE

Inflation was the story of the week for the U.K. as producer prices posted their sharpest gain ever recorded and consumer prices rose to the central banks threshold level of 3%- the highest since April 2002. The results led to the BoE issuing a significantly hawkish quarterly inflation report which signaled that the MPC may refrain from further rate cuts for the remainder of the year. This was in stark contrast to the prevailing expectation in the market, that a quarter point rate cut was forthcoming at the June policy meeting. The typical bullish sentiment failed to inspire traders, as the weighed the long-term implications of rising prices on the economy. A 95.1% decline in the RICS house price balance and a 7,200 increase in jobless claims underlined the ills of the housing sector and its broader impact on the economy. Although the inflation data provided support for the cable early in the week, the complete dour fundamental picture would leave the pair relatively unchanged by week’s end.

The acceleration of the deterioration of the housing sector over the past few weeks has prompted the government and Prime Minister Gordon Brown to  announce the creation of a £200 million fund to purchase unsold homes. £100 million will go to shared equity schemes to all more first time buyers to purchase newly built homes. The separate measures have given the central bank confidence that the credit issues will improve, thus allowing them to focus on price stability. The country has seen inflation rise to 3%, which is the threshold which requires Governor King to write letters of explanation to Chancellor Darling. The MPC’s recent quarterly inflation report underlined their concerns, when central bank leader stated that he expects to write several letters over the next few quarters.

This week will make the third straight that the economic docket presented significant event risk for the pound. It will highlight all the areas of focus for traders including the housing sector, growth, domestic spending and the central banks inclination. Rightmove house prices and retail sales are expected to show that the housing continues to falter and consumer are withering from the headwinds. Despite the BoE’s recent hawkishness, the minutes from their policy meeting are expected to show a less than unanimous decision. The impact for the markets will come if there were more calls for a rate cut than David Blanchflower, which may fuel speculation that there still exists the possibility of a rate cut in the future.  The pair has found major support at the 1.9400 price level and it may require significantly bearish fundamentals to see it break clearly below. – JR

TOF 05-18-08 6

Swiss Franc Drops on Dow Rallies – Is Carry Trade Back?

The Swiss Franc finished the week slightly lower against the US dollar, as a noteworthy recovery in global risk sentiment encouraged traders to sell the low-yielding currencies. The US S&P 500 index traded to its highest levels of the calendar year, while its Volatility Index (VIX) fell to similar lows. Lackluster Swiss economic data only compounded CHF-selling pressure, and indeed the domestic currency was the second-worst performer among the G10 to round out the week’s trading. An ostensibly bullish Retail Sales report was actually quite disappointing; a headline 9.7 percent gain was entirely a function of an unusually large seasonal adjustment. Excluding said adjustment, Retail Sales actually produced a rather disappointing -2.5 percent monthly change and exacerbated fears of a domestic economic slowdown. It is subsequently unsurprising to note that traders increase bets that the Swiss National Bank would cut interest rates in 2008—forcing similar moves in the CHF.

Whether or not the Swissie will continue its slide will largely depend on outlook for global risky asset classes, as a relatively empty economic calendar promises little in the way of foreseeable volatility for the carry trade currency. Possible exceptions include Tuesday’s Producer and Import Price Index report as well as late-week Trade Balance results. Yet PPI figures are comparatively unlikely to cause a stir, as markets have already seen the much more market-moving Consumer Price Index release. It seems that traders are most likely to ignore the subsequent ZEW survey release, while Trade Balance figures seldom force major moves in the domestic currency. As such, it will be most important to watch for fresh developments in global equity indices and other relevant risky assets. Given the growing sense of calm across financial markets, many feel that the time is now right to re-enter previously profitable currency carry trades. Yet any disruptions in said improvement could just as easily force significant pullbacks in the global carry trade and force substantial Swiss Franc gains. – DR

TOF 05-18-08 7

Canadian Dollar Pushing Its Range As Fundamentals Heavies Loom

While there was a broad push against the US dollar last week, the selling momentum was particularly meaningful for the long range-bound USDCAD. No other major pair has seen the level of congestion that the loonie-based cross has experienced over the past six months. A more expansive view of a USDCAD chart shows price action has been boxed in between range extremes at 1.0375 and 0.9700 since the sharp November reversal ran out of steam. However, more recently price action has had even less room to move as a downward sloping trend channel over the past two months has kept activity to a 250-point band. This has generated considerable pressure behind a potential breakout as hard technical levels are now starting to interfere with price action. Parity (1.0000) was the most recent level to run interference against the steady slope of the trend channel. This psychologically important and frequently tested pivot level was nearly overrun through the very end of the week as yet another slopped channel within the congestion pulled spot down to 0.9950.

Looking back over the fundamental influences on the pair last week, there were few pieces of event risk that could finally drive USDCAD to its much needed breakout. Aside from the few US indicators that weighed on the pair, crude was another underlying factor in the loonie’s steady advance. Crude on the NYMEX closed Friday’s session above $126/barrel for the first time on record. However, this extreme has so far failed to revive the tight correlation between the two assets some months ago. There was similarly little going on in the Canadian economic docket. Top event risk for the period was the New Home Price Index for March. The lagging report matched the consensus for a modest 0.2 percent advance for the month. From a broad fundamental perspective this data series confirms that the Canadian economy has so far avoided the housing crisis that has plagued the US and UK; but at the same time, it doesn’t garner much immediate enthusiasm for the Canadian currency. The same can be said about the manufacturing shipments report for the same month. The volatile indicator slipped more than expected, yet its importance has been superseded by the previously released trade balance and Ivey reports.

For the week ahead, the probability for a genuine breakout is much higher (especially if USDCAD holds close to support around 0.9950/1.00 for the release of major economic releases). There are a number of indicators scheduled through the period; but the greatest promise for volatility rests with the CPI and retail sales numbers due later in the week. The headline consumer inflation gauge is expected to hold steady at its 14-month low 1.4 percent clip, while the core figure holds its own four-year low 1.3 percent. No matter what happens to these figures, they will be fundamentally significant as BoC Governor Mark Carney had suggested just last month that he would lower interests again in June. On Thursday, retail sales is expected to report a significant recovery, yet with confidence souring, the risk is still to the downside. – JK

TOF 05-18-08 8

Australian Dollar Reaches 24-Year High

The small helping of Australian data for last week did not leave the Australian dollar wanting for a catalyst as the pair rallied to levels unseen since the mid-1980s. To start the week, the National Australia Bank reveled that businesses were at their most pessimistic in April since September 2001 as their confidence index dropped to -8 from -4 in the preceding month. A negative reading means more survey respondents expect their prospects to deteriorate versus improve in the near term. The result supports assertions by Governor Glenn Stevens of the RBA that the economy is slowing. Stevens must surely have been pleased when Tuesday’s first quarter Wage Cost index printed at 0.9% versus the expected 1.1%. The result brings the annual pace of wage growth down to 4.1% from 4.2%. Wages have been a key contributor to inflationary pressure. Aggressive hiring in the mining industry servicing China’s insatiable demand for Australian coal and iron ore exports has brought unemployment to a record low. The scarcity of labor supply in the face of such robust demand has inflated wage growth, bidding up the overall price level. While further evidence is needed, the initial easing in the Wage Cost index suggests the RBA has been correct in calling current borrowing costs at 7.25% “substantial” enough to tame price growth. Technically speaking, we identified a Bearish Engulfing candlestick pattern in the Australian Dollar / US Dollar pairing early in the week and reckoned prices would drop to support above 0.9285 before another run to 0.9500 (see article). The pair validated our analysis, dipping lower to create the entry and then rallying to surpass our target and closing the week at 0.9543.

This week again offers little by way of significant economic data. The RBA’s level of transparency and the fact that their quarterly monetary policy review was published shortly following the latest rate decision is likely to make Monday’s release of the minutes from that meeting old news. Tuesday will arguably be the most interesting as traders will be treated to May’s Westpac Consumer Confidence metric. The release will provide a timely reading on how the consumer is shouldering the burden of record-high borrowing costs along with booming food and petrol prices. April saw the metric decline by -1.3% and with the overall fundamental picture largely the same as it was then, further decline is likely. Motor Vehicle Sales for April will be released shortly after, with anything shy of a sharp contraction being truly surprising. Last week saw drops in auto sales drag down retail activity metrics in both the US and New Zealand as fuel costs skyrocket, and Australia is certainly not immune. The week’s docket will clear by Wednesday with the release of May’s Consumer Inflation Expectation. This will be the first gauge of the price level since last week’s encouraging Wage Cost index and traders will look for a pattern to reveal itself. – IS

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Technicals Stall Kiwi Decline as Data Disappoints Again

Last week saw the precipitous fall of the New Zealand dollar find a short term bottom. The latest fundamental data can hardly be given credit, as most significant metrics released last week showed decline. The week began with April’s QV House Price Index. The metric showed house prices grew 4.3%, a steep decline from March’s 6.5%. This marks the eighth straight month of slower price growth as record-high interest rates depress demand. April’s Business NZ Purchasing Manager’s Index offered the only bit of good news for the week, rising from a reading of 48.7 in March register at 51.4 and above the 50 “boom-bust” level. Such optimism in manufacturing sector may stem from the forthcoming free trade agreement between New Zealand and China. Chinese demand has done wonders to spur growth in neighboring Australia and the easing of restrictions that the agreement promises could divert a good portion of business to New Zealand. Unfortunately for the island nation, the good news stopped here. Retail Sales declined three times more than expected, showing a drop of -1.2% in March. While the extent of the slowdown is certainly notable, the downward trajectory in the retail sector was to be expected. Confidence readings have slumped, and employment registered at 19-year lows. The RBNZ now treads in dangerous territory as it is apparently crushing the economy along the way to squeezing out inflationary pressure. Taming prices may prove elusive, as the global boom in energy and food continues pushing higher. Mirroring a pattern seen in US retail sales earlier in the week, car sales were the main culprit of the slump. Tellingly, excluding autos would have seen a drop of only -0.5%. Going further, excluding cars along with related purchases of gasoline and expenses on automotive repairs would have actually seen a rise of 0.2%. Underscoring this dynamic, Thursday saw prices for production inputs nearly double in the first quarter, rising to 2.3% from 1.3%. Prices for producer’s output rose to 1.8% from 1.5%. This is bad news indeed, as the speed of the rise in production costs is apparently outpacing the rise in the price of the finished product, making New Zealand firms on the whole inherently unprofitable.

The gloom in the fundamental picture did not seem to come as a surprise to the market, as traders have been pushing NZDUSD lower for several weeks now. The end of the week saw a bottoming driven largely by technical considerations. As we noted in the beginning of the week, “a heavy price congestion area lies above 0.7600, raising the chances that a support level will emerge in the coming days” (see article). With an unusually light calendar, technicals are likely to remain the primary drivers for this week’s price action. The only significant market-moving item on the docket will be Finance Minister Cullen’s presentation of the government’s 2008 budget on Wednesday. Plans for a dose of fiscal stimulus may somewhat ease the clearly bearish market bias towards the Kiwi dollar. – IS

Let us know what you think – email the DailyFX team about this or other articles at research@dailyfx.com

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Euro and Pound Forming Near Term Bottoms

Posted by stevefx on May 15, 2008

Euro and Pound Forming Near Term Bottoms

Wednesday, 14 May 2008 11:32:26 GMT

Written by Jamie Saettele, Technical Currency Strategist

Short term patterns suggest that the USD will weaken (expect against the AUD and NZD) in the coming days and maybe even weeks.  Risk levels are clearly defined.

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The decline from 1.6018 began as an impulse but has failed to continue as one. This does not necessarily mean that the EURUSD uptrend will resume (although it could) but it does mean that at least a sizeable bounce is due. The rally from 1.5283 could be a series of 1st and 2nd waves or wave i of a diagonal. Either way, look higher near term. Ideally, 1.5364 remains intact but coming under 1.5283 would warrant a bearish break strategy. To the classical chartist, price is forming a clear inverse head and shoulders pattern which would be confirmed on a break through 1.5570.

STRATEGY: Bullish, against 1.5364, target TBD

Visit our recently updated Euro Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

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We remain bearish as long as the USDJPY is below 105.70. The potential for a sizeable decline in a 3rd of a 3rd wave within the bear cycle from 105.70 does exist. We wrote yesterday that “very near term, a poke through 104.04 is possible before the larger decline resumes.” That ‘poke’ has turned into a 100+ pip rally, which has us nervous but bearish potential warrants sticking with this count. The other side of a former support line has acted as resistance today.

Visit our recently updated Yen Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

STRATEGY: Bearish, against 105.70, target TBD

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In Elliott, there is something to be said for the ‘right look’. Does the circled area look like a C (or 3rd) wave decline? We don’t think so either. It seems more likely then that a complex correction (W-X-Y) is unfolding since the 1/22 low at 1.9337. Within wave X, the two legs of the decline would be equal at 1.9228. This does not mean that Cable will reach that level but it is an area to expect support.

Visit our recently updated British Pound Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency.

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The other USD pairs are showing strong signs of pending USD weakness and we have changed our count significantly regarding the USDCHF to reflect that. We view the rally from .9674 as an A-B-C advance (corrective) but this does not mean that the larger downtrend is back underway (similar to the EURUSD). The advance may well be the first leg in a larger, more complex upward correction but a sizeable decline is expected regardless (probably into parity).

STRATEGY: Bearish, against 1.0624, target below 1.0389

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Coming under .9997 yesterday negates the near term bullish outlook. The development also confirms that the USDCAD is still in wave Y. The decline is expected then to continue until measured support, which begins at .9945 and extends until .9841. The larger bullish bias is valid against .9710.

Visit our recently updated Canadian Dollar Currency Room for specific resources geared towards this currency

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The bearish outlook that we have focusing on is still valid. “With 5 waves down from .9541 and a 3 wave rally potentially complete at .9506, at least one more bear leg is expected for the AUDUSD. The minimum objective is below .9290 and risk is at .9506. This is roughly a 1:1 reward/risk ratio at the current juncture but if the decline does materialize, there is the possibility that it extends whereas risk is set at .9506.” Move risk to .9479

STRATEGY: Bearish, against .9479, target below .9290

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Recent commentary has stated that “although the major top is probably in place at .8215, the fastest part of the decline is probably about to begin.” This specific outlook (calling for the fat decline) holds as long as price is below .7727 (red line). We will begin to look for short term bearish targets in the coming days.

STRATEGY: Bearish, against .7727, target TBD

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Pound Selling Relentless Amidst Slowdown Concerns

Posted by stevefx on May 15, 2008

Pound Selling Relentless Amidst Slowdown Concerns

Wednesday, 14 May 2008 10:27:40 GMT

Written by Boris Schlossberg, Senior Currency Strategist

Talking Points

•    Japanese Yen: DCGPI at fastest rate in 30 years
•    Euro: IP declines but French inflation remains hot
•    Pound: Hit once again on growth concerns
•    US Dollar: CPI on tap

Another day, another decline in GBPUSD as the currency hit 12 week lows amidst growing concerns over the health of the UK economy. UK labor markets weakened materially in April as jobless claims rose 7.2K from 0K projected with companies hastening their pace of layoffs as demand deteriorates.

Despite persistent problems with price pressures as evidenced by much hotter than expected PPI and CPI readings this week, the BoE may not be able to maintain its battle against inflation by keeping rates steady for much longer if UK economic data shows further signs of weakness. Indeed Governor King himself echoed such sentiments in Boe Quarterly inflation report by noting that MPC is “facing its most difficult challenge yet” and that the UK is on a “bumpy road” as the economy rebalances. He also stated that  UK CPI inflation will return to its 2.0% target level leading traders to speculate that the focus of the BoE may shifting to stimulating growth rather than controlling inflation.

Cable fell to 1.9365 in the aftermath of the report, but bounced slightly above the 1.9400 figure into the early morning London trade. Nevertheless, cable is acting like a wounded animal as market consensus now centers on the notion that it is just a matter of time before BOE is forced to ease.

With yesterday’s better than expected US Retail Sales the overall sentiment in the FX market has turned decidedly dollar bullish, as the dominant theme in the market appears to be  that US monetary policy easing is nearly complete while rate cutting from the ECB and BoE is just beginning. Today’s US CPI numbers may only reinforce that idea especially if the reading prints hotter than expected.  With US consumer demand relatively healthy, the Fed may refocus it attention on growing price pressures in the US economy and choose to remain stationary at the next FOMC meeting relieving some downward pressure in the buck. Still, the pair continues to consolidate below the 1.5500 level and is unlikely to make any meaningful move given the paucity of economic news for the rest of the week. As we noted in our weekly commentary, trade action promises to be one of grinding consolidation with the pair bounded by 1.5600 to the topside and 1.5300 to the downside.

Is The Euro Headed Below 1.500?  Join us in EURUSD Forum

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Euro Crosses Resume Bull Trend

Posted by stevefx on May 12, 2008

Daily FX
Euro Crosses Resume Bull Trend
Monday May 12, 11:46 am ET
By Jamie Saettele, Technical Currency Analyst strategist@dailyfx.com

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Expect the EURGBP to reach the former 4th wave congestion zone (.7391-.7612) over the next few weeks. Near term, a bearish bias is warranted against .7941. An unexpected move above there may encounter resistance at the 61.8% of .8097-.7766 at .7970.

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The decline from the October 2007 high was in 5 waves and the sharp advance from March 17 low consists of 3 waves (a-b-c). Waves a and c are close to equal and the advance reversed in the area defended by the 200 day SMA and 61.8% of 1.6829-1.5328. A bearish bias is warranted against 1.6346.

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The EURCAD is tracking our preferred count. The decline from 1.6324 is corrective and reversed in the support zone that is defined by the 3/19 low and 50% of 1.4410-1.6324 (1.5367/1.5459). The first two waves up of the next bull cycle are complete. An aggressive bullish bias is warranted against 1.5395. The advance is expected to exceed 1.6324 in the coming weeks.

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The EURAUD is in the early stages of a long term (multi month and maybe even multi year) bull trend (price must remain above 1.5922). The decline from 1.7426 is a c wave and should unfold in 5 waves. To this point, the decline is in 3 waves so expect some consolidation and then a drop that may test the 78.6% of 1.5922-1.7253 at 1.6207.

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The EURNZD is expected to eventually exceed 2.1187. We wrote last week that “near term, expect a dip to the 1.9623-1.9466 zone for an opportunity to get bullish against 1.8957.” The low last week was at 1.9582 and the EURNZD bull trend has resumed. Expect a break above 2.0284 this week or next. The bias is bullish as long as price is above 1.9582.

Tell us what you think about this report: contact the strategist about the article at jsaettele@dailyfx.com

TREND ANALYSIS is based on a rolling pivot model. LONG TERM TREND is determined by the last 3 months of price data (high, low, close). SHORT TERM TREND is determined by the last 4 weeks of price data (high, low, close). R3, R2, R1, PL, PH, S1, S2, and S3 are provided to aid in identifying entries and exits. These are objective measures and our subjective analysis (STRATEGY) may differ.

SCHEDULE

Monday: EURGBP, EURCHF, EURCAD, EURAUD, EURNZD

Tuesday: EURJPY, GBPJPY, CHFJPY, CADJPY, AUDJPY, NZDJPY

Wednesday: GBPCHF, GBPCAD, GBPAUD, GBPNZD

Thursday: AUDCHF, AUDCAD, AUDNZD

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Dollar mixed before new economic reports

Posted by stevefx on May 12, 2008

AP
Dollar mixed before new economic reports
Monday May 12, 11:08 am ET
By David Rising, Associated Press Writer

Dollar’s modest rally goes on against euro as markets wait for Fed hints

BERLIN (AP) — The dollar furthered a modest rally Monday as markets awaited hints from the U.S. Federal Reserve about interest rate moves, and also economic figures from Washington.

The euro purchased $1.5442 in afternoon European trading, down from $1.5480 late Friday in New York.

The dollar rose to 103.99 Japanese yen from 103.09 yen on Friday, while the British pound rose to $1.9572 from $1.9519 in New York.

The dollar has now risen 3.6 percent since hitting an all-time low of $1.6018 against the euro on April 22, climbing on the belief that the U.S. Fed may finished cutting interest rates and that the U.S. economy may avoid a severe recession.

Investors were looking ahead to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s speech Tuesday for further indications about the Fed’s intentions on interest rates.

The Fed has lowered rates seven times in as many months to 2 percent, a major factor in the dollar’s decline as traders transfer funds to countries where they can earn higher returns.

Traders waited to see whether Bernanke’s remarks Tuesday would support the impression that the Fed’s rate cut on April 30 was the last of the series.

There is also a focus on the U.S. retail sector for indications about the strength of the American economy. Retail sales figures come out Tuesday, with the consumer price index numbers scheduled for Wednesday — all amid a raft of earnings reports from major U.S. retailers, including Wal-Mart.

Gavin Friend, the head of foreign exchange strategy at Commerzbank in London, said that from a fundamental perspective, the dollar will most likely weaken again if the numbers are poor.

“U.S. retail sales figures come out tomorrow, and we’re expecting soft numbers,” Friend said

He expects slow or even negative growth in the U.S. through the rest of the year, but does not anticipate a “real slide” in the dollar.

Even though the euro has come under pressure and there has been a bit of a “reorientation in the U.S. economy” that has worked in favor of the dollar, it does not mean the euro is down and out, said Howard Archer, the chief UK and European economist at Global Insight.

“We think the euro will trade at around $1.55 for an extended period,” Archer said, noting that the European currency will probably spike higher, but not until later this year or next. “We think the euro could have a final flourish toward the end of the year,” he said.

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Cot 05/12

Posted by stevefx on May 12, 2008

Daily FX
Cot 05/12
Monday May 12, 10:49 am ET
By Jamie Saettele, Technical Currency Analyst strategist@dailyfx.com

Implications: Bullish (but see above)

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NZD: The 52 and 13 week COT indexes are at 6 and . Readings have been low for weeks now, which is suggestive of a bearish sentiment extreme and reversal opportunity. However, this could be the beginning of a larger bear trend. In such instances, COT data will indicate an initial bearish extreme before the big decline begins…so be careful.

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