The strength of the Japanese yen is the main development in the foreign exchange market today. It has gained nearly 1.5% as short-term participants grow skeptical of the kind of stimulus that had driven the yen around7.5% lower between July 8 and July 21's six-week high. The pendulum of market sentiment has swung wildly.One set of estimates had risen from JPY10 trillion to JPY30 trillion over that period. There was also the fascination with a version of helicopter money by which the Japanese government would issue non-marketable, perpetual, zero coupon bonds that the BOJ would buy through newly created credits. Despite the illegality of such a policy, some observers seemed too hasty to shrug off Kuroda's assessment because it was made in the middle of June.In our discussions of the fiscal stimulus, we have emphasized the distinction between the inflated headline figure, puffed up by rolling up other programs and commitments, and the fresh water figure, which the is the stripped down new news. We read yesterday's report that the stimulus was going to be JPY6 trillion instead of JPY3 trillion to be referring to the fresh water. Today's comment by Finance Minister Aso that the size of the package, expected as early as next week, as not been decided yet only adds to the uncertainty and confusion.The market seems less sure of what the BOJ will do at the end of this week. And even if one knew what the BOJ was going to do, there is not much confidence in anticipating the yen's direction. We had thought there was room for disappointment with the BOJ. Of the three dimensions of its current policy, the quantity of assets being purchases, the quality of those assets, and interest rates, we had thought that increasing ETF purchases, and perhaps some other risk assets, maybe the likely course.The dollar fell JPY104 in late-Asia before stabilizing. The 20-day moving average is found just below there, and the JPY103.75 corresponds to a 50% retracement of the bounce from JPY100 to JPY107.50. The 61.8% retracement is found near JPY102.85. Initial resistance is seen near JPY!05 now.Another feature of today's foreign exchange market is the strength of the Antipodean currencies. The New Zealand dollar is up almost as much as the yen (~1.2%) and the Australian dollar (0.8%). The strength of the move is surprising given the fundamental outlook (both central banks likely to cut interest rates next month) and positioning (speculators in the futures long, especially the Australian dollar). First thing tomorrow in Sydney, Australia's Q2 CPI will be reported. Barring a surprise, the report is seen as the last hurdle to a rate cut next week. And the market is even more convinced of an RBNZ cut later in the month.The Australian dollar has been finding support near $0.7450 for the last several sessions, which is also at the intersection of a three-month uptrend. Its recent peak was about $0.7675 on July 15. The $0.7530 area that is probing in the European morning corresponds to a 38.2% retracement of that decline. The 50% mark is $0.7560....MORE
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
"Yen Soars Amid Stimulus Confusion and Doubts"
From Marc to Market: