Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Capital Markets: "Dollar May Prove Resilient if it is Turn Around Tuesday"

From Marc to Market:
The euro and sterling extended their recovery from the US hourly earnings lows seen before the weekend. However, the move stalled in the European morning, after the UK reported better than expected earnings itself.

Sterling approached the 61.8% retracement of the decline from the July high (~$1.3365) found just below $1.31. It has been correcting higher since reaching almost $1.2660 on August 15.

The position adjustment has been helped by more constructive comments from the EC on Brexit, with Barnier's comments suggesting that a deal could be reached in the next eight weeks. This follows perceptions that the risks of a Brexit without a deal had increased. UK economic data, including a strong service PMI, yesterday's GDP figures, and today stronger than expected weekly earnings data also helped lift sterling to its best level since early August today.

Excluding bonus payments, weekly earnings rose 2.9% in the three-months year-over-year through July. This was stronger than expected and matches the cyclical high from March, which was the highest in nearly three years. However, below the surface, there were some warning signs. The claimant count increased by 8.7k after an upward revision to 10.2k in July. It has risen by an average of 10.2k this year after being virtually flat in the same 2018 period. Employment growth has also slowed.

We argue that UK Prime Minister faces a trilemma. We do not think she can please three different parties: her cabinet, Parliament, and the EU. The EC has sounded more constructive, the basis of it, May's Chequers plan, faces domestic pressure from within her cabinet and Parliament. May's strategy seems to be to secure a deal with the EU and then sell it domestically. Also, the way the negotiations seem to work, the most difficult issues are addressed last and even at this late date; more work needs to be done on the Irish border.

The implication of this, and especially with the backdrop of a strong US dollar environment, is to view sterling's gains as corrective in nature. Recall that the speculative position in the futures market has the largest gross short position in over a year and roses sharply (~60%) in August.

That corrective forces grip the market is illustrated by the euro's price action today too. It recorded the session high in late Asia./early Europe near $1.1645, just shy of the pre-US jobs data high (~$1.1650). By the time the better than expected German ZEW survey was reported, the euro was already coming off, and could not bounce on the news. Both the assessment of the current situation and expectations improved more than expected (76.0 from 72.6 and -10.6 from -13.7). It is the second consecutive monthly advance, something not seen since last fall. Initial support today is seen near $1.1580.

The greenback's gains were extended against the yen. It neared JPY111.60, the best level since the middle of last week when it saw JPY11.75. The dollar has not traded above JPY112 since early August. There is a $1.7 bln option struck at JPY111.25 that expires today. Some link the yen's weakness to the Nikkei's gain today. It gapped higher and closed on its highs, and although the momentum appears strong, the 23,000 area offers formidable resistance and it is about two percent away....MORE