Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Currencies: "Sterling and Aussie Interrupt the Waiting Game"

Mr. Chandler has  apparently been waiting patiently:

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfAI7jGURLvWCvNvQ1IGLIKwxQQ2kTta5jj77c7vrpJUVikq-9Zzx6bZBjVRp90u3DxMg1rVEpTc5sQzGcRDRlXrWIst10cv6QuVBN_bRBBTg9ote7DLZ1RaPHpMmHQ-K_-1zYSQm-b9Eq/s1600/waiting+game.jpeg

Or he's pumped for the Day of the Dead.

From Marc to Market:
Most participants seemed comfortable marking time ahead of tomorrow's ECB meeting, and an announcement President Trump's nominations to the Federal Reserve. However, softer than expected Australian Q3 CPI and a stronger than expected UK Q3 GDP injected fresh incentives.

Australia reported headline CPI rose 0.6% in Q3. The market had been looking for a 0.8% increase. The year-over-year rate slipped to 1.8% from 1.9%. The Bloomberg median had forecast an increase to 2.0%. The trimmed mean and weighted median measures also eased. One of the important factors in the undershoot was electricity prices about 2/3 of what was expected. The Reserve Bank of Australia is on hold and today's report simply underscores this fact.

The Australian dollar was sold off immediately and was continuing to trend lower in Europe. It is set for its fourth consecutive declining session. It has only risen in one session, according to Bloomberg data since October 13. It is currently testing the $0.7700 area (the 200-day moving average is a few ticks below there), which it has not seen in three months. A break here targets $0.7630-$0.7645.

Separately, the New Zealand dollar remains under pressure. It also has only posted one advancing session since October 13. However, the driver here is the new government. We have just completed an unusual 12-month period in which all the G5 countries held national elections, and there has generally been a shift to the right. New Zealand appears to have shifted to the left with a Labour-led government. It will seek to hike the minimum wage and change the central bank's mandate to include, as the US does, a full employment goal, alongside price stability.

However, the significance of these measures for global investors does not seem particularly salient, though some object to what they see is a return to demand management. We suspect such ideological considerations will lead to an overshoot. While we monitor prices for a reversal pattern, we see it moving toward the lower end of this year's range (~$0.6800-$0.6845), with a break signaling $0.6675.

We note that both the Nikkei and the New Zealand stock market snapped a rally today with modest losses. The NZX 50 fell less than 0.1% to snap a 15-session advance that began on October 3. The Nikkei broke a 16-session rally with nearly a 0.5% pullback. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was off fractionally for the second session and for the sixth time in the past seven sessions.

The Aussie and Kiwi are the weakest of the major currencies today. Sterling is the strongest. The stronger than expected Q3 GDP renews speculation, which had been softening, of a rate hike next week as part of Super Thursday, when the BOE inflation report will also be issued. Growth ticked up to 0.4% from 0.3% in Q2. The market had expected an unchanged pace. The year-over-year rate was steady though at 1.5%. The upward revision to July services, showing a smaller decline in services spending offsets the slightly softer than expected August services....MORE, including USD; EUR and a cast of thousands (of skeletons)