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Summary: The USD rally attempt from last week has yet to find new sustenance and fresh dollar longs are at risk of a reversal if follow-through strength is not found. Elsewhere, sterling traders faced whiplash today while the JPY remains in focus this week for potential breakout strength.
The big break attempt lower in EURUSD last Thursday over the European Central Bank meeting has yet to find fresh fuel after a mixed US jobs report failed to see follow on broad USD strength on Friday and to start this week. This leaves the breakout monitor more bereft of new signals than it has been in a long time. Still, we have a look at potential JPY strength via AUDJPY, USDJPY and EURJPY soon if the recent firming of the yen turns more pronounced.
Breakout signal tracker
Our recent EURUSD and AUDUSD shorts are at risk of stopping out soon if the USD doesn’t follow through on last week’s firming move. The US dollar has simply been unable to sustain directional moves in either direction against the major currencies after range breaking attempts this year.
Source: Saxo Bank
Today’s FX Breakout monitor
Page 1: after last Thursday’s EURUSD break, we have yet to see follow-through lower. Elsewhere, the focus is on especially EURJPY and possibly AUDJPY as breakout candidates. Interesting to note AUDCAD trying to break higher on a day when AUDNZD is registering yet another new low.
Source: Saxo Bank
Page 2: EURNOK offered a dose of whiplash as last Friday’s new high close (an ugly one, given the shooting star candlestick to close the day) was rejected strongly today on a strong Norway CPI. Elsewhere on Page 2, we see little fresh directional interest.
Source: Saxo Bank
Chart: EURJPY
We added EURJPY to our watchlist on Friday and the pair narrowly missed a new 19-day close. Nominally, the 19-day low close is less interesting than a close clear of the 124.00 which has supported the price action since the brief meltdown at the beginning of the year.
Source: Saxo Bank
REFERENCE: FX Breakout Monitor overview explanations
The following is a left-to-right, column by column explanation of the FX Breakout Monitor tables. Trend: a measure of whether the currency pair is trending up, down or sideways based on an algorithm that looks for persistent directional price action. A currency can register a breakout before it looks like it is trending if markets are choppy. ATR: Average True Range or the average daily trading range. Our calculation of this indicator uses a 50-day exponential moving average to smooth development. The shading indicates whether, relative to the prior 1,000 trading days, the current ATR is exceptionally high (deep orange), somewhat elevated (lighter orange), normal (no shading), quiet (light blue) or exceptionally quiet (deeper blue). High Closes / Low Closes: These columns show the highest and lowest prior 19- and 49-day daily closing levels. Breakouts: The right-most several columns columns indicate whether a breakout to the upside or downside has unfolded today (coloured “X”) or on any of the previous six trading days. This graphic indication offers an easy way to see whether the breakout is the first in a series or is a continuation from a prior break. For the “Today” columns for 19-day and 49-day breakouts, if there is no break, the distance from the current “Quote” to the break level is shown in ATR, and coloured yellow if getting close to registering a breakout.
NOTE: although the Today column may show a breakout in action, the daily close is the key level that is the final arbiter on whether the breakout is registered for subsequent days.
With real rates being too positive, we see three scenarios: Opportunity to lock in rates at cycle high, government overreach to keep the economy afloat or a complete reset of the economy.
The road to a bond bull market is paved, although challenges remain
Is a bond bull market ahead? Inflation still poses a risk for investors, but the moment for increasing duration to your portfolio may be approaching towards the end of the year, when central banks might be forced to cut interest rates.
FX: King dollar and its far-reaching repercussions
The furious rate hike cycle has brought gains in the US dollar, but with stagflation risks in Europe and the UK and weakness in the Chinese economy, USD may have more room to run. But a strong dollar could also have repercussions for US growth, emerging markets and commodity prices.
Equities: Higher cost of capital is getting painful
With the cost of capital rising painfully, stagflation fears are back, illuminating the fragile state of the green transformation, while giving a tailwind to nuclear power, and threatening the growth of AI-related stocks.
Commodity sector supported by peak rates, tight supply focus
With supply tightness not only in energy but all commodities, the momentum in commodity prices may continue, pressuring central banks to lower real rates. That could be a good setup for precious metals, including gold, silver and potentially platinum as well.
As the pandemic showed, even the US Treasury can experience seismic shifts. With the government increasing the pace of issuing bonds to support fiscal spending, the complex Treasury market and regulatory constraints could spark a liquidity event.
The tide has turned for bonds. Given the current yields, bonds have become an attractive investment, with added benefits including lower risk than stocks, increased diversification and a steady stream of income unaffected by economic changes.
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