SEK_1_M

Complacency all around. What provides next spark?

Forex 4 minutes to read
Picture of John Hardy
John J. Hardy

Global Head of Macro Strategy

Summary:  Not much direction in this market as volatility continues to ebb and the market can’t work up much excitement for macro data or trade headlines. Focus this week on US treasury auctions and especially the May US CPI data tomorrow.


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Where do we go from here?
Risk sentiment continues to show complacency here more than any decidedly risk-on edge, although crypto is having a go at the all-time highs early this week. A look at USDMXN and especially the carry-adjusted returns in MXNJPY show that some carry trades are having a field day, but within the major currencies, volatility is extremely muted after the Friday US jobs data failed to confirm multiple other weak data points on the US labor market last week, although the jobs report was hardly anything worth celebrating as we all know the payrolls change numbers will inevitably see revisions, as the -98k revisions to the prior two months of data reminded us. USDJPY refuses to veer away from 145.00, while EURJPY teased new highs for the year above 165.20 before dipping back lower, and EURCHF remains bottled up below 0.9400.

The market feels uninspired, and USD bears have been frustrated by the lack of fresh momentum. What will spark volatility in either direction here after the fizzle last week of the USD bearish case? Would it be USD bearish to get news that the Fed and US Treasury are finally moving to bring more liquidity to the US treasury market? (The Fed’s newly appointed head of Bank Supervision and Fed Vice Chair is worth watching on that front.) Or would that be USD bullish as it encourages flows into US treasuries? On the policy front, the wait for the final shape of the “big, beautiful bill” is set to be a long one.

Market participants seem to be losing conviction and technically, the loss of USD bearish momentum suggests rising squeeze risks (a USD rally). Headlines from US-China talks in London could provide some direction, although it feels like this market doesn’t want to react to negative news, or even trade news in general, figuring that we are moving in the direction of detente. Bloomberg’s John Authers asks the excellent question of whether the US May CPI on Wednesday will be the first data point that shows the hard data impact of Trump’s tariffs – perhaps the best bet for a volatility generating event if we get a strong surprise that crystallizes the impact of the tariffs.

The risk sentiment barometer of yore – SEK – is nothing of the sort nowadays, more attuned recently to the weak Swedish CPI figures and rate spread shift with the euro (the 2-year spread there has shifted about 20 basis points against SEK). But SEK bullish is the recent announcement of Sweden’s willingness to engage in deficit spending to fund military. The country has been running large surpluses in recent years and has a debt to GDP of an absurd 33.5%, about half of Germany’s 65%. 11.00 in EURSEK may continue to provide resistance.

Chart: EURSEK
The European fiscal expansion is still a thing, and Sweden’s economy is often seen as a benefactor of a strong EU economy, due to its strong industrial export base. EURSEK has backed up recently on the combination of weak inflation figures from Sweden pointing to higher odds of another Riksbank easing move, while the modestly hawkish ECB last week guided for at least an imminent pause of the cutting cycle after one more cut. That’s probably about as much drama as we can expect for relative rate moves for now. A shift in focus back to stimulus and a pickup in the EU industrial base would be EURSEK bearish, but governments move painfully slowly. For now, watching whether 11.00 continues to act as resistance in this pair.

10_06_2025_EURSEK
Source:Bloomberg

FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength.
Note: If unfamiliar with the FX board, please see a video tutorial for understanding and using the FX Board.

The chief shifts from a week ago (the 5D change row in momentum) are the growing JPY weakness which feels right, given falling volatility/rising complacency. The AUD and NZD have been benefiting from the same, also as sentiment in Asia has brightened over the last week.

10_06_2025_FXBoard_Main
Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group

Table: NEW FX Board Trend Scoreboard for individual pairs.
The volatility readings (color shading for the ATR readings) continue to cool. New trends that fits with rising complacency are EURAUD trying to establish a downtrend (not compelling if we look at the chart) and the attempt to establish an uptrend in EURCHF, although that pair needs a clean break above 0.9400 as it has been very bottled up. The EURSEK “uptrend” is up against a key resistance level as noted above. Silver is an outlier!

10_06_2025_FXBoard_Individuals
Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Group

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