2024-04-22 10:34:49
AUD Dips, JPY Steadies on Ueda Remarks; US 2-Year Yield Nears 5%
Summary:
The Dollar Index, a popular gauge of the Greenback’s value against a basket of 6 major currencies, steadied to close at 106.11 (106.15 Friday).
Some Federal Reserve officials departed from previous intentions of rate cuts, preferring rate hikes. In the US Treasury Bond market, the 2-year yield hit 5% for the first time since November 2023 before closing at 4.99%.
The US 10-year yield dipped to 4.62% (4.63%). Other global bond rates were lower. The UK 10-year Gilt Rate was last at 4.23% from 4.27%. Japan’s 10-year JGB Rate dipped to 0.84% (0.86%).
New York Federal Reserve President John Williams said that another rate hike isn’t his base case but is still possible due to inflationary risks. Minneapolis Fed President Kashkari called for patience on rate cuts.
US economic data released Friday saw Initial Weekly Jobless Claims fall, while the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index soared to 15.5 from 3.2 previously, beating forecasts at 1.5.
Against the Japanese Yen, the Dollar dipped modestly to 154.60 from 154.67 after BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda said that the central bank may raise interest rates again if the Yen’s weakness leads to sustained price increases through high import costs.
Risk leader, the Australian Dollar dipped to 0.6417 from 0.6425 as market sentiment weakened. After falling to an overnight low at 0.5888, the Kiwi (NZD/USD) settled at 0.5900 (0.5905 Friday).
The Euro (EUR/USD) edged up to 1.0653 (1.0645), just above Five-Month lows. Potential escalation of tensions in the Middle East weighed on the shared currency.
Sterling (GBP/USD) settled at 1.2375, down from 1.2425 on Friday and near 5-month lows. Data released Friday saw UK Retail Sales (m/m) slump to 0% against median forecasts at 0.3%.
The US Dollar was mixed against the Asian and Emerging Market Currencies. Against the Offshore Chinese Yuan, the Dollar (USD/CNH) steadied to 7.2510 from 7.2485 Friday. The USD/SGD pair (Dollar-Singapore) finished at 1.3615 from 1.3625.
Global stocks fell on the risk-off sentiment. The US S&P 500 slid to 4,967 down from Friday’s open at 5,007. Japan’s Nikkei slumped 1.7% to 37,140 (37,740 Friday).
On the Lookout:
Today’s economic calendar is a light one and kicked off with China releasing its March Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) which fell to -26.1% from -19.9%. China also releases its 1-Year Prime Loan Rate (f/c 3.45% from 3.45% - ACY Finlogix) and China’s 5-Year Prime Loan Rate (f/c 3.95% from 3.95% - ACY Finlogix). The Eurozone starts off European data with its Eurozone Government Debt to GDP ratio (f/c 88% from 90.9% previously).
The UK releases its CBI Business Optimism Index (f/c 2 from -3 previously – ACY Finlogix). Canada kicks off North America with its Canadian March PPI (m/m f/c 0.8% from 0.7%; y/y f/c -1.3% from -1.7% - ACY Finlogix). The US rounds up today’s data releases with its Chicago Fed March National Activity Index (f/c 0.09 from 0.05 – ACY Finlogix).
Trading Perspective:
Hawkish Fed rhetoric and a resilient US economy with persistent price pressures has put a bid on the US Dollar against its Rivals. The Dollar Index (USD/DXY) finished above106., close to its November 2023 highs. US bond yields stayed firm with the 2-Year Treasury Bond Yield closing at 4.99%, just off 5%.
Reuters reported that IMM currency positions for the period between 10-16 April saw net speculative long US Dollar bets rise anew. Net speculative long bets in the Dollar Index (USD/DXY) were up 2.04%. Net speculative short bets in the Euro (EUR/USD) were -2.2% while net shorts British Pound (GBP/USD) were -1.96%.
Against the Japanese Yen, net speculative long USD bets (USD/JPY) rose +1.94%. Against the Aussie, net speculative short bets climbed to a whopping -3.39%. The risk is for a shake-out in the net long US positions. And the question is what’s the catalyst? Thursday’s US GDP report looms large this week.
Have a good week ahead. Happy Monday and trading all.
This content may have been written by a third party. ACY makes no representation or warranty and assumes no liability as to the accuracy or completeness of the information provided, nor any loss arising from any investment based on a recommendation, forecast or other information supplied by any third-party. This content is information only, and does not constitute financial, investment or other advice on which you can rely.
Sonrakileri Deneyin
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