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It was a big week for the US dollar but one currency managed to hang with it

USD was the top performer this week, GBP lagged

USD was the top performer this week, GBP lagged
The top performing currencies this week help to demonstrate the power of technical support and central banks. It’s no surprise that the high-flying US dollar was on top but right behind it was the Australian dollar.
The main reasons AUD was able to hold up was an improvement in sentiment around coronavirus. The RBA decision also briefly lent support, despite Lowe warning that Q1 GDP was possible.
The final factor was that AUD/USD was springing from support levels at the start of the week. That gave bulls a way to manage risk and encouraged buyers.
The warning sign is that the pair peaked mid-week and broke that support today, at least tentatively. If the extension continues next week, the same technical buying support will quickly become selling pressure and this week’s AUD outperformance could be next week’s underperformance.
AUDUSD chart

Markets and the Pathogen in the Week Ahead

The infectious and mortality rates of the new coronavirus have become the main force driving the pendulum of investor sentiment toward fear. The move is all the more dramatic as the investors had been positioned for a continuation of the historic bull market in equities and eager to take on new risks.The coronavirus has surpassed the earlier precedents of SARS (2003) and the Swine Flu (2009). The World Health Organization declared an international health emergency, which will free up resources and boost efforts to contain the pathogen. It took roughly 20 months to devise a vaccine for SARS, and it is estimated that a vaccine is possible within a month or so now to begin the testing process. Although China is expected to return from the extended Lunar New Year on February 2, more than a dozen provinces and cities will be closed several days longer, which ballpark estimates suggest are responsible for a little more than 2/3 of GDP and 3/4 of exports. Supply-chain and business disruptions will likely last longer still.Investors fear that the health crisis will turn into an economic crisis. Although President Xi is understood to be the strongest Chinese leader in a generation, the challenges that China faces are immense: US rivalry and trade conflict, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and a highly leveraged domestic economy underpinned by a deteriorating demographics. China recently reported its birthrate fell to a record last year. Still, some argue that the situation is even more dire as the official figures exaggerate both the population and the birth rate. More monetary and fiscal stimulus is expected to be delivered to cushion the impact. Some forecasts show the Chinese economy slowing to around 4.5% in Q1 20 from 6.0% in Q4 19.Since the onshore yuan (CNY) stopped trading for the holiday, the dollar appreciated by a net of a little less than 1% against the offshore yuan (CNH). A catch-up move of roughly the same magnitude would bring the greenback toward CNY7.0. While the last time the dollar rose through that threshold, the US accused China of currency manipulation, this time is considerably different. Moreover, of all times, this is the time when China could likely get away with manipulation if it wanted. It is not just because of the macro shock, but also because the US has played the card once and relatively quickly reversed itself. (more…)

CFTC commitments of traders: EUR shorts increase.

Weekly FX futures positioning data from the CFTC

  • EUR short 59K vs 47K short last week. Shorts increased by 12K
  • GBP long 18K vs 25K long last week. Longs decreased by 7K
  • JPY short 36K vs 45K short last week. Shorts increased by 9k
  • CHF loan 3.5K vs 1.5 long last week. Longs increased by 2K
  • AUD short 27k vs 19K short last week. Shorts increased by 8K
  • NZD long 2K vs 1.8K longlast week. Longs increased by 0.2K
  • CAD long 35k vs 38K long last week. Longs decreased by 3K
Highlights:
  • EUR shorts had the biggest change in week (increase of 12K to the short side).
  • The EUR short 59K is the largest speculative position
  • JPY shorts trimmed. I have to think that there might be more liquidation over the last few days on the back of the coronavirus.
Below is the history of the EUR. It has been negative since the 1st week of October 2018.
Weekly FX futures positioning data from the CFTC_

Offshore Chinese yuan falls to fresh six-week low against the dollar

USD/CNH rises to the highest level since 20 December amid virus concerns

USD/CNH D1 30-01
When China sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold – in this case, quite literally. As coronavirus concerns continue to grip markets, it is putting pressure on the offshore yuan as it falls to its weakest levels against the dollar since 20 December.
USD/CNH is closing back in on the 7.00 threshold and a break of that level may yet set off further risk aversion in markets – more specifically, emerging markets in Asia.
As Asian markets continue to be battered by fears surrounding the situation and the economic backlash set to come as a result of China being impacted, the dollar reigns as king in the region – and that may yet continue for quite some time yet.

“Global standard” gauge of currency misalignment has GBP 22% undervalued against the USD

Here’s a bit of (useful) fun, The Economist’s “Big Mac index” to gauge whether currencies are at their “correct” level against the US dollar.

Its based on the currency valuation model of purchasing-power parity (PPP), i.e. that “in the long run exchange rates should move towards the rate that would equalise the prices of an identical basket of goods and services (in this case, a burger) in any two countries”.Says the magazine (link here, may be gated(
  • Burgernomics was never intended as a precise gauge of currency misalignment, merely a tool to make exchange-rate theory more digestible. Yet the Big Mac index has become a global standard, included in several economic textbooks and the subject of dozens of academic studies. 
Some of the results (more at that link)The Economist's "Big Mac index" currencies US dollar

CFTC Commitments of traders: JPY shorts increase to largest level since early December

Weekly FX futures positioning data from the CFTC

  • EUR short 47K vs 48K short last week. Shorts trimmed by 1K
  • GBP long 25K vs 31K long last week. Longs increased by 6K
  • JPY short 45K vs 31K short last week. Shorts increased by 14k
  • CHF 1.5K vs flat last week. Longs increased by 1.5K
  • AUD short 19k vs 20K short last week. Shorts trimmed by 1K
  • NZD long 1.8K vs square last week. Longs increased by 1.8K
  • CAD long 38k vs 33K long last week. Longs increased by 5K
Weekly FX futures positioning data from the CFTC

Big week coming up for the pound

The near-term sentiment in the pound continues to be driven by odds of a BOE rate cut ahead of the 30 January policy meeting

  • 21 January – UK November average weekly earnings, unemployment rate
  • 21 January – UK December jobless claims change, claimant count rate
  • 24 January – UK January flash manufacturing, services, composite PMI
It is all about data, data, data for the pound this week. With the hot topic being a possible rate cut by the BOE, all eyes will turn towards the labour market report tomorrow and post-election PMI data later on Friday (⬆️).
Currently, odds of a 25 bps rate cut by the BOE on 30 January sit at ~70% – a key threshold that has historically seen the central bank take action when it comes to rate decisions.
GBP
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