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108 in USD/JPY flagged as resistance

Credit Agricole on US/Yen following the election in Japan over the weekend:

  • may test 108
  • Japanese equities could also head higher
  • 108 is likely to see sellers enter though as the response to the election win is likely to be restrained. It wasn’t a surprise result.
  • Yen to regain momentum as focus switches back to trade talks
  • USD to weaken with the dovish Fed ahead, EUR to weaken with a dovish ECB also
  • 106.50 a downside level to watch for support

Monday morning opening forex levels – indicative prices

start of the new FX week. Here is a guide to indicative rates.

As is usual for a Monday morning, market liquidity is very thin. It improves as more Asian centres come on online. Until then, rates can swing around on not too much at all, so take care.
So, far not too much change from late Friday levels:
EUR/USD 1.1216
USD/JPY 107.78
GBP/USD 1.2515
USD/CHF 0.9831
USD/CAD 1.3060
AUD/USD 0.7045
NZD/USD 0.6767

EUR/GBP hits fresh six-month high amid weaker pound

Can EUR/GBP firmly hold a break above 0.9000 today?

EUR/GBP D1 16-07
The pair has been knocking on the door of the 0.9000 handle over the past two weeks and is now hitting a fresh six-month high as the pound slips on the day. If buyers can manage a daily break above the 0.9000 handle, I reckon it could keep the rally going for a while more towards the highs seen in December and January.
As for the pound weakness today, I want to argue that it’s largely on the back of sentiment/flows but with key UK data set to be released later on today, this isn’t the first time we’re seeing something like this happen (if you catch my drift).
Let’s see what the labour market report has to offer later today before drawing those conclusions but either way, it hasn’t been a great last ten weeks for the pound against the euro and EUR/GBP bulls don’t look like keeping their horns away just yet.

Deutsche Bank have raised their probability for a ‘no-deal’ Brexit to near 50%

The bank says sterling is not cheap and that GBP can go much lower

DB have raised the probability for a ‘no-deal’ Brexit to 45%.
The bank acknowledges that on long term valuation models (citing PPP and FEER models) GBP is close to fair value, but say political risk is skedded asymmetrically downwards. Short GBP/JPY “remains an excellent expression ” (adding that yen is ranking far cheaper across our suite of trade-based models )
Weekly chart below:
The bank says sterling is not cheap and that GBP can go much lower

AUD/USD falls to two-week low amid poor data and firmer US dollar

AUD/USD falls to its lowest level since 24 June

AUD/USD H1 09-07
The pair is hitting a fresh low of 0.6936 on the day now as the aussie is dragged lower by poor business confidence data earlier and some notable strength in the greenback in the past hour of trading during the European morning.
That’s the lowest level the pair has traded since 24 June as sellers continue to stay in near-term control and are looking for a move towards 0.6900 ahead of Fed chair Powell’s testimony tomorrow and on Thursday.
(more…)

Dollar continues to hold firmer in trading today

The greenback extends gains against the rest of the major currencies bloc

GBP/USD D1 09-07
Cable is now hitting fresh lows of 1.2461 as price falls below key support around 1.2480 highlighted earlier in the session. Of note, EUR/USD is on the verge of falling below the 1.1200 handle as well as price trades at three-week lows.
The greenback is finding some fresh bids as it also advances against the likes of the aussie, kiwi and loonie.
It looks like the market is positioning itself expecting Fed chair Powell to reaffirm expectations of less aggressive easing in tomorrow’s testimony and that is something that traders should consider ahead of the event in case Powell doesn’t deliver.

An Update :Dollar Index ,EURO ,INR ,YEN ,GBP ,CAD ,AUD ,PESO -Anirudh Sethi

Some naysayers who insist on cursing the thorn instead of being inspired by the beauty a rose find something or other to fret about in the June employment report that easily exceeded expected job growth and was the best since January.  It succeeded in doing what several regional Fed presidents were unable to do, and that is to force a reassessment of the likely trajectory of Fed policy.
The yield of the January 2020 fed funds futures contract, which is among the best metrics for expectations of Fed policy in H2, rose nine basis points after the employment data, the largest increase in six months.  The yield has risen by more than 20 bp since the day after the FOMC met in June.  This, in the context of Draghi’s dovishness and expectations that Lagarde will continue the course (shades of Bernanke-Yellen), has boosted the dollar.  Trump’s attempt to talk the dollar down fell on deaf ears, and the technical outlook that we review below suggests scope for dollar strength to carry into next week.
To be clear, our suspicions that the third significant dollar rally since the end of Bretton Woods is over is a larger and longer-term view.  Closer to home, last week we suggested that the point of peak dovish had passed and that this favored a stronger dollar.  However, we thought the technicals were more supportive of sterling.  Instead, sterling slid to new lows since the early January flash crash before recovering a bit to close 1.3% lower.  Despite the 0.2% loss ahead of the weekend, the Canadian dollar managed to the only major currency that held its own against the dollar, rising about 0.15%.
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