Wednesday, 24 December 2014

Dollar Halts a 5-Day Advance Versus Yen; Taiwan’s Currency Falls

 
The dollar weakened against the yen, ending a five-day advance, amid speculation its recent climb was too rapid.
 
The greenback pared declines after fewer Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits last week. The dollar has advanced at least 4 percent against all its 16 major counterparts this year and extended gains yesterday after a report showed the world’s biggest economy grew at the fastest pace in more than a decade. Taiwan’s dollar slid to a four-year low. The ruble gained a fourth day.
 
“We might track around these 120 yen-type levels for a little while,” said Steven Barrow, head of Group of 10 foreign-exchange research at Standard Bank Plc in London. “Longer term, dollar-yen is moving higher. 150 is a realistic two-year target. There may be, as we’ve been seeing in this Christmas period, quite a bit of volatility up and down.”
 
The dollar declined 0.2 percent to 120.46 yen at 9:57 a.m. New York time after rising to 120.83 yen yesterday, the highest since Dec. 9. It gained 3.7 percent during the five-day streak. The U.S. currency weakened 0.2 percent to $1.2192 per euro after touching $1.2165 yesterday, the strongest level since August 2012. The yen was little changed at 146.88 per euro.
 
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the currency against 10 major peers, has risen 11 percent this year, set for the biggest annual gain in data starting in December 2004. It slipped 0.2 percent to 1,130.75 today.
 
The index’s 14-day relative-strength index reached 71 yesterday, above the 70 level some traders see as a signal an asset may have declined too far, too fast and is due to reverse course. It was at 68 today.

Unbeatable Dollar

The greenback is headed for gains against all of its 16 major peers this year for the first time since 2000.
 
Declines range from the Singapore dollar’s 4.5 percent drop to the 19 percent plunge by the krone of Norway, as lower oil prices weighed on the economic outlook for Western Europe’s largest crude producer. The yen fell 13 percent and the euro lost 11 percent.
 
Taiwan’s dollar slid to a four-year low versus the greenback today as overseas investors sold $2 billion more Taiwan stocks than they bought this month, set for the biggest outflow since June last year.
 
The currency weakened 0.2 percent to NT$31.815 per U.S. dollar after reaching NT$31.894, the least since September 2010.

Ruble Gains

The ruble gained even after Standard & Poor’s said it’s considering cutting Russia’s credit rating to junk. Hours earlier, lawmakers pushed through legislation to allow the government to bail out struggling lenders.
 
The ruble rose 0.4 percent to 54.26 per dollar after reaching 80.10 on Dec. 16, the weakest level on record.
 
Russia’s currency has still dropped 8.3 percent this month, the most against the dollar among 174 foreign-exchange values, followed by the krone’s 6 percent depreciation. Libya’s dinar leads gainers with a 9 percent climb, while the Somali shilling added 6.1 percent.
 
Even as the euro gained today, it headed for a sixth month of losses against the dollar amid speculation the European Central Bank is moving toward boosting currency-depreciating stimulus to revive growth.
 
“The euro will weaken especially against the dollar as a result of additional easing,” said Masato Yanagiya, head of foreign exchange and money trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. in New York. “More and more people are expecting the ECB to start buying sovereign bonds.”

Economic Recovery

In contrast, the Federal Reserve is moving toward raising interest rates for the first time since 2006 as the U.S. economic recovery strengthens.
 
Jobless claims dropped by 9,000 to 280,000 in the week ended Dec. 20, the fewest since early November, from 289,000 in the prior period, a Labor Department report showed today in Washington. The median forecast of 47 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for 290,000.
 
A report yesterday showed U.S. gross domestic product grew at a 5 percent annual rate from July through September, the biggest advance since the third quarter of 2003.
 
“The theme in the past few weeks has been dollar strength,” Nick Bennenbroek, head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo & Co., said in a phone interview from New York. The dollar weakened today as “investors are overlooking the data -- we’re seeing some small position-squaring ahead of the holiday.”
 
Sources: Bloomberg (24 Dec 2014)

Thursday, 18 December 2014

Forex News – Dollar Approaches 5-Year High on Fed Rate View; Ruble Rebounds

A gauge of the dollar rose toward a five-year high after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen indicated the central bank is on pace to increase interest rates as early as April.
 
The greenback gained for a second day against the yen after Fed officials yesterday replaced a pledge to keep borrowing costs near zero for a “considerable time,” and held the rate at zero to 0.25 percent, where it’s been since 2008. Russia’s ruble snapped a seven-day drop as the finance ministry said it was selling reserves to counter a plunge that sent the currency to a record amid a slide in oil prices.
 
“The Fed meeting clarified that rate hikes will start by mid-next year, giving a big boost to the dollar,” said Etsuko Yamashita, chief economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. in New York. “The Fed indicated that the decline in oil will boost spending more than hurt inflation.”
 
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the greenback against 10 major currencies, rose 0.1 percent to 1,122.19 at 9:27 a.m. in Tokyo from yesterday, when it strengthened 0.9 percent. It closed at 1,122.34 on Dec. 5, the highest since March 2009.
 
The dollar rose 0.2 percent to 118.84 yen, after surging 1.9 percent yesterday, the biggest gain since October. The U.S. currency was little changed at $1.2328 per euro following yesterday’s 1.4 percent advance. The yen slipped 0.1 percent to 146.51 per euro.
 
Source: Bloomberg (18 Dec 2014)

Forex News – Yen Retreats From Four-Week High Before Fed; N.Z. Dollar Slides


The yen retreated from the strongest in four weeks against the dollar before the Federal Reserve concludes a two-day policy meeting today.
 
The yen has been the biggest gainer among the 10-currency Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes in the past week as tumbling oil prices added to concern the global economy will falter, boosting demand for havens. The ruble collapsed to a record yesterday even after Russia increased borrowing costs to the most since 1998. A gauge of emerging-market currencies fell to a 12-year low. New Zealand’s kiwi declined after the South Pacific nation’s current-account deficit widened.
 
“Looking toward the FOMC, it’s creating a bit of a cross current — the market may be more reluctant to sell the dollar-yen now than it may have been yesterday,” said Greg Gibbs, the head of Asia-Pacific markets strategy at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Singapore, referring to the Federal Open Market Committee. The greenback “remains basically in a nervous state, caught somewhere between 115 and 119” yen.
 
The yen dropped 0.3 percent to 116.74 per dollar at 12:05 p.m. in Tokyo from yesterday, when it touched 115.57, the strongest since Nov. 17. Japan’s currency slid 0.2 percent to 145.93 per euro after advancing 1.6 percent in the previous two sessions. The dollar was little changed at $1.2501 per euro.
 
West Texas Intermediate crude slid as much as 4.1 percent to $53.60 a barrel in New York, the least since May 2009, before trading at $54.70. The United Arab Emirates said the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries won’t cut production even if prices fall as low as $40 a barrel.

Source: Bloomberg

Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Oil Plunges Below $60 a Barrel

On 10th December, the 12-member OPEC group predicted that the demand for crude oil will drop next year by about 300,000 barrels a day to 28.9 million, the least since 2003.
 
That sentence caused Brent futures to slide as much as 2.5 percent in London, coming close to $60 a barrel. Brent for January settlement declined as much as $1.57 to $60.28 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange and was at $61.16 at 12:30pm Sydney time. The more active February future was 71 cents lower at $61.44.
 
US oil fell to $56 a barrel on Monday morning, extending its decline from the lowest level in more than five years. The United Arab Emirates has said that OPEC will resist output cuts even if prices slump as low as $40.
 
West Texas Intermediate for January delivery dropped as much as 2.7 percent, to $56.25 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract decreased $2.14 to $57.81 last Friday, the lowest since May 2009. Prices are down 42 percent this year.
 
In the interim, the International Energy Agency has reduced its 2015 demand forecast for the fourth time in five months amid rising supply from non-OPEC countries. Oil has lost more than 20 percent since OPEC decided at a meeting in Vienna last month to maintain its production target, resisting calls from members including Venezuela to cut output.
 
Drillers in the US, pumping crude at the highest rate in more than three decades, idled the most rigs in almost two years as prices sank further.
 
OPEC, which supplies about 40 percent of the world’s oil, pumped 30.56 million barrels a day in November, exceeding its target for a sixth straight month, a Bloomberg survey showed.
 
Along with oil, prices of iron ore has been one of the hardest hit as well. The price of the material used to make steel has almost halved this year and slumped to a five-year low of USD68.49 a ton last month.
 
Australia has estimated that iron ore will trade at about USD60 a metric ton as the largest mining companies press on with expanding supply, deepening a glut just as demand growth in China falters.
Iron ore currently accounts for about 20 percent of Australia’s export income, and government revenue is expected to be A$7 billion lower this fiscal year due to the sharp drop in commodity prices. The Australian dollar has fallen more than 10 percent since the start of September as the price of the steel-making material declined.

Top News This Week

Europe: German Flash Manufacturing PMI. Tuesday, 16th December, 4.30pm.              
I expect figures to come in above 50.1 (previous figure was 49.5).
UK: CPI y/y. Tuesday, 16th December, 5.30pm.              
I expect figures to come in at 1.5% (previous figure was 1.6%).
Canada: Manufacturing Sales m/m. Tuesday, 16th December, 9.30pm.              
I expect figures to come in at -0.3% (previous figure was 2.1%).

Trade Call

Long USD/CAD at 1.1538
On the H1 chart, prices on USD/CAD have failed to rally to a higher high, signaling a pause in the upward momentum. I expect prices to retrace another 30-40 pips downwards as traders take profit on slumping oil prices.
 
With the negative data expected to come out from Canada this week, I expect the uptrend on USD/CAD to continue. An entry is taken at 1.1538 at the support level. A stop loss of 35 pips is placed below the previous low and we will have two targets on this trade, exiting the first position at 1.1573 and the second one at 1.1608.
 
Entry Price = 1.1538
Stop Loss = 1.1503
1st Profit = 1.1573
2nd Profit = 1.1608
 
Sources: (As written on BTInvest, 15 December 2014.)
 
Note: The information in this article has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Its accuracy or completeness is not guaranteed and opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is for information only and not to be construed as a solicitation for contracts. We accept no liability for any direct or indirect loss arising from the use of this information.
 

Saturday, 13 December 2014

US Non-Farm Payrolls Record Blow-out Number

Employers in the U.S. added 321,000 jobs in November, the most since January 2012, driving wage gains and highlighting increased corporate confidence the economy will endure a weakening in global markets.
 
According to figures from the US Labour Department, the advance in payrolls exceeded the most optimistic projection in a Bloomberg survey of economists and followed a 243,000 gain in October that was stronger than previously reported. The jobless rate held at a six-year low of 5.8 percent. Average hourly earnings rose 0.4 percent, the biggest gain since June of last year.
 
The USD/JPY shot up over 100 pips immediately after the blowout number was reported. On Monday morning, USD/JPY rose to 121.84, touching its highest level since July 2007. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.1 percent by 9:25 a.m. in Tokyo, as Japan’s Topix Index rose 0.4 percent to extend its highest level since December 2007.
 
Elsewhere in Europe, European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi has promised that the ECB will act should current stimulus prove insufficient when it is reassessed early next year. The central bank is said to be preparing a QE package to be discussed at the next monetary policy meeting on 22nd January 2015.
 
On 11th December, banks are expected to borrow about 148 billion euros in the targeted long term refinancing operation (TLTRO), according to the median estimate in the survey of 24 analysts. Predictions ranged from 90 billion euros to as much as 250 billion euros. An initial round of the program in September raised 82.6 billion euros, less than economists forecast.
 
The TLTRO, designed to spur lending to the real economy, will mature in September 2018 and will have a fixed interest rate, which is the refinancing rate at the time of take-up plus 10 basis point spread. After December, additional amounts can be borrowed in further target LTROs during the period from March 2015 to June 2016, depending on the evolution of the banks’ eligible lending activities in excess of bank-specific benchmarks.
 
A low take-up rate in December would make the prospect of actual sovereign bond QE in early 2015 more likely. Draghi’s plan to boost the ECB’s balance sheet toward early-2012 levels, when it was about 3 trillion euros compared with 2 trillion euros now, is aimed at ensuring the euro area is flooded with cash, keeping real interest rates low and spurring credit creation that can revive the economy.
 
As well as the long-term loans, it’s also fueled by purchases of covered bonds and asset-backed securities.
 
Since those private-sector asset purchases started in late October, the ECB’s balance sheet has barely budged as liquidity injections are countered by repayments on the older loans. In fact, between now and February 2015, banks must repay 270 billion euros of outstanding loans issued at the end of 2011 to alleviate the effects of the euro area’s sovereign debt crisis.
 
Covered-bond purchases totaled 17.8 billion euros as of 28th November, and buying of asset-backed securities (ABS), which started late last month, reached 368 million euros.
 
The problem in all of the ECB’s moves thus far is that the 18-nation economy has also shown little sign of improvement. Inflation matched a five-year low at 0.3 percent in November and the ECB last week cut its forecasts for consumer prices and gross domestic product through 2016.

Top News This Week

UK: Manufacturing Production m/m. Tuesday, 9th December, 5.30pm.              
I expect figures to come in at 0.2% (previous figure was 0.4%).
China: CPI y/y. Wednesday, 10th December, 9.30am.              
I expect figures to come in at 1.5% (previous figure was 1.6%).
Australia: Employment Change. Thursday, 11th December, 8.30am.              
I expect figures to come in below 16K (previous figure was 24.1K).

Trade Call

Short EUR/USD at 1.2276

On the H1 chart, there was a “short squeeze” last week when prices retraced upwards to hit 1.2456. The main reason was due to Draghi’s refusal to commit to QE this year. Some traders saw that as a reason to take profit on the short EUR/USD, causing the EUR/USD to have a push upwards.
However, the EUR/USD short trades have returned almost immediately, especially after the blowout number from Friday’s NFP. An aggressive entry is taken at 1.2276 once prices hit the support level. A stop loss of 35 pips is placed above the previous high and we will have two targets on this trade, exiting the first position at 1.2241 and the second one at 1.2206.

Entry Price = 1.2276
Stop Loss = 1.2311
1st Profit = 1.2241
2nd Profit = 1.2206


Sources: (As written on BTInvest, 08 December 2014.)
 
Note: The information in this article has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Its accuracy or completeness is not guaranteed and opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is for information only and not to be construed as a solicitation for contracts. We accept no liability for any direct or indirect loss arising from the use of this information.

Forex News – Aussie Slumps Toward Record Nine-Day Losing Streak as Yen Gains

Australia’s dollar weakened for a ninth day and New Zealand’s fell for a third as a slide in commodity prices damped the outlook for nations that rely on sales of raw materials.
 
The yen strengthened versus all except one of its 16 major counterparts as a decline in Asian stocks revived demand for the currency as a haven. The Aussie extended its daily losing streak to the longest since it was allowed to float freely in 1983 as a gauge of business sentiment fell to the lowest since last year’s election. China’s yuan weakened to a four-month low.
 
“The Aussie is leading losses in commodity currencies with oil declining as a slowdown in global economy reduces demand,” said Junichi Ishikawa, an analyst at IG Markets in Tokyo. “Gains in the greenback against its Australian peer are spreading to the dollar-yen cross rate as well.”
 
Australia’s dollar fell 0.7 percent to 82.33 U.S. cents as of 2:46 p.m. in Tokyo, having tumbled 3.7 percent during its nine-day decline. The Aussie earlier dropped to 82.24 cents, the weakest since June 2010. New Zealand’s currency slipped 0.3 percent to 76.27 cents.
 
The yen gained 0.4 percent to 120.22 per dollar after strengthening 0.6 percent yesterday. Japan’s currency advanced 0.4 percent to 148.11 per euro. The U.S. dollar was little changed at $1.2320 per euro.
 
Source: Bloomberg (09 Dec 2014)

Friday, 5 December 2014

Forex News – Dollar Approaches 120 Yen on U.S. Outlook; Euro Weak Before ECB

The dollar rose to within 0.1 percent of 120 yen, a level unseen since July 2007, as forecasts that the U.S. economy’s jobs growth maintained momentum contrasted with a recession in Japan.
 
The euro was near a two-year low reached yesterday before the European Central Bank meets today as investors speculated about the timing of additional stimulus. Australia’s dollar fell to a four-year low, extending its slide to a sixth day, after data yesterday showed the pace of economic growth unexpectedly slowed.
 
“It’s still the divergent-growth, divergent-policy story,” said Robert Sinche, a global strategist at Amherst Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “We are seeing capital flows out of Japan, and I think that helps bring capital out and continues this movement down in the yen.”
 
The dollar rose 0.1 percent to 119.87 yen at 9:04 a.m. in Tokyo from yesterday, after earlier reaching a seven-year high of 119.90. The euro was little changed at $1.2312 after falling to $1.2301 yesterday, the lowest since August 2012. The single currency bought 147.60 yen from 147.48 in New York.
 
The Aussie fell 0.1 percent to 83.95 U.S. cents after dropping as low as 83.86, a level unseen since July 2010.
 
Source: Bloomberg (04 Dec 2014)

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Forex News – Dollar Rises to 7-Year High Versus Yen as Aussie Slides on GDP

The dollar strengthened to a seven-year high against the yen before U.S. data this week that economists say will back the case for higher interest rates as Japan and Europe ease policy.
 
The greenback was 0.2 percent from its strongest in two years against the euro before the European Central Bank meets tomorrow. Australia’s currency slid to a four-year low after a report showed economic growth was less than forecast. New Zealand’s dollar weakened following a drop in milk prices at an auction. Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said yesterday low oil prices are a boon to the U.S. economy.
 
“The market has been paying attention to comments by Fed officials that lower energy prices are a plus for the U.S. recovery,” said Yasuhiro Kaizaki, vice president for global markets at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank in New York. “That optimism over the economic outlook is fueling dollar buying.”
 
The dollar rose 0.2 percent to 119.39 yen at 11:45 a.m. in Tokyo from yesterday, after reaching 119.44, the highest since August 2007. It was at $1.2387 per euro from $1.2383 in New York. The greenback touched $1.2358 on Nov. 7, the strongest since August 2012. The euro traded at 147.88 yen from 147.63.
 
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the U.S. currency against 10 trading partners, was little changed at 1,111.39 from yesterday, when it closed at the highest level since March 2009. The gauge has risen 9 percent in 2014, heading for its best year since Bloomberg started compiling the data in 2004.
 
Source: Bloomberg (03 Dec 2014)

Tuesday, 2 December 2014

“Save Our Swiss Gold” Rejected

The Swiss voted against the “Save Our Swiss Gold” proposal last weekend.
 
The proposal that required SNB to hold at least 20 percent of its assets in gold has been rejected by a majority of 77%. SNB said it was “pleased to hear” of the result and “The SNB will continue to enforce the minimum exchange rate with the utmost determination and is prepared to buy foreign currency in unlimited quantities,” in their statement.
 
The immediate market response to the outcome of the referendum is spot Gold opening at 1159 lower than last Friday’s closing of 1168. The EUR/CHF opened slightly higher at 1.2035 too, compared to Friday’s closing. SNB had set a floor of 1.20 for the EUR/CHF exchange rate 3 years ago. With the prospect of further stimulus by the ECB, it could exert pressure on the EUR/CHF and may prompt the SNB to intervene in order to defend the 1.20 level. Besides direct intervention in the currency market, setting negative interest rates is one of the options available to SNB.
 
The outcome of the Swiss Referendum marks the beginning of an eventful week. With 4 central banks, ECB, BOE, BOC & RBA due to release their statements and US announcing their key manufacturing and employment data, we can expect the currency market to be pretty volatile this week.
 
ECB will release their official statement on 4th Dec. The recent decision by OPEC to continue with their production caused the oil price to drop to a 5-year low. This has presented a challenge to ECB in their bid to raise the inflation in the Euro zone. This may prompt ECB to decide on more aggressive easing. On the other hand, ECB Vice President Vitor Constancio said that the best time to evaluate the effect of the current stimulus is Q1 2015.
 
If ECB announces on more aggressive easing on 4th Dec, we can expect the Euro to weaken further. However, if ECB decides to remain status quo until Q1 2015, we may see a short term rally in the Euro.
 
Last week’s Thanksgiving Day presented an insight to consumer spending in US. The traditional Thanksgiving Black Friday weekend is famous for long queues and crazy spending.  According to the National Retail Federation (NRF), spending fell to $50.9 billion as compared to $57.4 billion in 2013. The number of shoppers came in at 133.7 million, more than 6 million lesser than the 140.1 million expected by NRF.
 
Although the figures may present a “not-so-optimistic” picture of the consumer spending, we have to look at the upcoming spending figures in December to give us a clearer view. It is important to look at the November and December figures because they account for 19% of total annual revenue of the retailers.
 
Besides retail spending data, the upcoming employment data is something to look out for as well. If the data is weaker than market consensus. Market is likely to price in delay in rate hike by the Fed again

Top News This Week

Australia: Cash Rate. Tuesday, 2nd December, 11.30am.              
I expect figures to remain at 2.5% (previous figure was 2.5%)
.
Europe: Minimum Bid Rate. Thursday, 4th December, 8.45pm.              
I expect figures to remain at 0.05% (previous figure was 0.05%).
 
US: Non-farm Employment Change. Friday, 5th December, 9.30pm.              
I expect figures to come in at 222K (previous figure was 214K).
 
Trade Call
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Long EUR/CHF at 1.2060
On the daily chart, EUR/CHF is hovering around 20 plus pips away from the 1.20 level and the immediate resistance around 1.2050 level. SNB has vouched to hold the 1.20 level.  If the upcoming ECB press conference announces further easing, it may put pressure on the EUR/CHF to test the 1.20 level, thereby prompting SNB to take action to weaken CHF.
I expect prices to hover between 1.2000 and 1.2050.  A pending order with entry at 1.2060 is placed in anticipation of any intervention by SNB.  A stop loss of 70 pips is placed below the 1.20 level.  We will have two targets on this trade, exiting the first position at 1.2130 and the second one at 1.2200.
Entry Price = 1.2060
Stop Loss = 1.1990
1st Profit = 1.2130
2nd Profit = 1.2200
 
Sources: (As written on BTInvest, 01 December 2014.)
 
Note: The information in this article has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Its accuracy or completeness is not guaranteed and opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is for information only and not to be construed as a solicitation for contracts. We accept no liability for any direct or indirect loss arising from the use of this information.

Forex News – Australian Dollar Falls to 4-Year Low After Swiss Gold Decision

Australia’s dollar slid to a four-year low on speculation demand for the nation’s gold will wane after voters in Switzerland rejected a referendum to force the Swiss National Bank to hold more of the metal.

The Aussie and the New Zealand dollar fell against major counterparts before data forecast to show manufacturing slowed in China, the biggest trading partner of both South Pacific nations. The Reserve Bank of Australia sets policy tomorrow. Australia is the world’s largest gold producer after China.

“Gold is an important driver of the Aussie dollar,” said Raiko Shareef, a markets analyst at Bank of New Zealand Ltd. in Wellington. “Sentiment is quite fragile in Aussie right now given what’s happening in metals generally.”

Australia’s dollar dropped 0.8 percent to 84.37 U.S. cents as of 8:59 a.m. in Tokyo, after touching 84.27 cents, the least since July 2010. New Zealand’s currency slid 0.6 percent to 77.93 U.S. cents. The Aussie and kiwi fell for a third day.

The greenback rose 0.2 percent to 118.88 yen. It was little changed at $1.2436 per euro. The single currency added 0.1 percent to 147.82 yen. The Swiss franc weakened 0.3 percent to 96.79 centimes per dollar.

The “Save Our Swiss Gold” proposal stipulating the Swiss National Bank hold at least 20 percent of its balance sheet in gold and never sell any bullion was voted down by 77 percent to 23 percent, the government said. Polls had forecast the initiative’s rejection.

Source: Bloomberg (01 Dec 2014)

Forex News – Yuan Trade Surge Shows Hong Kong Role Intact, HKMA Chan Says

The daily average turnover of Hong Kong’s real-time yuan payments system has doubled to 800 billion yuan in October, from 400 billion yuan a day in 2013, Chan said. The city’s savings in the Chinese currency totaled 944.5 billion yuan by the end of September, according to HKMA data. With the central bank due to release last month’s deposit figures later today, Chan said the total is yet to reach 1 trillion yuan.
 
The currency in Hong Kong fell 0.37 percent this week, the most since the five days ended Oct. 3, after China cut benchmark interest rates for the first time since 2012. It traded at 6.1561 per dollar as of 10:19 a.m. local time.
 
Hong Kong has assigned all of its quota to invest yuan in China’s onshore financial markets and Chan said the HKMA’s request for a higher limit received a “positive response” from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange in meetings yesterday.
 
Hong Kong has 270 billion yuan of allocations under the Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program, the world’s largest, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The U.K., Singapore, France, South Korea, Germany, Qatar, Canada and Australia have 500 billion yuan of quota in total.

Source: Bloomberg (28 Nov 2014)

Forex News – Aussie Near 4-Year Low After RBA’s Lowe Says Currency May Weaken

Australia’s dollar traded 0.3 percent from a four-year low after central bank Deputy Governor Philip Lowe said yesterday the currency will probably depreciate in line with commodity export prices.

The yen was near the weakest level in seven years against the U.S. dollar as Bank of Japan board member Sayuri Shirai said she supported the central bank’s additional monetary stimulus last month. The U.S. dollar was little changed against most of its major peers before a report economists said will show durable goods slid for a third month.
 
“Weaker commodity prices and the possibility that the interest-rate differential could narrow between the U.S. and Australia, with the Fed looking to raise interest rates next year, have been pointing to a weaker Australian dollar for some time,” said Janu Chan, a Sydney-based economist at St. George Bank Ltd. who attended the Australian Business Economists’ annual dinner yesterday where Lowe spoke.
 
Australia’s dollar traded at 85.38 U.S. cents as of 12:02 p.m. in Tokyo from 85.30 cents yesterday, when it touched 85.14 cents, the least since July 2010.
 
The yen gained 0.1 percent to 117.85 per dollar, after touching 118.98 on Nov. 20, the weakest since August 2007. The euro was little changed at $1.2469. The single currency bought 146.95 yen from 147.17.
 
Source: Bloomberg (26 Nov 2014)

Forex News – Yen Rebounds as Drop Seen Overdone; Kuroda Says Japan on Track

The yen rebounded from near a seven-year low versus the dollar amid signs its decline had become overstretched and as Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said the economy is on track to achieving policy makers’ 2 percent inflation target.
 
Japan’s currency rose against all major peers as a gauge of momentum signaled its drop versus the greenback since the end of last month has been too much, too soon. The BOJ surprised markets on Oct. 31 by expanding monetary stimulus, two days after the Fed ended its bond-buying program. New Zealand’s dollar held its first decline in three days before a quarterly Reserve Bank survey of inflation expectations.
 
The yen gained 0.2 percent to 118.02 per dollar at 10:20 a.m. in Tokyo from yesterday, when it fell 0.4 percent. It reached 118.98 on Nov. 20, the weakest since August 2007. The yen jumped 0.3 percent to 146.70 per euro, after yesterday’s 0.8 percent slide. The euro traded at $1.2432 from $1.2442.
 
Kuroda said in a speech in Nagoya today that core consumer-price gains are likely to reach 2 percent in or around the fiscal year starting next April, and that efforts to end Japan’s deflationary mindset are progressing.
 
The BOJ last month lifted the annual target for enlarging the monetary base to 80 trillion yen ($680 billion), from 60 trillion yen to 70 trillion yen. The policy board voted to retain the plan at the end of a two-day meeting on Nov. 19.
 
The yen’s 14-day relative-strength index versus the dollar was at 24, and has been below the 30 line that signals to some traders that an asset is oversold every day since Oct. 31.
 
Source: Bloomberg (25 Nov 2014)