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Weekly speculative Positions: Bulls and Bears Saw Speculative Opportunity in Euros

 

In the sessions before and after the UK referendum speculators in the currency futures did three things. First, they generally reduced exposure.
This means gross longs and short positions were reduced. Of the 16 gross speculative currency futures positions we track, 12 fell.

Euro: Speculators were divided

Second, speculators were divided about what to do with the euro. The bulls added 20.9k contracts to their gross long holdings, which stood at 10.96k contacts at the end of the CFTC reporting week on June 28. The bears added 21.5k contracts to their gross short position, lifting it to 171.5k contracts.

The conventional approach which focuses on the net position misses this color. The net position was little changed. It is short 61.9k contracts. In the previous week, the net speculative position was short 61.3k contracts. It is the size of the gross positions that suggest the power of the unexpected. It is the gross position that is adjusted in an unexpected move or profit-taking. The finance pipes have to be sufficiently large and robust to handle the gross flows. The net position is a residual.

Sterling: No big change 

Third, in the sessions around the UK referendum, speculators added a very small amount to their gross long sterling positions and covered some of their gross
short positions. Specifically, the gross long sterling position increased by 1.6k contracts (to 43.3k) and the 7.7k gross short contracts were covered (leaving 86k).
Most position adjustments were small. Outside of the euro, there was only one other significant (10k contracts) adjustment to gross speculative positions. The gross short position in the Australian dollar futures was cut by a quarter (11.1k contracts) to 34.5k.

Swiss Franc: Increase to 10.9k contracts 

The net speculative position in CHF increased from 6.4k contracts to 10.9k contracts.

Oil: Reductions in Gross Longs and Gross Shorts

Speculators in the oil futures market reduced gross longs and added to gross shorts. The bulls cut 4.8k contracts to bring their gross long position to 510.4k contracts. The bears
added 9.5k contracts to bring their gross short position to 206.2k contracts. These adjustments resulted in a 14.4k contract fall in the next long position. The net long position peaked in mid-May just below 369k contracts. It stood at 304.2k contracts on June 28.

Treasuries: Small changes

Speculators in 10-year Treasury note futures move to the sidelines. The bulls liquidated 43.3k contracts, leaving them with 668.2k. The bears covered 12.6k contracts, bringing their gross short position to 584.3k contracts.

The net long position fell to 83.9k contracts from 114.7k.

 

 

28-Jun      Commitment of Traders
Net  Prior  Gross Long Long
Change
Gross Short  Short
Change
Euro -61.9 -61.3 109.6 20.9 171.5 21.0
Yen 59.8 52.3 85.5 6.1 25.7 -1.4
Sterling -42.7 -51.9 43.3 1.6 86.0 -7.7
Swiss Franc 10.9 6.4 22.9 -1.1 12.0 -5.6
C$ 7.9 2.6 38.7 -2.0 30.7 -7.3
A$ -2.0 -7.0 32.6 -6.0 34.5 -11.1
NZ$ -2.8 -3.0 29.8 -0.3 32.6 -0.4
Mexican Peso -65.3 -68.9 13.4 -0.1 78.7 -3.7
Crude Oil +304.2 +318.6 510.4 -4.8 206.2 +9.5
Treasuries (10yr) +83.9 114.7 668.2 -43.3 584.3 -12.6
(CFTC, Bloomberg) Speculative
positions in 000’s of contracts

 

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Marc Chandler
He has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for more than 30 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. After 14 years as the global head of currency strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, Chandler joined Bannockburn Global Forex, as a managing partner and chief markets strategist as of October 1, 2018.
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