Tag Archive: Bank of Canada
Yen Unwinds Yesterday’s Gains, while the Mexican Peso and Indian Rupee Stabilize
Overview: The foreign exchange market is calmer
today than Monday and Tuesday, and the dollar is mixed. The yen, which rallied,
yesterday, has given back most of its gains and the wage data gave the market
second thoughts about next week's BOJ meeting. The Mexican peso, which has been
sold aggressively in the face of the strong election showing of the Morena
party and allies, is the strongest currency today, though the greenback is
holding above...
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Dollar Pulled Back in Europe. New Buying Opportunity?
Overview: The dollar initially extended yesterday's
North American recovery but unwound most of the gains in the European morning. As
North American dealers return, the greenback is lower against most of the G10
currencies. After approaching levels believed to have been where the BOJ last
intervened, profit-taking pushed the dollar back to a marginal new low for the
week (~JPY156.55). The yen's recovery arguably helped the Chinese yuan rise for
the...
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Dollar Consolidates but Adjustment is Not Over
Overview: Higher than expected US CPI for the third consecutive month drove US interest rates sharply higher and lifted the greenback broadly. The market appears to be catching its proverbial breath today, but the shallow consolidation suggests the moves are not over.
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Dollar Consolidates Softer Ahead of Tomorrow’s CPI
Overview: The dollar is trading with
a softer bias in mostly narrow ranges against the G10 currencies. It did not
rally much ahead of the US jobs data, and it was not able to sustain the upside
momentum afterwards, despite the jump in US yields. Former St. Louis Fed President
Bullard, who still has a strong reputation in the market, told Bloomberg TV
yesterday that three cuts were his base case this year. The Scandis and
Antipodeans are the...
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Forex Becalmed with the Greenback Mostly Firmer in Narrow Ranges
(Business trip will interrupt the commentary over the next few days. Check out the March monthly here. Back with the Week Ahead on March 9. May have some comments on X @marcmakingsense.) Overview: Outside of the Australian and New Zealand
dollars, which are off by 0.20%-0.25%, the other G10 currencies are little
changed and mostly softer in narrow ranges. A firm Tokyo CPI, mostly on base
effects and softer rates helped keep the US dollar below...
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China’s CSI 300 Rises for Seventh Consecutive Session and Offshore Yuan Strengthens for the Sixth Session
Overview: The dollar is trading quietly
after being sold yesterday. It is still soft against the dollar bloc and the
Swiss franc but is firmer against the other G10 currencies. Narrow ranges have
dominated. Emerging market currencies are mixed, with central European
currencies and the Taiwan dollar trading softer. The offshore Chinese yuan is
firmer for the sixth consecutive session. The highlights of today's North
American session features minutes...
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Attention turns to Lagarde’s Press Conference and US Q4 GDP
Overview: The US dollar is trading mostly quietly in narrow ranges
against the G10 currencies ahead of the ECB's President Lagarde's press
conference at the conclusion of the policy meeting and the first estimate of Q4
US GDP. With elevated price pressures, Norway's central bank left rates steady
and reiterated its signal that rates will remain high for some time, and this
has lifted the krone by about 0.5% to leader the major currencies. Most of...
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PBOC Cuts Reserve Requirements, but USD Pullback may offer New Buying Opportunity in North America
Overview: After a strong showing yesterday, the
dollar was sold in Asia and Europe. China announced a cut in reserve
requirements and took more informal action to support the stock market, which
encouraged risk-taking. Yet, the dollar's decline has stretched intraday
momentum indicators, which may provide early operators in North America a new
dollar buying opportunity. The ECB and Norway's central banks meet tomorrow,
and the US reports its first...
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Markets Catch Collective Breath
Overview: The US dollar is mixed today. The dollar-bloc currencies are firmer, while the euro and yen are softer. We had anticipated a recovery of the dollar on ideas that the market has too aggressively pushed down US rates, and pricing in more Fed easing with higher confidence than seems to be warranted by the recent data. However, US rates have not recovered, but the dollar has. Partly, this reflects that rates have fallen as faster if not...
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Tensions Run High Ahead of ECB Meeting and US Q3 GDP as JPY150 Breached
Overview: The market is on edge. Anxiety is running higher. It is
partly geopolitics, and it is partly market stresses. The dollar is holding
above JPY150 but so far, no reports or signs of intervention. Bank shares are
under pressure. An index of Japanese banks has fallen for five of the past six
sessions and are off about 8% from the year's high set last month. An index of
European bank shares has fallen in six of the past seven sessions and...
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Divergence Continues to Underpin the Greenback
Overview: The divergence reflected in the flash PMI
readings seen yesterday underpinned the dollar, which is firmer in mostly quiet
turnover. The initial Australian dollar gains scored in response to the
slightly less decline in Q3 CPI have been unwound. The greenback also remains
within striking distance of JPY150 where there are still some large options and
some apprehension over possible BOJ intervention. Hungary's larger than expected
rate cut...
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Battle for $1.07 in the Euro
Overview: Despite disappointing German
industrial output, where the 0.8% decline was twice expectations, the euro is
holding above $1.07, where large options exist that are expiring over the next
few sessions. The greenback is consolidating against the Japanese yen, where
the fear of intervention has increased. Sterling remains on its back foot after
yesterday's seemingly dovish comments by Bank of England Governor Bailey. Emerging
market...
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Dollar Sell-Off is Getting Stretched
Overview: Softer-than-expected US CPI, following
weaker than expected job growth has sent the greenback tumbling. The dollar is
stabilizing against the yen today, but the downside momentum is intact against
the other major currencies. The euro approached $1.1175, sterling $1.3080, and
the greenback slumped to almost CHF0.8615. The Australian dollar reached $0.6850,
and the New Zealand dollar tested $0.6360. The Canadian dollar, often a laggard
in a...
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US CPI and Bank of Canada Highlight North American Session
Overview: The US dollar's losses have been extended
ahead of the June CPI. At the same time, speculation that the Bank of Japan
will adjust policy later this month saw the yen extend its gains for the fifth
consecutive session. Sterling made new highs since last April, while the Swiss
franc has risen to its best levels in about 2 1/2 years. The Dollar Index
gapped lower and through the trendline drawn off the April and May lows. The
greenback has...
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Japan’ Q1 GDP was Revised Up, While the Eurozone’s was Revised Down
Overview: The back-to-back surprise rate hikes by
the Australia and Canada spurred speculation that the Fed could hike next week,
and this lifted US rates and helped the dollar recover. The odds of a hike
increased, according to the indicative pricing in the Fed funds futures market
from about a 20% chance to a little above 35%. now. At yesterday's high, the
two-year yield was up a little more than 25 bp since the low before the US
employment data...
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RBA Surprises with a Quarter-Point Hike and German Factory Orders Disappoint
Overview: The Reserve Bank of Australia surprised
many with a quarter-point hike and German factory orders unexpectedly fell.
Reports suggest that China has asked banks to cut deposit rates. The next
result is the Australian dollar is the strongest currency in the G10 and helped
lift the Canadian dollar ahead of the Bank of Canada meeting tomorrow. Australian
stocks sold off (~1.2%) while large markets outside of China rose in the region.
Europe's...
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US Dollar Slumps and China Surprises with Twice the Expected Trade Surplus
Overview: The market took US short-term rates and
the dollar lower after the CPI data, which was largely in line with
expectations. On the one hand, the odds of a quarter-point hike next month
increased slightly (73.6% vs. 71.6%) to 5.25%, but it reinforced that sense
that it is last hike and that the Fed will unwind this hike and more before the
end of the year. The year-end implied policy rate fell by about six basis points to
4.33%. The dollar...
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US CPI is Unlikely to Tell Us Anything We Don’t Already Know
Overview: Today's highlight is the March US
CPI, and while everyone is talking about it, it is unlikely to tell us anything
we do not already know. Headline price pressures are easing but the core rate
is sticky, and despite comments from the Chicago Fed president about the need
for patience, the odds of a hike next month have crept up. Understanding the
Fed's reaction function, it seems clear that for most officials, inflation is
remains too high...
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Yen Jumps Despite Poor GDP Ahead of Tomorrow’s BOJ Outcome
Overview: Seeing the drama he inspired on Tuesday,
the Fed chair tried soft-pedaling the idea that he was signaling a 50 bp hike
in March. The market did not buy it. And the odds, discounted by the Fed funds
futures rose a little above 70% from about 62% at Tuesday's close. The two-year
note yield solidified its foothold above the 5% mark. With the Bank of Canada
confirming its pause, the Reserve Bank of Australia does not seem that far
behind, and...
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Powell Sends the Two-Year Yield above 5% and Ignites Powerful Dollar Rally
Overview: Federal Reserve Chair Powell's comments to
the Senate Banking Committee were seen as hawkish by the market, even though it
has been clear to most observers that the 5.10% median terminal rate that the
Fed projected in December would be increased. Also, it seemed well appreciated
a few Fed officials support a 50 bp hike at the February 1 FOMC meeting, two
days before a "hot" jobs report that showed over 500k jobs were
filled. It...
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