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Currency market: GBP/USD and FX next week

As written yesterday, GBP/USD highs were located at 1.2197, 1.2214 and 1.2233. GBP/USD traded perfectly to 1.2214. Lows at 1.2072 and 1.2063 traded exactly to 1.2064. Then longs dead stopped perfectly at reported range top at 1.2174. Vital to 1.2214 and 1.2063 are perfect levels. GBP/USD knew exactly where it would trade. If GBP/USD traded in between price at an interval then the message is GBP/USD contains a hesitant price and is not certain to direction. The larger range yesterday was 1.2174 to 1.2009. GBP/USD traded 40 pips above 1.2174. Next week's range: 1.2181 Vs 1.2020. GBP/JPY short strategy traded 200 pips lower. Longs next week must trade above 162.07. DXY traded 178 pips this week while USD/CAD traded 124 pips. USD/CAD's months long problem is short ranges to DXY. USD/CHF traded 181 pips Vs DXY 178. SPX traded 88 pips this week, 226 last week and 188 points 2 weeks ago. SPX trades consistent to DXY 200 ish pip ranges. A free trade to longs and shorts for free money occurs when SPX trades above or below DXY ranges. EUR/USD's overall range this week began at 1.0283 to 1.0136. Next week: 1.0290 Vs 1.0155. EUR/USD big break for higher… Read More »Currency market: GBP/USD and FX next week

NFP Analysis: America’s labor market is red hot, only weak inflation could dethrone King Dollar

The US gained a whopping 528K jobs in July, far above expectations.  Strong wage growth adds to the notion of a 75 bps hike in September and is set to keep the dollar bid Only a drop in inflation could chang the course of the greenback beyond minor correction.  Help wanted, and much more of it – that is what the Nonfarm Payrolls report tells markets about the state of the hiring in America. Contrary to most Nonfarm Payrolls reports, the verdict on this one is clear – a monster report.  The US gained 528,000 jobs in July, more than double the early expectations of 250K, exceeding any upgraded expectations based on leading indicators – and on top of upward revisions. July's gain comes on top of 26,000 additional jobs updated for June. Despite rapid hiring, wage growth accelerated. It rose by 0.5% MoM in July, above 0.3% projected, and 5.2% YoY, beating early estaimtes for 4.9%. The only downside is a 0.1% slide in the participation rate to 62.1%. Neverhteless, the US is just 32,000 jobs short of pre-pandemic employment.  The impressive report seemed to have pushed away recession fears – at least for now – and substantially increased… Read More »NFP Analysis: America’s labor market is red hot, only weak inflation could dethrone King Dollar

Gold Weekly Forecast: Recovery could end if US CPI data confirms 75 bps Fed hike

Gold closed the third straight week in positive territory. $1,780 aligns as key technical level for XAU/USD. July inflation data from the US could trigger a strong reaction next week. Gold started the month of August on a firm footing and climbed toward $1,800 before erasing a portion of its weekly gains on Friday. The sharp decline witnessed in the US Treasury bond yields and the dollar’s uninspiring performance allowed XAU/USD to gain more than 1% during the first half of the week. Following the impressive July jobs report from the US, however, gold reversed its direction. The July inflation report from the US next week will be the next significant catalyst for the pair. What happened last week? The dollar sell-off continued at the beginning of the week and the US Dollar Index declined to its weakest level in nearly a month below 106.00. The data published by the ISM revealed on Monday that the Prices Paid Index of the Manufacturing PMI survey declined to 60 in July from 78.5 in June, revealing a significant softening in price pressures. Investors continued to scale back 75 basis points (bps) Fed rate hike bets in September on this data and gold… Read More »Gold Weekly Forecast: Recovery could end if US CPI data confirms 75 bps Fed hike

GBP/USD Weekly Forecast: Down but not out? Focus shifts to US inflation, UK GDP

GBP/USD snapped two straight weekly gains after dovish BOE hike. UK Q2 GDP could confirm a potential recession, US inflation is also crucial. Acceptance above 1.2200 is critical for GBP bulls to sustain the recovery. GBP/USD bulls faced exhaustion after two straight weekly advances and therefore, ended the week in negative territory. The Bank of England’s (BOE) dovish rate hike and persistent recession fears could be linked to cable’s underperformance. The impressive US July jobs report on Friday highlighted cable buyers’ hesitancy heading into the critical US inflation and UK quarterly GDP releases. GBP/USD: What happened last week? The US dollar’s weakness extended at the start of the week on Monday, as risk flows dominated amid a reduced probability of a 75 bps Fed rate hike in September. GBP/USD built on last week’s 150 pips gains and hit the highest level in four weeks at 1.2293, in anticipation of a 50 bps rate hike by the BOE to combat inflation. But the greenback sprung back to life towards the mid-week, as recession fears amplified alongside escalating geopolitical tensions. The safe-haven bids for the dollar resurfaced ahead of US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, despite China’s warning… Read More »GBP/USD Weekly Forecast: Down but not out? Focus shifts to US inflation, UK GDP

EUR/USD: Daily recommendations on major

EUR/USD – 1.0240 Despite euro's retreat from Tue's near 4-week high of 1.0293 to 1.0124 (Wednesday), subsequent rebound to 1.0253 in New York yesterday on broad-based usd's weakness suggests choppy swings would continue ahead of key U.S. jobs report, above 1.0293 needed to extend rise from July's 0.9953 bottom to 1.0334, break, 1.0360. On the downside, only a daily close below 1.0209 signals intra-day top is made n heads back to 1.0161 (New York low), 1.0124. Data to be released on Friday: Australia AIG services index, Japan all household spending, coincident index, leading indicator. UK Halifax housing prices, France current account, trade balance, industrial output, imports, exports, non-farm payrolls, Italy industrial output. U.S. non-farm payrolls, private payrolls, unemployment rate, average weekly earnings, Canada employment change, unemployment rate and Ivey PMI.

In the US, the risk of recession seems to have retreated

Outlook: Today’s is jobless claims (expected up to 259,000 from 256,000 a week earlier) ahead of the big kahuna tomorrow, nonfarm payrolls. The markets are suspiciously quiet and in a narrow range, with a lull like this usually preceding some fancy volatility and sometimes a breakout. Risk sentiment is not exactly on a knife edge, but it’s not taking a clear direction either. If we take the S&P as a bellwether, risk appetite is on an upswing and we see that in the CAD/AUD/NZD, too. This is not a commodity play but rather a growth play, with the AUD notably reflecting growth in Asia generally and China in particular, despite scare stories about China stumbling. If it’s buying iron (but not coal), it’s hardly on its sickbed. In the US, the risk of recession seems to have retreated now that the ISM services PMI unexpectedly rose to 56.7 in July from 55.3 in June and beating market forecasts of 53.5. Trading Economics notes output and new orders rose while employment fell only a little and price pressures eased (72.3 vs 80.1). Not so much fin–inventories fell at a faster pace (45 vs 47.5). “Availability issues with overland trucking, a restricted… Read More »In the US, the risk of recession seems to have retreated

Pound edges higher, markets eye BoE

The British pound is in positive territory today and briefly climbed above the 1.22 line. In the European session, GBP/USD is trading at 1.2185, up 0.18% on the day. Will BoE tighten by 50bp? The Bank of England meets on Thursday, and a 50bp hike looks likely, especially after hints from Governor Bailey to that effect. In today’s business climate of high inflation and central banks aggressively raising rates, such increases are no longer viewed as ‘massive’ or ‘supersize’. Still, it should be remembered that the BoE has not raised rates by 50bp since 1995, so such a move would be significant, even if it has been priced in by the markets. This would bring the Bank Rate to 1.75%, still well below the rate levels at the Federal Reserve and many other major central banks. In June, the MPC voted 6-3 to raise rates by 25bp, suggesting that Thursday’s decision will not be unanimous either. If the majority wins six or more votes, it would send out a strong message that the BoE is prepared to continue hiking and another 50bp move would be a strong possibility in September, which would be bullish for the pound. A close 5-4… Read More »Pound edges higher, markets eye BoE

Why has the dollar done an about-face?

Outlook: Why did the dollar do an about-face? The comments from the Fed presidents did the trick–not the Pelosi trip, not Jolts–but even the strongest words from mere regional presidents do not usually generate this much power. As triggers go, these are not terribly impressive. We surmise that the market really was overold and wanted to square up a bit. The move was substantial, though, and that gives us our usual trend-follower’s headache–short-lived correction or return to primary trend? We get it right about half the time. We have push-me/pull-you risk factors today. The Pelosi trip has some still unknown after-effects making some folks nervous. Both Pelosi and Pres Biden have said the US will stand up for Taiwan, despite no defense treaty (or even diplomatic relations), and while we’d like to know why this statement and this trip at this time, we see no reason to think they are bluffing. Bloomberg opines that it’s Pelosi who gets the credit/blame. “Yields fell on the pivot narrative, but the move was amplified by concerns about Pelosi's trip to Taiwan. After her plane landed safely on the island, yields rose by over 20 basis points in a matter of hours, one of… Read More »Why has the dollar done an about-face?

US July ISM Services PMI Preview: Inflation component holds the key

ISM will release the July Services PMI report on Wednesday, August 3. Markets have been scaling down hawkish Fed bets since the last FOMC meeting. Inflation component of the PMI survey could impact the dollar's valuation.  The dollar has been having a difficult time finding demand amid disappointing macroeconomic data releases and the Fed’s decision to abandon rate guidance. The US Bureau of Economic Analysis’ initial estimate showed that the US economy contracted at an annualized rate of 0.9% in the second quarter and the probability of a 75 basis points (bps) Fed rate hike in September dropped below 20%. On Monday, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported that the business activity in the manufacturing sector continued to expand at a moderate pace with the headline Manufacturing PMI coming in at 52.8. The Prices Paid component of the survey, however, declined to 60 from 78.5 in June, revealing a remarkable easing in price pressures. Consequently, the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenback’s performance against a basket of six major currencies, fell to its lowest level in a month near 105.00.  DXY daily chart Dollar bears look for signs of softening inflation On Wednesday, the ISM will release… Read More »US July ISM Services PMI Preview: Inflation component holds the key

EUR/USD Forecast: Break below 23.6% Fibo could shift the bias in favour of bearish traders

EUR/USD retreated sharply from a multi-week high set on Tuesday amid resurgent USD demand. The risk-off impulse, US-China tensions, hawkish remarks by Fed officials boosted the greenback. The downfall, however, stalls near mid-1.0100s, warranting caution for aggressive bearish traders. The EUR/USD pair witnessed a dramatic turnaround and retreated around 130 pips from the vicinity of the 1.0300 mark, or a four-week high touched on Tuesday. The US dollar made a solid comeback from its lowest level since July 5 and turned out to be a key factor that exerted heavy downward pressure on the major. Against the backdrop of growing recession fears, mounting diplomatic tensions over US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's Taiwan visit tempered investors' appetite for perceived riskier assets. This was evident from a generally weaker tone around the equity markets, which drove some haven flows towards the greenback. The intraday USD buying picked up pace after several Fed officials hinted that more interest rate hikes are coming in the near term. In fact, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly noted that work on inflation is nowhere near almost done and that policymakers are still resolute and completely united on achieving price stability. Separately, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans… Read More »EUR/USD Forecast: Break below 23.6% Fibo could shift the bias in favour of bearish traders