Intraday Market Thoughts Archives
Displaying results for week of May 09, 2021Gold's Friday Trading Sessions إغلاقات الجمعة في الذهب
Our latest Gold video with contents breakdown آخر فيديو الذهب مع تقسيم الفصول المختلفة
Charting US & Eurozone Data Misses
Economic data was a minor factor in trading in Thursday's trade. PPI was up 6.2% compared to 5.8% y/y expected but there was a small 'sell the fact' trade in the dollar afterwards. At the same time, weekly jobless claims also slipped to 473K from 498K as that series continues to improve.
Oil was the mover on the day, falling 3.5% to the lows of the week. The loonie struggled and some light jawboning from BOC governor Macklem may have helped that along.
The surprise on the day was the bond market. There was a soft 30-year Treasury auction but it did little to halt the bid, which has been relentless despite higher inflation. The bond market is most-sensitive to rising inflation risks but isn't screaming in the same way that some commentators are but that could change.
Looking ahead, the consumer comes at 1400 GMT with the UMich consumer sentiment report. It's forecast to tick up to 90.2 from 88.3 but there will also be a focus on inflation expectations. The one-year metric is forecast to climb to 3.5% from 3.4%.تداول العملات بدون مخاطر الدوار الأميركي
Fed Fight Begins
The remainder of the year will be a battle between those seeing problematic inflation and those – particularly the Fed -- who insist it's temporary.
Think of the past few months of inflation talk as pre-fight hype but the bell rang on the real bout on Wednesday with the April CPI report. The inflationistas came out swinging and landed an absolute haymaker as CPI rose 4.2% y/y compared to 3.6% expected. Excluding food and energy it rose 3.0% y/y compared to 2.3% expected. The 0.9% m/m rise in core inflation was the highest in 39 years.
The dollar surged, Treasury yields rose and equities tumbled. The S&P 500 fell 2.1% in the largest decline since February, closing just off the lows of the day.
Fed vice chair Clarida spoke just after the report and said it was surprising but largely stuck to the same message. If there was a minor shift it was that he said that policymakers need to remain humble along with a reiteration that they wouldn't hesitate to act in the face of problematic inflation. He also highlighted the important role of inflation expectations in his decision-making.
The mood in markets is a sharp reversal from Friday when a soft jobs report looked like it paved the way for an easy summer for the Fed.
What's abundantly clear is that economic data is going to drive markets for months. Next up is PPI, which is often ignored but will reverberate this time around. There's often a correlation between the two reports so risks are to the upside in the +5.8% y/y consensus. Weekly jobless claims are also due and forecast at 490K.
We will also be keeping a close watch on the BOC's Macklem. Canada has drifted away from the central bank consensus with the early taper and Macklem widen the rift by highlighting inflation risks. If so, that would boost CAD but could also reverberate more broadly.Fed Sings Chorus but CPI Could Upend
Equities were the main event on Tuesday as the risk-off trade that bubbled up on Monday extended. Europe and Japan were hit hard and US was on track to tumble as well but after a punishing run, it was tech that set off a bounce from the bottom as the Nasdaq turned a 2% decline into a flat close.
Those gyrations dictated FX moves with commodity FX following closely but the overall currency market moves weren't large.
Another source of support was an overwhelmingly consistent message from the 8 separate Fed officials who spoke. They unanimous preached some variation of patience before hiking rates and a belief that higher inflation is transitory. That kind of strong consensus should continue to offer comfort to equities for the months ahead.
One risk that several highlighted was an unwelcome rise in inflation. That's something that could start as soon as Wednesday with the April CPI report. The year-over-year reading is expected to jump to 3.6% from 2.6%. Excluding food and energy, the consensus is a rise to 2.3% from 1.6%.
We anticipate that the Fed has well-prepared the market for a short-term rise in prices so even a 0.1-0.3 pp upside miss on the y/y numbers should be well tolerated and may present a short-term buying opportunity. Watch bonds closely, particularly if there's an upside surprise.Inflation Alert, NFP Rethink, GBP Resists
Whether a higher than expectec CPI helps the USD, will depend on the follow-up in US bond yields. But what's many are ignoring is that rising supply-driven inflation does not move in a vaccum. Do you think inflation will remain muted in Europe?
Was the soft jobs report a game-changer? The trade on Friday was that it meant rates would stay lower for longer, or would at least give the Fed some leeway to try out it's patient approach to normalizing. On Monday though, the mood was more that it was a one-off report and that the dozens of other inputs of better growth are more relevant. That led to a big unwind in the stock and yield moves.
The US dollar though hardly bounced. A particularly large move came in cable, which jumped more than 150 pips to the highest since February. Some of that was technical as a series of March/April highs gave way but the tipping point was the Scottish election. Today's Queen's speech also helped boost GBP via improved political prospects for PM Johnson, following Labour's horrid showing in last week's local elections.
The SNP and pro-indepenced Greens together got enough votes for a majority but it wasn't a resounding win and will independence polls flagging and better growth on the way, the market clearly took the impression that no referendum is coming soon. Combine that with ongoing UK vaccinations and reopenings and there isn't much in the way of a return to the Feb high of 1.4242 and potentially to back to 2017 levels.
CFTC Commitments of Traders
Speculative net futures trader positions as of the close on Tuesday. Net short denoted by - long by +.EUR +85K vs +81K prior
GBP +20K vs +29 prior
JPY -41K vs -49K prior
CHF 0K vs -1K prior
CAD +26K vs +16K prior
AUD +1K vs -1K prior
NZD +9K vs +7K prior
Specs are beginning to buy into the Canadian dollar rally and that's no surprise given the positive backdrop in commodities and acceleration in Canada's vaccine rollout. Friday's Canadian employment report was on the soft side but lockdown measures should begin to ease this month and then it will be clear sailing. The report prompted Ashraf to trigger longs in GBPCAD on Friday, as stated late in the video and to the WhatsApp Broadcast Group on Monday.Timing GBP & Gold توقيت تداول الاسترليني و الذهب
Full video on calling the fractal in GBPUSD & Gold's breakout with chapter breakdown تفاصيل فنيات الذهب و الاسترليني مع فصول الفيديو