Early FX
May 26th, 2016 6:39 amVia Kit Juckes at SocGen:
A bit of risk aversion overnight and US real yields’ advance has stopped, stopping the DXY rally at the same time. TIIPS still do a good job of helping me understand where the dollar’s going and it’s clear that a rapid rally can’t happen while the reaction to talk of fed tightening is so muted at the longer end of the Treasury market,. So we’re bullish, but not over-excited. Today, we get US durable goods, which we expect to be flat on a headline basis and not too sparkly if we dig further (non-defence ex-air capo goods are likely to be up 0.1%). Jobless claims are due, as are pending home sales, the Kansas fed index and St Louis fed President James Bullard speaks. But with parts of Europe off today, the real focus is now on tomorrow’s speech by Janet Yellen and a marginally softer dollar, correlating with the higher oil price, is the result.
DXY bounce stalls with TIIPS yield
[http://email.sgresearch.com/Content/PublicationPicture/226488/1]
Oil prices are up through USD 50 for WTI, and that combines with the strength of US equities yesterday to keep the commodity currencies supported. AUD is steady despite a soft headline on Capex data. The New Zealand dollar is a little softer after a downbeat milk price forecast from Fonterra, but overall, the commodity and emerging market currencies are quietly stronger today. Copper prices bounced and that marginally reduces the appearance of divergence between metals and oil, but that remains a theme we stick with – shorts in NZD and AUD, rather than CAD, in G10 for example.
Copper/oil divergence – one to watch
[http://email.sgresearch.com/Content/PublicationPicture/226488/2]
In the week to May 20, Japanese investors bought Y684bn in foreign bonds, taking purchases this year to Y11trn, more than twice as much as they had bought in the same period last year. How on earth can I be bearish of a currency whose investors ship money out at that rate (nearly 50% above the run-rate of the current account surplus)? Annual purchases are over Y20trn and if I include buying of foreign equities, and subtract foreign buying of Japanese bonds and equities, the annual total is now running at Y26trn. These figures are worth highlighting not because they tell me where the Yen is going today, but because they show that yen strength is now predicated on a big market long of the currency. That long can grow on risk averse days (and on days like today when there are nerves about the Chinese economy) but I’ll only really push fresh yen longs either at cheaper levels or at least, after positions have been cut back.
Japanese buying of foreign bonds
[http://email.sgresearch.com/Content/PublicationPicture/226488/3]
GBP/USD is bid – yet again. More pre-referendum hedges are being closed than I could imagine possible and GBP/USD is bearing down on the May 3 high at 1.4770, which coincides with the 200-day average. I want to be short of GBP/USD after the vote, on a ‘remain’ bounce or an ‘exit’ fall, but here, everything is about positioning and I suspect ‘Brexit’ hedges are being put on in other FX pairs (buying CHF/NOK at these levels, looking for sideways trading on a ‘remain’ or a sharp rally on a risk-averse ‘leave’ outcome, is attractive, for example).