Dollar and Yen Slip in Quiet even if Eventful Turnover

Dollar and Yen Slip in Quiet even if Eventful Turnover

by Marc Chandler

The US dollar is posting minor losses against most of the major currencies today. The Japanese yen isthe exception, as the greenback continues to straddle JPY105.
There have been several developments today, and the US also has a full economic calendar today. The most important of the developments was the upbeat message from the Reserve Bank of Australia. The Australia dollar is easily the strongest currency on the day, rising 0.7% against the greenback. It is poised for another run the $0.7700 area that has blocked the upside for the past several months. Australia's AAA 10-year sovereign bond yield rose three bp to 2.80%. The two-year yield rose the same among to 1.675%.
The RBA said as it kept the cash rate at a record low 1.5%, that current rates were sufficient to sustain the expansion. There was also the now regular concern over property prices. The RBA statement also acknowledged that currency appreciation could complicate the situation. The important takeaway is that the RBA appears to have shifted to a neutral bias and a rate. The market has reduced the odds of a rate cut next year to around one-in-three. Separately, Australia's Oct manufacturing PMI rose to 50.9 from 49.8. The PMI is recovering from the sharp fall in August (to 46.9 from 56.4), and is back above the 50 boom/bust level for the first time since then.
China's PMI also surprised on the upside. The official manufacturing reading rose to 51.2 from 50.4. This is a two-year high, well above the 50.3 median forecast in the Bloomberg survey, and the third month above 50. The non-manufacturing PMI rose to a new high for the year. It stands at 54.0 from 53.7. Caixin's manufacturing PMI rose to 51.2 from 50.1. This is also a two-year high. It gives further support to our contention that Chinese policymakers have the will and wherewithal ensure a soft economic landing.
As widely expected the Bank of Japan left policy on hold (7-2 vote). As had been tipped, the BOJ pushed out when it is anticipating reaching its inflation target to around FY18 from somewhere in FY17. The BOJ's message was still downbeat, recognizing the risks to growth and inflation were on the downside, and that recent price developments were of concern. The BOJ has not closed the door to additional measures. Separately, its manufacturing PMI was trimmedto 51.4 from the 51.7 flash, and 50.4 in September. It is the highest since January.
Australia, China, and Japan PMIS suggest Q4 is off to a good start. The UK broke the streak. Its October manufacturing PMI slipped to 54.3 from a revised 55.5 (from 55.4) in September. This was a little more than most had anticipated. Recall that the PMI had slumped to 48.2 in July (from 52.3 in June) after referendum shock. It subsequently rebounded sharply to two-year highs in September. It remains above 12 and 24-month averages (51.9 and 52.3 respectively).
Sterling had already seen yesterday's bounce on Carney's one-year extension and the weaker US dollar tone. It reached $1.2280 in early in the European session and a low in North America yesterday near $1.2140. The 20-day moving average is found a little above today's high. Sterling has not closed above this moving average in over a month. Above there, the high from the second half of October (~$1.2330) comes into view.
The euro is also flirting with its 20-day moving average ($1.1005). Above there, the $1.1030-$1.1040 area beckons. That area houses a retracement and previous congestion. Support now is seen in the $1.0960-$1.0980 area. Its fortunes for the remainder of today's session will likely be determined by news from the US.
The US news is expected to be upbeat. The Markit is expected to confirm the preliminary estimate at 53.2, the highest since July 2015. The ISM estimate is expected to continue to recover from the 49.4 hit in August. It stood at 51.5 in September. October auto sales will also be reported. Sales are expected to nearly match the September's 17.65 mln unit pace, though foreign brands are expected to have picked up market share.
Canada reports August GDP. The median forecast is for a 0.2% rise after 0.5% jump in July, as the economy recovered from the wildfires' impact. The year-over-year pace may be stable at 1.3%. A disappointing report would likely weigh on the Canadian dollar, as the greenback continues to hover around CAD1.34.
Although the API inventory estimate is reported after the markets close, commodity prices are radar screens. Copper and nickel prices are extending gains for a seventh session. Copper, nickel, aluminum, and zinc are extending their rallies. Gold is near a one-month high. On the other hand, oil prices are near one-month lows and consolidating yesterday's large drop. Technically, there looks to be scope for another dollar drop in the December light sweet crude oil contract.

Disclaimer

This post was originally published by Marc Chandler at his blog, marctomarket.com

Copyright © Marc Chandler

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