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Weekly Speculative Positions: Bottom-Picking Sterling, Swiss Franc Even More Net Short

Summary:
Comment on Swiss Franc by George Dorgan My articles About meMy booksFollow on:TwitterFacebookGoogle +YoutubeSeeking AlphaCFA SocietyLinkedINEconomicBlogs Swiss Franc and Euro  In both euro and Swiss Franc, the net short position expanded. Speculators are now net short the euro with 124K contracts and net short Swiss Franc by 18.7K contracts against the US Dollar. Register for an OANDA forex trading accountCommitments of Traders powered by OANDA Sterling Speculators in the futures market increased their gross long sterling position by nearly 20% to 63.6k contracts (+11k) in the reporting week ending October 25.  In mid-September the gross long position stood at 40.4k contracts. Not everyone is convinced that sterling will bounce.  The bears extended their gross short sterling position by 3.4k contracts to 147.6k.  On the eve of the UK referendum, the gross short position was around 94k contracts. Bulls and Bears Again speculators, both bulls and bears have rapidly expanded their exposure in recent weeks.  In the most recent reporting period, the bulls added 14.7k contracts, lifting the gross long position to 142.9k contracts.    Given the bearish sentiment and recent trend, this is a very large position.  It is about 5k contracts shy of a record set in May 2007.

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Swiss Franc and Euro 

In both euro and Swiss Franc, the net short position expanded. Speculators are now net short the euro with 124K contracts and net short Swiss Franc by 18.7K contracts against the US Dollar.

Sterling

Speculators in the futures market increased their gross long sterling position by nearly 20% to 63.6k contracts (+11k) in the reporting week ending October 25.  In mid-September the gross long position stood at 40.4k contracts.
Not everyone is convinced that sterling will bounce.  The bears extended their gross short sterling position by 3.4k contracts to 147.6k.  On the eve of the UK referendum, the gross short position was around 94k contracts.

Bulls and Bears

Again speculators, both bulls and bears have rapidly expanded their exposure in recent weeks.  In the most recent reporting period, the bulls added 14.7k contracts, lifting the gross long position to 142.9k contracts.    Given the bearish sentiment and recent trend, this is a very large position.  It is about 5k contracts shy of a record set in May 2007.

The bears increased the pressure by adding 29.3k contracts to their gross short position of 266.7k contracts.  This is 5k contracts shy of the record set in March 2015.  The gross short position has risen by nearly 100k contracts since mid-September.

The bears continued to run for cover in the Mexican peso futures. They covered another 10k contracts to reduce the gross short position to 54k contracts.  It has been halved since the end of September’s record of nearly 111k contracts.  The bulls, however, were not so sure, and liquidated 4.7k contracts, leaving them with 28.7k.

Patterns

There were two distinct patterns in the speculative activity.  With the exception of the peso, speculators added to gross long currency futures positions.  They also added to the gross short positions, with the exception of the yen (-0.2k contracts) and the peso.  Speculators were taking on more risk.  This is lost if one focuses only on the net positions.  Next week we will learn whether this was just a quick play or positioning ahead of this week’s four central bank meetings and US jobs data (and of course, the run-up to the US election.

Oil and Treasuries

In the oil and T-Note futures, speculators cut exposure.  They shaved their gross long oil position by 6.7k contracts to 571.8k.  Speculators covered 2.3k contracts to reduce the gross short position to 168.2k contracts.  This saw the net position slipped 4.4k contracts to 403.6k.

The adjustment in the 10-year Treasury note futures was larger.  The bulls liquidated about 5% of their gross long position (31.9k contracts), leaving them with 631.3k contracts.  It is the smallest position in two months. The bears covered 6.5k contracts bringing the gross short position to 556.8k contracts.

25-Oct      Commitment of Traders
Net  Prior  Gross Long Change Gross Short  Change
Euro -123.9 -109.3 142.9 14.7 266.7 29.3
Yen 44.6 37.0 82.4 7.4 37.8 -0.2
Sterling -84.0 -91.6 63.6 11.0 147.6 3.4
Swiss Franc -18.7 -16.4 18.8 0.5 37.5 2.8
C$ -13.3 -14.3 33.3 9.6 46.6 8.6
A$ 31.9 30.0 83.2 2.6 51.2 0.7
NZ$ -0.4 -0.2 29.5 0.0 29.9 0.3
Mexican Peso -25.3 -30.7 28.7 -4.7 54.0 -10.0
(CFTC, Bloomberg) Speculative
positions in 000’s of contracts
Marc Chandler
He has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for more than 30 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. After 14 years as the global head of currency strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, Chandler joined Bannockburn Global Forex, as a managing partner and chief markets strategist as of October 1, 2018.

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