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Weekly Speculative Position: CHF Net Shorts rising, but JPY net shorts falling

Summary:
Swiss Franc Speculators were net short CHF in January 2015, shortly before the end of the peg, with 26.4K contracts. Then again in December 2015, when they expected a Fed rate hike, with 25.5K contracts. The biggest short CHF, however, happened in June 2007, when speculators were net short 80K contracts. Shortly after, the U.S. subprime crisis started. The reverse carry trade in form of the Long CHF started and lasted - without some interruptions - until the peg introduction in September 2011. In mid 2011, the long CHF trade became a proper carry trade - and not a reverse carry trade anymore - because investors thought that the SNB would hike rates earlier than the Fed. CHF Speculative Positions This week’s data: Speculators are net short CHF with 14K contracts against USD. This is 1K more than last week. But yen and Euro net shorts are currently diminishing. This could imply that soon CHF net shorts start falling, too. Speculative Positions Choose Currency [embedded content] source: Oanda   The dollar fell against the yen in four of five sessions of the CFTC reporting period that ended on January 10. Speculators in the futures market covered shorts and took profits, or at least liquidated long positions.

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Swiss Franc

Speculators were net short CHF in January 2015, shortly before the end of the peg, with 26.4K contracts. Then again in December 2015, when they expected a Fed rate hike, with 25.5K contracts.

The biggest short CHF, however, happened in June 2007, when speculators were net short 80K contracts. Shortly after, the U.S. subprime crisis started. The carry trade against CHF collapsed.

The reverse carry trade in form of the Long CHF started and lasted - without some interruptions - until the peg introduction in September 2011.

In mid 2011, the long CHF trade became a proper carry trade - and not a reverse carry trade anymore - because investors thought that the SNB would hike rates earlier than the Fed.

CHF Speculative Positions

This week’s data:

Speculators are net short CHF with 14K contracts against USD. This is 1K more than last week.

But yen and Euro net shorts are currently diminishing. This could imply that soon CHF net shorts start falling, too.

Speculative Positions

Choose Currency

source: Oanda

 

The dollar fell against the yen in four of five sessions of the CFTC reporting period that ended on January 10. Speculators in the futures market covered shorts and took profits, or at least liquidated long positions.

Nearly 12k long yen contracts were liquidated, leaving the bulls with 26k contracts. This is the smallest gross long position since February 2014. The bears covered almost 19k short yen contracts, leaving 105.8k.

There was one other significant (10k or more contracts) adjustment in gross speculative positioning in the futures market. It was the bulls liquidating 11.1k contracts to reduce the gross long position to 28.4k contracts. The Canadian dollar was in a strong appreciating trend. It has risen in 11 of the past 15 sessions, but only in three of the period’s five sessions.

The bulls cut exposures in both the yen and Canadian dollar. It was part of a larger pattern. Of the eight currencies we track, there were three small exceptions. The gross long euro position rose by 5k contracts to 134.7. The gross long sterling position rose by 1.3k contracts to 56.7k. The bulls added 1.6k contracts to their long Mexican peso position, lifting it to 23.9k contracts.

Another pattern that continued is that the speculators are not as bearish the euro on balance as one might expect given that dollar appreciation has become consensus. The net short position in the euro has been trending lower, and it fell by a little more than 4k contracts in the latest reporting period to 65.8k contracts. This is the smallest net short position since last July.

The 10-year yield eased in three of the five sessions of the reporting period, but this did not deter the bears who continued to extend their record net and gross short position. They added 33.7k contracts to the gross short position, raising it to 849.8k contracts. The bulls pealed off another 6.1k contracts, leaving them with a still substantial 455.2k contracts. As a consequence of the gross position adjustments, the net short position rose to 394.7k contracts from 344.9k.

Speculators in the oil futures market trimmed the gross long position by 3.9k contracts to 604.3k. The bears added 2.7k to the gross short position, lifting it to 170.7k contracts. As a result the net long position eased to 433.6k contracts, a loss of 6.5k.

10-Jan Commitment of Traders
Net Prior Gross Long Change Gross Short Change
Euro -65.8 -70.1 134.7 5.0 200.6 0.8
Yen -79.8 -86.8 26.0 -11.9 105.8 -18.8
Sterling -65.8 -64.7 56.7 1.3 127.6 2.3
Swiss Franc -14.2 -13.4 10.6 -1.8 24.3 -1.0
C$ -7.9 -3.9 28.4 -11.1 36.3 -7.1
A$ -3.8 -3.3 40.8 -7.2 44.6 -6.6
NZ$ -14.0 -11.4 23.0 -2.5 36.9 0.0
Mexican Peso -71.8 -65.6 23.9 1.6 99.7 7.7
US Treasuries -394.7 -434.4 455.2 -6.1 849.8 +33.7
Crude Oil 433.6 427 604.3 -3.9 170.7 +2.7
(CFTC, Bloomberg) Speculative positions in 000’s of contracts

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George Dorgan
George Dorgan (penname) predicted the end of the EUR/CHF peg at the CFA Society and at many occasions on SeekingAlpha.com and on this blog. Several Swiss and international financial advisors support the site. These firms aim to deliver independent advice from the often misleading mainstream of banks and asset managers. George is FinTech entrepreneur, financial author and alternative economist. He speak seven languages fluently.

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