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Tag Archives: FX Trends

Cameron vs Brexit: Mission Accomplished

  The EC draft proposals in response to the UK’s demands have been enthusiastically embraced by Prime Minister Cameron.  The wires quote Cameron as saying "I would opt in to EU membership on these good terms." The proposals presented by European Council President Tusk are weak on details that are still to be decided, though Cameron quickly seized upon them to claim: I have delivered commitments in my election manifesto."  It has yet to be seen if it is sufficient to convince several of...

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Familiar Patterns Return to Capital Markets

The decline in oil and equities are lifting European bonds and Treasuries.  The US dollar is firmer against most major and emerging market currencies.   We never put much stock in last week's seemingly euphoric speculation of a deal between Russia and OPEC to support oil prices.  As the speculation is unwound, anticipation of another large US inventory build, and poor corporate earnings from energy sector are also taking a toll.  BP posted a 91% decline in Q4 earnings. Yesterday, S&P...

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3.3. FAQ: The Why and What For of BOJ’s Negative Interest Rates

The Bank of Japan surprised investors last week by introducing negative interest rates.  At the World Economic Forum in Davos a couple weeks ago, BOJ Governor Kuroda appeared to deny that such a move was under consideration.  The market's focus, like ours, was on the pace by which it was expanding its balance sheet (JPY80 trillion a year).    The FAQ format may be the most effective way to explain what the BOJ did, why and the implications for investors. What did the Bank of Japan do? ...

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3.3. FAQ: The Why and What For of BOJ’s Negative Interest Rates

The Bank of Japan surprised investors last week by introducing negative interest rates.  At the World Economic Forum in Davos a couple weeks ago, BOJ Governor Kuroda appeared to deny that such a move was under consideration.  The market's focus, like ours, was on the pace by which it was expanding its balance sheet (JPY80 trillion a year).    The FAQ format may be the most effective way to explain what the BOJ did, why and the implications for investors. What did the Bank of Japan do? ...

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Emerging Market Preview: Week Ahead

As we suspected, the current EM bounce still has some legs.  The BOJ’s surprise easing helped EM and risk end on last week on a strong note, and we expect that to carry over into this week.  Within EM, we will start to see the first readings for January.     The biggest risk perhaps is the jobs report on Friday.  Soft US data has helped push out Fed tightening expectations, but a strong reading here could put it back on the radar screen. Brazil reports December trade data on Monday. ...

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Dollar Mixed to Start the Week

Investors continue wrestling with the implications of last week's surprise rate cut by the Bank of Japan. . The yen is little changed against the dollar, near its 200-day moving average (~JPY121.50).  The euro moved from the upper end of its two-cent range last Thursday to the lower end on before the week.  The absence of follow through selling appears to have prompted some short-covering.   The $1.0880-$1.09 area may stymie the upside.  Softer Chinese data and a pullback in oil prices...

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New Month, Same Drivers

On the very first trading day of the year, the Nikkei, DAX, and S&P 500 gapped lower, setting the tone to a particularly challenging month for investors.The last week and a half has been better, and this will likely carry over into the start of the new month.  Before January could slip into the history books, the Bank of Japan sprung a last-minute surprise by adopting a tiered system that includes a minus 10 bp charge to new excess reserves. BoJ goes negative, not completely unexpected...

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Speculators Added to Long Yen Position Ahead of BOJ

The latest CFTC Commitment of Traders report covers the five sessions through January 26, the day before the FOMC concluded its two-day meeting and three days before the BOJ's announcement.  Speculators hardly changed their positioning during the period.  There was no gross position adjustments that we call significant, a bar we set at 10k contracts.   Indeed, in the most recent reporting period, there were only four gross position changes larger than 5k contracts.  The bears added 5.8k...

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The Dollar: Now What?

The US dollar turned in a mixed performance last week.  Firmer oil and commodity prices more generally helped lift the Australian and Canadian dollars, and many emerging market currencies.  These currencies initially extended their  gains ahead of the weekend in response to the Bank of Japan's surprise 20 bp cut on some excess reserves ( to -10 bp). The yen lost 2.25% on the week, its biggest weekly decline since the BOJ's surprise expansion of its Qualitative and Quantitative Easing in...

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Emerging Markets: What has Changed

1) Korea’s Financial Services Commission will introduce a so-called “omnibus account” for foreigners investing in local stocks2) Malaysian Attorney General Apandi Ali closed the investigation into transfers of foreign money into Prime Minister Najib Razak’s personal bank accounts 3) The South African Reserve Bank increased the pace of its tightening 4) The Egyptian central bank eased restrictions on dollar cash deposits 5) The Turkish central bank raised its 2016 and 2107 inflation...

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