9 Reasons To Trade Forex This Week

 | Apr 27, 2015 04:51PM ET

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

  • 9 Reasons You Should Be Trading Forex This Week
  • GBP Hits 7-Week High Ahead of GDP
  • EUR Rises After Greece Appoints New Leader in Debt Talks
  • USD/CAD is Headed for 1.20
  • CAD: More Optimism from BoC
  • AUD: Oil and Gold Prices Move Lower

9 Reasons You Should Be Trading Forex This Week

Currencies took a back seat to equities Monday with the market focused on the first-quarter earnings report from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL). Once the results were released, investors began a day-long period of data digestion before shifting their focus to the long list of important events on this week's economic calendar. Three central banks have monetary policy announcements and the same number will be releasing GDP reports. The global nature of this week's event risks means currencies will be on the move and here are 9 reasons why we think you should be trading forex this week:

  1. Fed Rate Decision will drive up volatility in the USD
  2. NZD could get crushed by the RBNZ statement
  3. Chinese PMI Could Stall the AUD Rally
  4. And RBA Glenn Stevens Could Talk Down the Currency
  5. Beware of the Impact of Q1 GDP on the USD
  6. Major Disappointment in UK Q1 GDP Could Reverse the Rise in GBP
  7. More Upside Surprises in CAD Data (Feb GDP) Could Drive USD/CAD to 1.20
  8. Rebound in German Retail Sales or Drop in GE Unemployment Could Accelerate Gains in EUR
  9. Upcoming May Day holiday (May 1) in Europe and Australia Could Encourage Position Adjustments in EUR, GBP and AUD

Even though there wasn't much in the way of forex news flow on Monday, currencies were already on the move. The U.S. dollar traded lower during the North American session and that weakness drove GBP/USD to its strongest level in 7 weeks and USD/CAD to its lowest level in more than 3 months. According to Markit Economics, the U.S. economy expanded at a slower pace in April. The report adds to the string of disappointments in U.S. data and is driving the dollar lower by causing investors to position for a more dovish FOMC statement. Between a slowdown in manufacturing and service-sector activity -- along with the weakest pace of non-farm payrolls growth since December 2013 -- there's no doubt that the recovery lost momentum over the past month. The Federal Reserve is not expected to change monetary policy but dollar bulls can't help but worry that the central bank will take June tightening off the table.

GBP Hits 7-Week Highs Ahead of GDP

Sterling rose to its strongest level versus the U.S. dollar since March with Monday's rally taking GBP/USD above the 100-day SMA for the first time since August 2014. The move was driven entirely by U.S. dollar weakness because the only piece of U.K. data released on Monday was the Confederation of British Industry's Total Trends Orders report, which fell well short of expectations. Not only was order growth weak, but prices declined and business optimism dropped to its lower level since January 2013. Whether sterling extends its gains to 1.54 or fizzles at these levels will be determined by Tuesday's Q1 GDP report. Given the weakness of retail sales and trade activity in the first 3 months of the year, we believe that growth slowed. A soft report could put an end to the currency pair's rally and allow the market to shift its focus to election risk. Technically, our friends at Forex Live made a very insightful observation. They said the last time GBP/USD rose 10 out of 11 trading sessions was in April 2012, a move that preceded a deep correction. In fact, taking a look at how the pair traded in recent years, it is rare not to see a 100+pip correction in an uptrend that lasts for 9 or 10 trading days.

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