Cold Front For Bearish Sentiments?

 | Jan 25, 2016 03:58AM ET

The relief rally rolls on in Asia as markets begin to test new levels of resistance. The ASX hasn’t managed a close above 5000 since 7 January, and while the rally has been very strong, it doesn’t look like we will quite make the 5000 level today. Markets have rallied on hints of further easing by the ECB and speculation that the BOJ will follow suit. But there has been no major change in fundamentals to support the rally, and the concern is if and when it fizzles out, markets could even drop below their recent lows. These concerns are likely holding back a lot of “bottom-pickers”. The rally in oil has the least fundamental support, and the huge bounce we’ve seen in prices could well be reversed by another EIA oil inventories miss this week.

Kuroda’s interview at Davos on Friday seems to have provided more consternation than clarity with regards to any easing by the BOJ at their meeting this week. While the yen has gained 1.7% since the ECB excited market speculation about monetary easing, it has shown little inclination to weaken much further today. 119 for the USD/JPY is looking like an important resistance level as the market weighs the actual likelihood of a move by the BOJ.

Japanese trade data today has only further showed the growing pressures of a stronger yen. Japanese exports and imports both declined more than the market expected, but the difference between the two held steady, seeing a further rise in Japan’s trade balance. Japan posted the second positive trade balance in a row in seasonally adjusted terms, the first time it has done so since 2011, which points to some successes of the Abenomics program.