FX Update: JPY Matching King Dollar Blow For Blow

 | Apr 13, 2015 06:02AM ET

China’s trade numbers for March shocked expectations with a shortfall of some $37 billion relative to expectations, though it must be noted that the February number was an all-time record high and that every year sees an enormous seasonal dip (usually in February, but clearly pushed forward a month this year).

Still, the market reacted to this number by sending AUD and NZD lower versus the USD, helping to broaden the USD strength that was somewhat lacking on Friday.

Federal reserve hawks and doves are sending opposite messages as Minneapolis Fed chief, non-voter and ultra-dove Narayana Kocherlakota argued ahead of the weekend that it would take several years for price and employment levels in the US to meet Fed objectives and that there is therefore no compelling reason to move on rates any time soon.

FOMC voter Jeffrey Lacker, meanwhile, argued Friday in favour of a June rate hike as he views the recent weakness in US economic numbers as being only temporary.

Sources indicate that Eurozone officials were shocked by Greek behaviour during recent negotiations, citing a lack of plan outlines on structural reforms and insistence on maintaining civil servants’ pension levels. In early trading Monday, the market is not pricing in any additional fear (Greek yields are still well off recent highs.)
The calendar highlights this week:

  • Tue: US Retail Sales, Sweden CPI, UK CPI
  • Wed: Bank of Canada Meeting, ECB Meeting
  • Thu: Australia’s Employment report
  • Fri: US CPI and University of Michigan Confidence

Chart: EURJPY

Watching EURUSD and EURJPY on this week's countdown to the Wednesday European Central Bank meeting. The question here is whether we should be looking for a “double bottom” scenario or if we see continuation of the USD strength right through this event risk, which isn’t particularly highly anticipated.

The focus is a bit more intense on EURJPY because it has already reached the cycle lows here, while EURUSD still has a ways to go before it is pushing below 1.0500. The next level here could be a psychological one like 125, or the 200-week moving average and 50% retracement closer to 122.