USD Rally Seeks Fresh Fuel This Week

 | Sep 22, 2014 05:37AM ET

There was a G20 over the weekend, a meeting of which little was expected, but one at which the US and even the Eurozone had the opportunity to complain about the sharp weakening of the Japanese currency, but failed to do so. This could be seen as a green light for further JPY weakening, though I suspect the most important factors for whether the JPY weakening picks up again immediately remain first, the direction of rates and second, the direction of risk appetite.

The USD/JPY consolidation has been very orderly, in any case, as Friday’s sharp reversal has failed to yield to any downside follow through yet. A local line of support has developed in USD/JPY above 108.50.

Interestingly, a former Bank of Japan deputy governor Iwata (not to be confused with a different current deputy governor Iwata) was out saying that the weak JPY puts Japan at a recession risk due to “beggar thyself” policy of Abenomics.

The New Zealand election resulted in few ripples and no change in leadership, an event that was met with little reaction, though NZD survived the Asian open better than AUD, which is tumbling on fresh pressure on commodity prices, as the bottom dropped out of silver late Friday and into this morning. Gold is not far from the cycle lows below 1200, so AUD traders should be on the lookout for commodity sentiment near these levels. Chart: GBP/USD Paying attention to the pivot. GBP/USD reversed hard on Friday after a bit of euphoria once the Scottish independence referendum No was registered. Since then it is trying to find a new equilibrium. Today’s pivot at 1.6366 has so far held the pair from a further bounce, though the 1.6400/25 zone is the more important resistance area if the USD dips a bit further today. As long as resistance remains in place, the bears will focus on 1.6200 and lower here in the near term.