GBP Flash Crash, USD Stronger Ahead Of NFPS

 | Oct 07, 2016 04:53AM ET

h3 Market Brief

In the early Asian session, the pound sterling plunged 770 pips against the US dollar, or 6.15%, reaching its lowest level since March 1985. The “flash crash” pushed the currency as low as $1.1841 before bouncing back above the 1.24 threshold. The rumor mill is in overdrive concerning the origin of the flash and what triggered a wave of stop-loss orders: some people are calling it a “fat finger”, while others believe it was due to algorithmic trading. The thin liquidity environment did not help in any case. The uncertainty surrounding the Brexit story will remain the main driver for the pound. Over the last few days the market has been increasingly concerned about a potential drop in the GBP as the price of puts has been surging. We are finding it difficult to be bullish on the sterling and play a reversal with no visibility on the outlook. However, we also have the feeling that the pound is being over sold as investors are lost in the dark without any historical benchmark of such a situation. It is likely just a knee-jerk reaction that is not backed by any fundamentals. Given the quantity of stop loss and puts that are trailing at around 1.20 and below, we wouldn’t be surprise to see another flash crash.