GBP Soars On Scottish 'NO', German PPI, Eurozone LTRO

 | Sep 19, 2014 05:54AM ET

For a day with limited data, there are plenty of leftovers to chew on: the Federal Reserve’s meeting last Wednesday, the European Central Bank’s unimpressive TLTRO and now the Scottish vote. This was supposed to be a “mega-week” of important events and trading opportunities. Expectations of important news weeks rarely turn out that way, as markets mostly discount results beforehand, or take plenty of time to digest important developments.

My taste of the week now drawing to a close is that Europe remains very troubled economically and politically and the markets overestimate the resolve of the European Central Bank, and the efficacy of the tools that it has on hand.

The Fed remains as pragmatic and fluid as before, and the US economic surprise index is at relatively high levels and could be expected to begin to fall, if only to revert to the mean, in response to weakness in China and Europe. Weaker US and weak ECB could suggest the EURUSD does not have much downside left and is vulnerable to a correction higher.

Relief at Scotland vote

The results of the Scottish vote for independence will be known by the time you are reading this, or soon afterwards. The last-minute polls, voter turnout and initial results suggested that “no” would win. While markets were worried that “yes” might triumph, such fears had dissipated during the week. The GBP has been gaining in value. UK shares will almost certainly gap higher following the “no” result.

Longer term, what kind of political mess this creates is unknown. While the marriage of the UK and Scotland will stay, the relationship could become more strained, as Scotland has courted something else on the world stage. This implies that Cameron’s government could sustain some sort of political damage, although in the short term, the outcome will be seen as a victory. The effect on separatist campaigns elsewhere are also unknown.

The weekly and daily charts show that this week belonged to the JPY and GBP,. The EURUSD failed to provide much excitement, even though it broke to new lows and the event calendar was supposed to make it “the pair of the week”. Note that the EURGBP is nearing possible target areas, while the GBPUSD is back to where it was before the Scottish scare begun. The weekly EURUSD candlesticks show two “hammers”: both the current and the previous week have opened and closed toward the high end of the week’s range, suggesting that the market is not comfortable to probe to new lows as yet.