Chart Of The Day: Have Euro Traders Been Manipulted By Draghi?

 | Jul 06, 2017 10:02AM ET

While both German and eurozone June services PMIs beat expectations, they were weaker month-over-month. But that’s not what’s actually on euro investors’ minds.

Europe has assumed leadership of global growth. So, a PMI that's lower in a single month, especially when expected, is negligible for everyone but short-term traders. Second, what every euro denominated investor cares about are the ECB minutes. The ECB is at a crossroads, both fundamentally and technically.

h3 When Draghi Speaks, Euro Responds/h3

The last time ECB President Mario Draghi spoke, financial markets ended in a tizzy. Draghi began by smooth-talking the possible end of QE, mentioning the notion for the very first time. The euro surged immediately afterward, to the highest prices of the year for the single currency.

Bond investors were happy too, dumping the asset for sexier instruments, so that interest rates on two-year and five-year Bunds reached their highest levels in more than a year – all on the change of a single letter, when Draghi charmingly announced that “deflationary forces have been replaced by reflationary ones.” For investors, more romantic words were never spoken.

Afterward, when Draghi realized the euphoria his words had created, he was suddenly filled with regret, recalling the “taper tantrum” in bond markets, that, for instance, the Fed had triggered in 2013 in the US. He quickly took back his words, but, either out of cowardice or cruelty, he used an intermediary to deliver the message.

Initially the euro fell. However, soon afterward investors remembered their approval of just the possibility of tightening and pushed the euro all the way back, and then some.

h3 Hammer Time/h3