JPY Broadly Lower As Equities Rebounded, USD To Look into FOMC Statement

 | Oct 27, 2014 02:30AM ET

The Japanese yen weakened broadly last week and stocks extended the rebound from prior week's low and recovered nearly 70% of loss in the past few weeks. Indeed, S&P 500 had the largest weekly gain since January 2013 on better than expected earnings, as well as stabilization in markets sentiments. Meanwhile, New Zealand dollar was the second weakest major currency following weak inflation trade data. Meanwhile, European majors were generally weak too. Sterling was under pressure most of the week after dovish BoE minutes and retail sales but recovered as Q3 GDP met expectation. Aussie, Canadian and dollar were the strongest currencies but it should be noted that these three were bounded in range against each other. It's more of the weakness in others that drove the markets.

An important question is whether the correction in stocks were finished and yen would extend last week's decline. Technically, we maintain that 2019.26 is a medium term top in S&P 500, on bearish divergence condition in daily MACD. While rebound from 1820.66 might extend, the consolidation pattern from 2019.26 isn't completed and would continue. Thus, upside potential in S&P 500 is limited and we'd expect strong resistance above 2000 level to bring reversal. Break of 1909.38 will target 1820.66 and then 38.2% retracement of 1343.35 to 2019.26 at 1761.06. With this outlook in consideration, the rise in yen crosses would face strong resistance ahead and there would be reversal to revisit recent lows soon.