GBP/JPY Breaks Above 186.00

 | Dec 02, 2014 06:12AM ET

RBA remains on hold The Reserve Bank of Australia kept the official cash rate unchanged, as was universally expected, and repeated that the exchange rate “remains above most estimates of its fundamental value.” In the statement accompanying the decision, the Bank said that recent data on prices confirmed that inflation is running between their 2%-3% but unlike their previous statement they seemed less confident that this is likely to continue. The change in their stance may be attributed to the lower oil prices. On the other hand, they kept their concerns over the labor market which has some time yet before it declines consistently. AUD/USD strengthened following the decision but the move was halted just below 0.8530. The pair has depreciated approximately 2.3% since their last meeting and seems not enough to tone down their comments over an overvalued rate. As mentioned in the statement “A lower exchange rate is likely to be needed to achieve balanced growth in the economy”. The decline in iron ore prices and the downward pressure on prices from the falling oil give me enough reasons to remain bearish on AUD.

As for the country’s data releases ahead of the policy meeting, the current account deficit narrowed a bit in Q3 while building approvals rebounded strongly in October. Both releases exceeded estimates, yet they had a limited impact on the rate that traded stable until the rate decision.

With no other major economic releases overnight, USD remained subdued against most of its peers. It was lower the most against NOK and CAD, which gained following the moderate rebound in oil prices.

On Monday, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Japan’s credit rating, citing heightened uncertainty over the country’s ability to cut its fiscal deficit after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe decided to delay the next tax increase scheduled to take effect next year. Moody’s downgraded Japan’s debt by one notch to A1 from Aa3, the first downgrade since 2011. USD/JPY surged to a seven-year high of 119.14 following the downgrade, but fell immediately to trade at lower levels than before the announcement and moved sideways since then. Despite the move lower, we maintain our long-term USD/JPY bullish view and could see the current setback as providing renewed buying opportunity.

As for today’s activity, we have a relatively quiet calendar day: Eurozone’s PPI for October is expected to fall at a decelerating pace, still indicating that the deflation risk persists in the region.

From the UK, construction PMI for November is expected to decline a bit. Although it is expected to remain above the 50 level, the overall decline could be attributed to the tighter lending conditions as seen in mortgage approvals released on Monday.

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As for the speakers, Fed Chair Janet Yellen gives welcoming remarks to students in Washington and Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer speaks again. Fischer along with the New York President William Dudley who spoke on Monday at separate events, stressed the positive impact from the low oil prices. As for the concerns that lower oil prices will lead to lower inflation, Fed Vice Chairman Fischer said that this is going to be temporary.

h3 The Market/h3

h3 EUR/USD slightly higher/h3