Never A Dull Moment In The World Of Foreign Exchange.

 | Jan 09, 2017 01:40AM ET

Never A Dull Moment in the World of Foreign Exchange.

As we move into the second trading week of 2017, two macro narratives are evolving: Chinese FX policy and US interest rates. For traders that were expecting a free lunch in early 2017, going long on USD and short on bonds, the market has quickly reminded them that nothing comes easy in the world of Foreign Exchange. Early 2017 trade has been full of twists and turns. You know the old saying, there is no dull moment in the world of FX, and last week was the proof in the pudding.

Exaggerated moves in G-10 last week were more about heavily skewed short-term long USD positioning jitters, after a subtle shift in Investor sentiment emerged, suggesting the recent moves in US yield have run up far too quickly. This notion could dampen the USD bull’s short-term enthusiasm and despite supportive US data, the USD may continue to consolidate before the anticipated resumptions of the USD uptrend, which should return full-bore post-Trump inauguration.

As for the near-term calendar, although not jam-packed, we may be in for some excitement none the less. Tuesday could be very engaging if Chinese CPI or PPI deviates from expectations and of course, Aussie traders will dial in on domestic retail sales that same day.

With attention squarely on China this week, the AUD could re-emerge as the quintessential China proxy trade.

However, my focus is on Friday, as Fed Chair Janet Yellen will deliver a speech on Thursday evening (EST), which will be available on webcast. Given the markets focus on all things Feds, we could be in for bustling APAC session at the end of the week. China’s December trade report will also be released on Friday.

NFP

Traders treated last Friday’s NFP with little importance ahead of President-Elect Trump’s inauguration and possible policy game changers. While the 156K rise in non-farm payrolls in December fell short of market expectations, the huge story that emerged was the sharp gain in average hourly earnings (AHE), which was the call to action for traders, as the employment report was viewed in a positive light. Keep in mind that both resurgent wage inflation, coupled with buoyant oil prices, have been supporting the reflation trade. Thus, US bond yields rose on the AHE headline and a stronger USD ensued. Despite the 10-Year UST yield moving higher to 2.42-3% after a holiday-induced position squaring rally, the S&P closed at a record high, while the Dow Jones closed at 19,963.8, just shy of the major psychological 20,000 mark.

Non-aggressive USD buying mainly centred on USD/JPY, EUR/USD and USD/SGD

AUD

While the AUD closed the year on an offered note, the odds of that bias to re-emerge are strong, but the recent sell-off in USD/CNH has permeated into strength in commodity currencies, as the AUD remains perched just below the .7300 level.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

If you’re surprised by the uptick in volatility to start the year, you are not alone, as a vicious wave of short CNH covering, on the back of ridiculous funding costs, has caught more than a few traders by surprise. While the effects have spilled over into the G-10 basket as memories of 2016 China hysteria gripped the market. The fact is, it appears to be more or less a CNH contained phenomenon and has not affected general market sentiment anywhere near to the panic levels of early 2016.

As the CNH effect begins to temper, not a great deal has changed in the AUD trade. A tug of war between commodity prices and rising US interest rates will continue to play out, as will a possible trade disruption from the political uncertainty associated with the US Presidential transition and regional trade sanctions.

Asset classes continue to trade favourably, and commodities trade bid on expectations of massive US infrastructure spend. If current price action is telling us anything, it is that commodity currencies should continue to hold up well, even in the face of a continued USD uptrend.

However, the commodity block remains intrinsically linked to the price of oil and with both OPEC and NON -OPEC member’s assurance to turn off the spigots, prices should rise. However, the fly in the ointment remains the shale producers, as the latest data from Baker Hughes reveals that the number of active US rigs drilling for oil climbed by 4 to 529 rigs this week. That marks the tenth weekly rise in a row.

On the Diary, Tuesday’s domestic retail sales report and Wednesday’s quarterly ABS job vacancy data are the featured events on a relatively quiet local calendar, so look for the external factors to continue driving sentiment.

.