RBNZ Bulls Not Affected By Dairy Prices

 | Jul 23, 2014 07:15AM ET

Capital Markets require rate divergence for sustainable volatility, which in turn drives greater investor interest, more volatility and so on. The market just wants price movement. To date, Central Banks and option traders have been successful to handcuff, in particular the forex asset class, to tight, contained and boring currency ranges for many months. Even geopolitical risk, when considered on a grand scale, has had a minimal impact on the markets twin problems of "volatility and volume." Intraday volatility has appeared - last week's tragic events over the Ukraine combined with the Gaza offence saw the VIX (everyone's fear gauge) jump +32% intraday to +14.5. This was the twenty-second highest jump ever recorded. However, the fall out of geopolitical and historical events has been short lived so far in 2014.

Are investors putting too much faith in Central Banks to rein in market tension? Market direction depends on G7 monetary policy changing. To understand and appreciate the G7 curve will yield greater long-term awards. All the forex market requires is for a Central Bank to tighten and there has been talk.