Yen Entering Unchartered Waters

 | May 27, 2015 06:50AM ET

  • Market playing rate divergence catch up with yen
  • Yen outright could be the next dollar strength barometer
  • Fixed income need to reprice the front end for Fed
  • Euro periphery contagion fears muted for now
  • With one session down into an already shortened trading week, has the mighty dollar consolidating some of the strong gains it has acquired since last Friday. Yen outright trades close to its eight-year low (¥123.30), while the EUR is struggling to stay afloat of its multi-week support levels (€1.0920).

    The Europe’s single unit remains under pressure by the same fear of a Greek IMF default payment next week. With a large percentage of the market believing that the Fed will begin their rate normalizing process sooner rather than later, is favoring the dollar across the board. The constant ‘hawkish’ Fed rhetoric continues to fan the interest rate divergence argument, like Richmond Fed Lacker’s comments that it looks “pretty clear that U.S inflation is heading back to 2%,” has the markets becoming even more sensitive to economic touch point releases.

    Yet, today stateside, there are no tier 1 releases apart from the BoC interest rate announcement where Governor Poloz is expected to stand pat. The loonie has been suffering from withdrawal symptoms of late, similar to other commodity sensitive currencies. The dollars gain has created the commodity price downfall and with it their associated currencies (AUD and NZD). Mind you, their respected Central Banks have also been rather vocal on the value of their own currencies.