FX Daily Planet: London Open
FX Daily Planet: London Open
Click here for the full Note and
disclosures.
View for the day
Only notable move in the Friday Asian session was seen in NZD, which sharply declined (-0.6% against USD) on a much-weaker-than-expected Dec. NZ retail sales (0.0% m/m against consensus at +0.6%). Meanwhile, there were no major moves in the other G-10 currencies; JPY and USD strengthened against the others, though only modestly. EUR which was the weakest currency on Thursday remained weak today and lost another 0.2% against USD. Asian equities broadly rallied following the overnight gains in the US equities. However, USD/EM Asia was fairly mixed with MYR rising 0.2% against USD while PHP declining 0.2%. In FX vol space, 1-month implieds for JPY lowered 0.1-0.2 vols.
At yesterday's EU Leaders’ summit, it was agreed that EU would take determined and coordinated action to safeguard financial stability in the euro if needed, but no precise details about the plan or the schedule were announced. Therefore, as the uncertainties surrounding the Greek issue remain intact, we should still be aware of the risk that any relevant headlines would heighten the market volatility. The near-term focus will be Ecofin and the Greek Government's announcement about the details of its fiscal stability program on 16th Feb. On the economic data front, 4Q GDP from some countries in the euro area, Dec. industrial production from the euro area, Jan. retail sales and Feb. consumer sentiment from the US will be in focus today.
Overnight news
NZD: Dec. retail sales
was much weaker than expected at 0.0% m/m (cons.
+0.6%).
JPY: MoF’s weekly portfolio flow data
showed that foreign investor turned net buyer of Japanese
stocks last week. Meanwhile, net foreign stock purchase by
Japanese investor increased to ¥202bln from ¥126bln last
week.
JPY: Jan. consumer sentiment improved to
39.4 from 37.9 in Dec.
JPY: Japanese Banking
Minister Shizuka Kamei said that Japan Post could buy more
US Treasuries as one way to reduce its current heavy focus
on domestic government debt.
USD: Fed data showed
that Federal Reserve’s balance sheet expanded in the
latest week.
EUR: ECB Nowotny said that Europe
does not want Greece’s problems to have a negative effect
on the broader region, therefore it makes sense to contain
the risks and avoid a spillover.
Today’s watchlist (all times GMT; +11hrs for Sydney, +9hrs for Tokyo, -5hrs for New York)
EUR: Germany 4Q GDP prelim.
(%q/q, sa) @7:00 (JPM: 0.0, Cons: 0.2); ECB Nowotny speaks
@8:00; Euro Area 4Q GDP (%q/q, sa) @10:00 (JPM: 0.3, Cons:
0.3); Euro Area Dec IP (%m/m, sa) @10:00 (JPM: -1.0, Cons:
0.1)
USD : Jan retail sales (%m/m, sa) @13:30
(JPM: 0.0, Cons: 0.3); Jan retail sales less autos (%m/m,
sa) @13:30 (JPM: 0.5, Cons: 0.5); Feb U.Michigan consumer
conf. prelim (index) @14 :55 (JPM : 74.0, Cons : 75.0) ; Dec
business inventories (%m/m, sa) @15:00 (JPM: 0.0, Cons:
0.2)
Overnight price action
FX: NZD
underperformed G-10 currencies on the weak retail sales. JPY
and USD modestly strengthened against G-10 currencies.
USD/Asia range-traded.
FX vol: 1-month JPY
implieds lower by 0.1-0.2 vols.
Commodities: Oil
down 0.3%.
Bonds: JGB yields largely flat across
the curve.
Equities: Asian equities broadly
rallied. Nikkei outperformed with a 1.3% gain.
Technical View for the day
The handling of the Greek issue is definitely not what markets were looking for in terms of re-establishing confidence in the EUR what conclusively caused a bit of a headache in form of a stronger sell-off. This feeds into the general perception that the EUR is caught in a broader down-swing towards the 1.31 handle in EUR/USD which would only change once major barriers at 1.3852 and at 1.3965 would be taken out. As Cable refused to join the selling stampede EUR/GBP entered a real nose-dive but would need to break below key-support at 0.8658/13 to confirm a sustained decline towards the last bottom at 0.8400 and a potential extension into Fib.-support at 0.8250 With the EUR under tremendous pressure across board and in particular against commodity currencies we are now approaching key-supports like in EUR/CAD at 1.4285/48 from where we could at least get to see a temporary EUR bounce whereas the big picture is ultimately pointing even lower
Research from the region you may have missed
New Zealand: consumer spending hit a wall in
December
https://mm.jpmorgan.com/servlet/UserDocsHelperServlet?action=openpdf&docId=GPS-373969-0
ENDS