Dollar Gains Versus Euro, Dow Slips Market Awaits Sequester

  • Dollar Gains Versus Euro, Dow Slips Market Awaits Sequester

  • Euro: CPI, Unemployment and LTRO Repayment Define ECB’s Decision

  • Japanese Yen Unresponsive to BoJ Candidates, What Next?

  • Canadian Dollar Tumbles Ahead of GDP Release

  • Swiss Franc: The Fundamental Issues with a Technical USDCHF Breakout

  • British Pound Traders Price in Probability of Stimulus Next Week

  • Gold Drops a Second Day on Rising Volume as ETF Interest Extends Drop

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Dollar Gains Versus Euro, Dow Slips Market Awaits Sequester

While the greenback moved higher against the crowd this past session, it lacked the momentum in which we measure conviction. The focus for both currency and risk trends moving into the final trading day of the week is the sequester. Any hope that a last minute deal would be hammered out was crushed when Congress shot down two deficit-reduction strategies and called an end to the week. Congressional leaders will meet with the President at the White House Friday in a last ditch effort to avert the estimated $85 billion of automatic spending cuts, but the prognosis isn’t encouraging. Allowing the wave of cuts to hit was a scenario that the IMF suggested would lead to its lowering the US’ 2013 GDP outlook by 0.5 percentage points. This would be ‘risk’ negative, but thereby potentially dollar positive. We may not have a read on market impact until after the weekend however if the outcome of the meeting (good or bad) isn’t know before Friday’s close.

Euro: CPI, Unemployment and LTRO Repayment Define ECB’s Decision

The euro was under some pressure this past session, but the absence of key updates on the risk of an Italian-borne Euro-area crisis meant the stress was bearable for the currency. Italian President Napolitanoresponded to international cries for action to resolve the uncertainty in his country’s political situation by saying the process could not be rushed. An election cannot be called for weeks, so the third largest economy is in a holding pattern (because a grand coalition seems highly unlikely given Five Star Movement leader Beppe Grillo’s adamant position against dealing with the austerity-minded). This new cloud will no doubt also cast a shadow over the ECB next week. In past weeks we have seen downgrades in growth and suggestions of a high currency. Friday’s inflation, employment and stimulus repayment updates may further add.

Japanese Yen Unresponsive to BoJ Candidates, What Next?Stimulus. That is what is on the mind of every yen trader. It is already well known the Bank of Japan (BoJ) is going to further leverage its easing efforts to fight deflation, and inadvertently (so they say) drive the currency lower. The variable that currency speculators should be focusing on is how much the stimulus effort will be amplified (take this course to learn how a Currency War affects your FX trading). Over the past two months, there were definable milestones that drove confidence of a one-sided market to feed a bull trend. Such steps included the election of Prime Minister Abe, the adoption of a 2 percent inflation target for the BoJ and commitment to a 13 trillion-yen-per-month program starting in January 2014. The last definable reaction to headlines came with BoJ Governor Shirawaka’s announcement that he would resign early (March 19). Yesterday, the market was finally given Abe’s pick for the replacement monetary policy officials – but there was no response… Perhaps the market needs something more material to act upon. If that is the case, we will have to monitor for any comments that suggest the new regime plans on moving up or increasing stimulus plans. In the meantime, a strong risk aversion wind can still topple these overbought pairs.