Forex: Dollar’s Smallest Range in 7 Months Warns of Volatility

Talking Points:

  • Dollar’s Smallest Range in 7 Months Warns of Volatility

  • British Pound: CPI Data Round One for Breakout Risk

  • Euro Bests All Majors after Greece Avoids No Confidence Problems

Dollar’s Smallest Range in 7 Months Warns of Volatility

The Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (ticker = USDollar) traded in an incredibly tight 18.8-point daily range Monday – the lowest level of activity in seven months and the second most restrained reading in six years. Extremes don’t last by their very nature and this is certainly a severe reading of inactivity. There is plenty of thematic, fundamental fodder for FX traders to use to put the currency back on pace; but a meaningful trend may be out of reach of anything short of a clear risk trend move or obvious shift in the timing of the Fed’s stimulus wind down. The opening session for the week was light on such high-level catalysts. Over the coming session, we have a few indicators and Fed speeches that will offer small sparks. The NFIB small business optimism report for October along with Kocherlakota’s and Lockhart’s talks is top event risk.

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British Pound: CPI Data Round One for Breakout Risk

The British pound was lower against all but the Australian dollar through the opening day of the trading week. Yet, as wide as the decline was, it pace was tepid. The sterling’s docket was empty of major releases Monday, two days of heavy event risk begins with the inflation data due London time today (specifically 9:30 GMT). With a market transfixed on the bearings for monetary policy and proactively contradicting the Bank of England’s forward guidance for low rates through 2016, sterling traders are battening down the hatches. In the wave of data, we will have factory, housing, retail and consumer-based inflation readings. For market influence, the CPI data will be the beacon for news traders and yield forecasters alike. Looking at the positioning for GBPUSD and EURGBP, the sterling is still pricing in an optimistic time frame (2015 versus 2016 first hike). If price pressure ease, the 8.5 bps priced in though the next 12 months can quickly evaporate…and the sterling drop.

Euro Bests All Majors after Greece Avoids No Confidence Problems

There wasn’t much data on the Euro’s calendar this past session, but there were plenty of headlines for the market to work with. Perhaps the most synopsis-worthy was Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras surviving a No-Confidence vote in Parliament called by leader of anti-Euro party Syriza, Alexis Tsipras. There was little worry in the market that this vote would send the country into another power struggle that threatened its participation in the Eurozone. Yet, a market that has selective attention for ‘positive’ outcomes may have helped this news gain more traction against its major counterparts than it would have otherwise. Meanwhile, there were other financial headlines that were not as favorable to the shared currency. Portugal’s rescue program was under discussion with the EU saying the country was on course, while the country’s Foreign Affairs Minister suggestion a yield below 4.5 percent was needed from the market to fund the country going forward.