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Be Ready for ECB, BoE Surprises and Heavy Euro, Pound Trading
  • Dollar Breakout Stalls Immediately on with Liquidity Drain, NFPs Fear

  • Euro: Be Ready for an ECB Surprise, Regional Crisis Escalation

  • British Pound Risk Bearish with New BoE Leadership

  • Australian Dollar Suffers Biggest Selloff in Weeks on Stevens’ Comment

  • New Zealand Dollar Bear Trend Contrasts Highest Forecast in Years

  • Oil Volatility Threat Eases after Egyptian President Removed

  • Gold Returns to Congestion Awaiting Stimulus Decisions from Fed, ECB, BoE

Dollar Breakout Stalls Immediately on with Liquidity Drain, NFPs Fear

We have entered a dangerous period for trading the US dollar and the FX market. In a unique turn of events, the US capital markets will be offline Thursday – and with it a critical cog of the sentiment transmission system will be removed from the machine. Alone, this would lead to high thin trading where volatility is rampant and breakouts fail to find the depth necessary to develop trends. Yet, the situation is even more complicated. In addition to the unusual market backdrop, we are further expecting key event risk through the final 24 hours of this trading week. The unemployment rate is perhaps the most important series for the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy bearings moving forward, and this week’s labor report is the first since Chairman Bernanke announced a loose timetable for the Taper. Adding fuel to the fire, the ADP rose and ISM service sector employment component surged this past session. Steady growth equates to an earlier QE3 breaking.

Euro: Be Ready for an ECB Surprise, Regional Crisis Escalation

Euro-area crisis pressures are building. This time around, the risk from the market-side is the secondary threat. A global risk aversion move can certainly expose the region’s economic and financial problems, but that is a scenario that lies in the future – and investors have grown more reflexive to Europe’s troubles rather than proactive. Alternatively, trouble from the sovereign side of the financial crisis watch is already upon us. Portuguese 10-year government bond yields soared above 8 percent – the biggest increase since February 2012 – for the first time in 8 months. After two key cabinet members resigned from their post, it is clear that there is a risk to the stability of the government. Any delay in aid payments can send Portugal back into crisis mode. Meanwhile, Greece was given an ultimatum to meet its austerity milestones by Friday or potentially miss its €8.1 billion aid payment. Add to this growing trouble the reality of ongoing deep recessions for certain members and growing social unrest, there are active risks in the region. Will the ECB respond to the need for support or simply allow the issues to work themselves out? There is heavy consensus for no change to the benchmark lending rate – if there were a cut, it would confer little economic benefit and just succeed in lowering the euro’s yield. That would be very bearish. Instead, the focus is on guidance for using new LTROs, moving to activate a program for SME loans or some other active stimulus support.