HomeContributorsFundamental AnalysisCurrencies: FX Flash-Crash In Asia This Morning. Yen Jumps Sharply

Currencies: FX Flash-Crash In Asia This Morning. Yen Jumps Sharply

Rates: Core bonds start year on strong footing
A dismal Chinese manufacturing PMI set the tone for risk-off trading in Asia/Europe yesterday with Bunds and US Treasuries surging. Liquidity remained rather low. Both contracts extended gains overnight despite heavily overbought conditions as Apple guidance hit stocks. US data will be watched today with especially the US manufacturing ISM grabbing attention.

Currencies: FX flash-crash in Asia this morning. Yen jumps sharply
The yen is the star performer at the start of 2019. EUR/JPY, USD/JPY and EUR/USD declined in a classic risk-off repositioning yesterday. Overnight, the yen jumped again sharply higher in the wake of the Apple warning. FX traders will closely monitor the eco data for clues on US growth going forward. The USD looks vulnerable despite yesterday’s EUR/USD decline

The Sunrise Headlines

  • WS ended modestly higher yesterday (+0-0.5%) after a volatile trading session. Oil shares led the gains. Most Asian indices opened with losses, as Apple cut its quarterly sales outlook. Japanese bourses are closed today.
  • Apple has lowered its revenue outlook for the first time in almost 20 years. The company has cut revenue expectations for Q4 from $89bn/$93bn to $84bn. CEO Tim Cooke points at weakness in China’s economy and supply constraints.
  • US President Trump failed to reach an agreement with congressional Democrats on border security funding yesterday, leaving the government in a partial shutdown. Leaders are said to meet again on Friday.
  • The People’s Bank of China announced it will ease the calculation rules for some banks’ reserve ratios, to further boost the impact of a previous easing measure to support loans to small- and micro-sized enterprises.
  • UK PM May starts a round of talks with EU leaders today, as she still seeks answers to sell her Brexit deal back in Westminster. Starting on Monday, she’ll discuss the deal with MP’s, to eventually take a vote on it the week after.
  • Oil data showed that OPEC countries have started to cut oil output earlier than announced. December output fell by the most in almost two years, led by Saudi Arabia. Oil prices gained modest ground on the news.
  • Today’s US economic calendar contains employment data (ADP Employment Change, Initial Jobless Claims) and the ISM Manufacturing gauge for December. The calendar in the EMU remains empty, apart from Spanish bond supply

Currencies: FX Flash-Crash In Asia This Morning. Yen Jumps Sharply

FX flash-crash. Yen jumps sharply

Global sentiment didn’t improve at the start of 2019. Poor Chinese (and EMU) PMI’s reinforced investor worries on the global economy. The US dollar lost interest rate support of late as markets priced out further Fed rate hikes. It looked that more EUR/USD gains were possible yesterday morning. The pair came close to 1.15, but a poor start of European equities and a sharp decline of German yields blocked the euro upside. USD/JPY, EUR/JPY and EUR/USD declined in lockstep, with EUR/JPY taking the lead in a classic risk-off move. Sentiment improved temporarily in US dealings, but a (China related) profit warning from Apple after US close, recharged the risk-off trade. EUR/JPY closed at 123.55 (open at 125.87). EUR/USD (close 1.1344) lost more than a big figure. USD/JPY closed at 108.88. In thin markets early in Asian trade (Japanese markets still closed), the post-Apple repositioning triggered a violent run to the yen. EUR/JPY and USD/JPY were temporarily in free-fall. The likes of the Aussie dollar were also hit very hard. The move eased later in Asian trading, but yen gains remain impressive (USD/JPY trades currently below 107, EUR/JPY is trading in the mid 121 area). Contrary to yesterday’s losses, EUR/USD reacted rather calmly in Asia (currently 1.1360 area). FX traders will closely monitor European markets (Asian equities are holding up relatively well, but US equity futures show heavy losses). The jury is still out, but this price action suggests a repositioning out of US assets/equities as the impact from the trade war is also weighing on (parts of) the US economy. In this context, markets will eagerly look out for the first 2019 US data with the ADP labour report and the manufacturing ISM. Especially the latter might be important as investors try to make up their mind on the health of the US economy. A weak ISM will probably weigh on USD/JPY. The reaction in Asia suggests that US equities and maybe the dollar, are vulnerable, despite yesterday’s EUR/USD decline. EUR/USD is holding in the established 1.12/1.15 trading range. Even in case of a further risk-off repositioning, the 1.1265/70 area might provide first important support.

EUR/GBP hovered mostly in the low 0.90 area yesterday. The UK manufacturing PMI unexpectedly improved, but didn’t help sterling as the rebound was mostly driven by stock-building ahead of Brexit. This morning, the temporary sell-off of risky currencies also hit sterling. EUR/GBP trades currently in the mid 0.90 area. Today’s UK construction PMI is probably of second tier importance. The combination of global market stress and uncertainty on brexit remains sterling negative.

EUR/JPY: yen jumps as uncertainty on global growth intensifies

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This non-exhaustive information is based on short-term forecasts for expected developments on the financial markets. KBC Bank cannot guarantee that these forecasts will materialize and cannot be held liable in any way for direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this document or its content. The document is not intended as personalized investment advice and does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold investments described herein. Although information has been obtained from and is based upon sources KBC believes to be reliable, KBC does not guarantee the accuracy of this information, which may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute a KBC judgment as of the data of the report and are subject to change without notice.

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