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Dollar Resumes Slide and Risk Appetite is Weakened, Following Cohn Shock
The unexpected nature of sudden announcements from the Whitehouse never fails to surprise.
Investors across the globe have been taken by surprise following the sudden news that top economic advisor to President Trump, Gary Cohn, resigned overnight. The breaking development encouraged an acceleration in selling momentum for the Dollar, with the Dollar Index touching its lowest level in two weeks. The resignation appears to have played a role in weakening risk appetite towards the stock markets. High-yielding currencies, like the South African Rand, suffered against the USD during trading on Wednesday. Other emerging market currencies, like the Russian Ruble and Turkish Lira, have also declined against the Dollar.
Gary Cohn was previously viewed as a leading candidate to replace past Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, therefore his resignation has not been something that investors are prepared to overlook. Cohn was also seen as an advocate for global trade, therefore there is speculation that President Trump’s trade war rhetoric, is being considered as a catalyst behind his sudden resignation.
I think that investors will be inclined to take the news of Cohn’s resignation as another reason to sell the Dollar. It shouldn’t have a long-lasting impact on the stock markets and risk appetite, unless Trump does step up the trade war narrative.
The broad weakness in the Dollar during trading so far on Wednesday has been behind the Euro trading at its highest level in nearly three weeks, while the Japanese Yen appears to be close to achieving a new milestone high, after reaching its strongest level against the USD since November 2016 late last week. The Swiss Franc also gained against the Dollar.
Gold appears to be at risk for profit-taking after originally trending higher in the early hours of trading today. As long as Gold remains above the psychological $1300 level, I remain bullish on the precious metal over the medium and longer-term.
The British Pound is surprisingly one of the currencies that has been unable to capitalize on Dollar weakness. The Pound is currently trading lower against the Dollar. This could be linked to the GBPUSD facing what is seen as quite tough resistance around the 1.40 handle, although Sterling sensitivity to Brexit developments could also be encouraging pressure on the Pound.
EU Warns of Retaliation to US Tariffs, BoC Rate Decision Pending
Here are the latest developments in global markets:
FOREX: The resignation of Trump’s economic adviser and free-trade advocate, Gary Cohn, late yesterday, spurred speculations that the President’s plans to impose hefty import tariffs on aluminum and steel were more likely than analysts previously thought. The dollar index touched a fresh two-week low at 89.40 (-0.14%) and dollar/yen continued to trade near 16-month lows reached yesterday, last seen at 105.46 (-0.46%). Pound/dollar extended losses to reach 1.3858 (-0.17%) after the EU’s Brexit guidelines stated that a future trade deal should address an “appropriate” customs cooperation, preserving any regulatory autonomy. Moreover, the document acknowledged that Britain’s departure from the EU will lead to frictions in trade, though it also revealed the EU’s willingness to maintain a close partnership with the UK. Euro/dollar inched up to a fresh three-week high of 1.2443 (+0.14%) shrugging off US trade threats as the EU reiterated its warnings to react accordingly if the US punitive tariffs materialize. Speaking in Brussels, the EU trade Commissioner argued that US protectionism would damage transatlantic relations, hoping for the EU to be excluded from the tariffs. Dollar/loonie changed hands higher at 1.2932 (+0.43%) ahead of the BoC rate announcement, aussie/dollar edged back up to 0.7800 (-0.24%) but remained down on the day, while kiwi/dollar was weak at 0.7279 (-0.14%).
STOCKS: European stocks corrected lower following their Asian counterparts as Cohn’s resignation revived fears of a potential trade war between the US and the rest of the world. The pan-European STOXX 600 and the blue-chip Euro STOXX 50 were down by 0.26% and 0.23% respectively at 1050 GMT. The German DAX 30 retreated by 0.19%, with automaker shares including mainly those of Volkswagen and Daimler being the worst performers in the index. Still, losses could have been larger if not offset by gains in telecommunications. The French CAC 40 fell by 0.37% and the British FTSE 100 managed to erase earlier losses after the British plane engine maker, Rolls Royce stated that it was on track to meet its 2020 goals, lifting its shares by 12.30%. US futures were in the red, pointing to a negative open.
COMMODITIES: Heightened trade risks weighed on oil prices as well, with WTI crude and Brent remaining pressured at $62.14 (-0.79%) and $65.27 (-0.73%) per barrel respectively. Yesterday, the API oil report added to concerns that US oil production could hamper OPEC’s efforts to curb supply as the numbers indicated a larger increase in US stockpiles than analysts thought. In precious metals, gold was slightly down at $1332.64 (-0.11%) per ounce.
Day ahead: Bank of Canada to announce interest rate decision; US ADP nonfarm employment report in focus
The Bank of Canada (BoC) will announce its rate decision at 1500 GMT and expectations are for the central bankers to keep interest rates steady at 1.25% after raising borrowing costs three times since July, when rates stood at 0.75%. In the recent weeks, investors have been paring back the odds of a potential rate hike since the economy seemed to lose momentum in times when the government was struggling to reach an agreement on the NAFTA front. GDP growth slowed down surprisingly to 1.7% y/y in the final quarter of 2017, following a downward revision in the Q3 measure, while it was a big surprise to see employment declining sharply in January. Trump’s punitive import tariffs on steel could be another reason for the BoC to leave monetary policy unchanged today as Canada owns the largest share of steel imports to the US and any implementation of the measures could exaggerate trade conflicts between the countries and make NAFTA negotiations much more difficult. While markets are already waiting for the BoC to hold a cautious tone given the above risks, a larger degree of pessimism in the central bank’s outlook could push the loonie lower.
Canadian trade statistics for the month of January will be also available today prior the rate decision at 1330 GMT.
Meanwhile in the US, investors will keep a close eye on the ADP nonfarm employment report due at 1315 GMT before they prepare their positions ahead of the famous nonfarm payrolls on Friday. According to analysts, the ADP readings which regard the US private sector are expected to show an employment increase of 195,000 in February compared to 234,000 seen in the previous month. Government’s nonfarm payrolls which track changes in both the private and public labor sectors are anticipated to stand flat at 200,000.
In other data out of the US, the Fed’s Beige Book will give an overview of the current economic conditions in each of the 12 Federal districts at 1900 GMT, while the Energy Information Administration will publish its weekly report on US oil inventories earlier at 1530 GMT.
Elsewhere, Japan will see the release of the GDP growth figures for the final quarter of 2017 at 2350 GMT. However, these will be the second estimates and are likely to have a moderate impact on the yen. Forecasts continue to support a growth rate of 0.9% y/y, although first GDP growth estimates came in lower at 0.5%. Data on private consumption and capital expenditure will also attract some attention.
As for today’s speakers, we will hear from Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic (voter), as well as New York Fed President William Dudley (voter), at 1300 GMT and 1320 GMT respectively.
EU draft Brexit negotiation guidelines reject “mutual recognition”
European Council President Donald Tusk is putting forward a draft of Brexit negotiation guidelines. The 6-page document was leaked to Politco. A point to note is that the document rules out UK Prime Minister Theresa May's proposal of "mutual recognition" of standards.
It notes that "trade in services … to an extent consistent with the fact that the U.K. will become a third country and the [European] Union and the U.K. will no longer share a common regulatory, supervisor, enforcement and judiciary framework."
Another point is that financial services is not included in the trade agreement. This certainly disappoints Chancellor Philip Hammond who has been pushing to include it.
Also, the "the European Council has to take into account the repeatedly stated positions of the UK, which limit the depth of such a future partnership. Being outside the customs union and the single market will inevitably lead to frictions.
Equities Drop, Bonds and Yen Gain on Trade War Fears
Wednesday February 7: Five things the markets are talking about
The fear of heightened protectionism continues to have a massive impact on capital markets.
President Trump's former economic adviser Gary Cohn's resignation late yesterday has hit global equities and the currencies of U.S trade partners, as investors consider the news means that Trump is pushing forward with his planned steel and aluminum tariffs.
Sovereign bonds have rallied while the yen rose to its strongest level in almost 16-months. Oil is under pressure as the trade-war fears sap most commodities ahead of today's EIA data that's expected to show U.S stockpiles expanded (10:30 am EST).
On tap: U.S ADP Non-Farm Employment Change at 08:15 am EST and Bank of Canada (BoC) rate announcement at 10:00 am EST.
1. Stocks see red
In Japan, the Nikkei share average dropped overnight after free-trade advocate Gary Cohn resigned as Trump's top economic adviser. The fear that Trump will proceed with tariffs pushed the steelmaker index to an eight-month low. The Nikkei fell -0.8%, not far from its five-month low. The broader Topix Iron and Steel index lost -2.1%.
Down-under, the Aussie commodity-heavy S&P/ASX 200 fell -1%, while in S. Korea, the Kospi declined -0.4% as optimism about N. Korea being open to talking about giving up its nuclear weapons was offset by worries about global trade.
In Hong Kong, stocks followed global markets lower amid renewed trade war fears. The Hang Seng index fell -1.0%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.1%.
In China, stocks reversed earlier gains to end the overnight session under pressure. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.5%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was -0.75% lower.
In Europe, regional indices trade mostly lower, tracking sharp declines in the U.S futures on Gary Cohn's announced resignation.
U.S stocks are set to open deep in the "red" (-1%).
Indices: Stoxx600 -0.3% at 370.1, FTSE flat at 7146, DAX -0.3% at 12077, CAC-40 -0.5% at 5146, IBEX-35 -0.2% at 9569, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 22156, SMI -0.3% at 8739, S&P 500 Futures -1.0%
2. Oil under pressure as concern grows over U.S trade, gold lower
Oil prices fell overnight, in line with other asset classes, after Gary Cohn's resignation renewed concerns that Washington will go ahead with import tariffs and risk a trade war.
Ahead of the U.S open, Brent futures are down -85c at +$64.94 a barrel, while U.S crude futures (WTI) are down -69c at +$61.91 a barrel.
A rise in U.S crude inventories has also dented market sentiment. API data yesterday showed that U.S crude inventories rose by +5.661m barrels last week to +426.8m barrels.
Official data by the U.S Energy Information Administration (EIA) is due later this morning (10:30 am EST).
Yesterday, the EIA upwardly revised its predictions for U.S crude oil production – it now expects to rise by more than +120k bpd to +11.17m bpd by Q4 2018.
Gold prices have retreated from their one-week high as trade war fears weigh on the dollar and equities. Spot gold is down -0.1% at +$1,333.15 per ounce, after touching +$1,340.42, its highest since Feb. 26, earlier in the session.
3. Yield focus shifts to central bank announcements
Later this morning, the Bank of Canada (BoC) will publish its monetary statement at 10:00 am EST. The central bank is not expected to make changes to the benchmark interest rate, keeping it at +1.25%.
The growing uncertainty over Canada's trade ties with the U.S is keeping the loonie under pressure (C$1.2933). Investors will be looking for clues that the BoC is still expected to raise rates three more times this year to keep up with the U.S Fed pace of rate hikes.
Earlier this morning, the Turkish central bank (CBRT) kept interest rates unchanged. The communiqué stated that the committee decided to maintain the tight monetary policy stance given that "core inflation remains elevated." It added that a tight monetary policy stance "will be maintained decisively until inflation outlook displays a significant improvement."
Elsewhere, the yield on U.S 10's fell -3 bps to +2.86%. In Germany, the 10-year Bund yield declined -1 bps to +0.67%, while in the U.K the 10-year Gilt yield fell -2 bps to +1.521%.
4. Dollar under pressure
The USD is a tad lower against G10 currency pairs in quiet trading. Gary Cohn departure, Trump's most senior economic adviser, is considered a massive blow to pro-business and free trade.
EUR/USD is a tad higher by +0.2% at €1.2425 and seems poised to retest the upper-end of its 2018 range with €1.25 in the cross hairs.
GBP/USD is the outlier, trading under pressure, down -0.25% at £1.3855. Data this morning showed that the U.K Feb Halifax House Prices beat expectations, but still registered its lowest level in five-years.
USD/JPY continues to trade atop of the ¥105.60 level and within striking distance of 16-month lows.
Euro data this morning showed that the third estimate of euro-zone GDP in Q4 showed that expansion was driven mainly by net exports.
As expected, Q4 euro-zone growth was left unrevised at +0.6%, slightly slower than Q3's +0.7%.
Digging deeper, both the German and French economies were confirmed to have grown by +0.6%, while Italy lagged behind with a +0.3% expansion. In 2017 as a whole, the euro-zone economy grew by +2.5%.
Next up will be tomorrows European Central Bank (ECB) monetary policy announcement. Many individuals expects the ECB to remove the easing bias at its meeting, making it the first step in its "gradual" change of language.
The easing bias refers to the possibility that the ECB's QE could be increased again if need be.
DAX Ticks Higher as Eurozone GDP Stays Steady
European stock markets are seeing green on Tuesday, and the DAX and CAC have both posted strong gains. Currently, the DAX is trading at 12,097.08, up 0.10% since the Tuesday close. On the release front, Eurozone Revised GDP posted a gain of 0.6% for a fourth straight quarter. This matched the forecast. On Thursday, the ECB sets its benchmark rate, and the US will publish unemployment claims.
The ECB will be in focus on Thursday, as policymakers set the monthly benchmark rate. This will be followed by a press conference with Mario Draghi. The interest rate has been pegged at a flat 0.0% for the past two years, and no change is expected. The markets will be keeping a close eye on the language of the rate statement; in particular, whether the easing bias stance will be removed. If so, this would likely be interpreted as a plan to eventually tighten policy and would be bullish for the euro. Inflation remains weak, so there is little pressure on the ECB to tighten policy anytime soon. Recent indicators show that inflation in the eurozone is steady, but remains well below the ECB target of around 2 percent.
European stock markets have been turbulent since US President Trump stunned investors last week when he proposed stiff tariffs on steel imports, much to the consternation of the European Union and other US trading partners. Fears of a trade war sent the DAX sharply lower last week, with losses of 5.2%. The DAX has clawed back some of the losses this week, as Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, have come out strongly against the move. This has raised hopes that Trump will back down. However, the unpredictable president could barrel ahead and impose the tariffs, which would likely send global stock markets lower.
USD/JPY W Bullish Pattern at Daily Support
The USD/JPY dropped heavily to its session lows after Trump cancelled Thursday’s Tariff meeting. Now we can see that the price is exactly at the POC zone and it is either “make it or break it”. The price might spike from 105.75-60 zone to the upside. In that case targets are 105.94 and 106.25. Only above 106.25 targets are 106.44 and 106.72. H1 momentum or 4h close above 106.75 aims for 107.05. A drop below 105.45 should target 105.04. If we see a daily close below 105.00 then 104.38 is next target.
- W H3 - Weekly Camarilla Pivot (Weekly Interim Resistance)
- W H4 - Weekly Camarilla Pivot (Strong Weekly Resistance)
- M H4 - Monthly Camarilla Pivot (Very Strong Monthly Resistance)
- M L3 – Monthly Camarilla Pivot (Monthly Support)
- M L4 – Monthly H4 Camarilla (Monthly Strong Daily Support)
- POC - Point Of Confluence (The zone where we expect price to react aka entry zone)
Euro Edges Higher As Eurozone GDP Matches Estimate
The euro has edged higher in the Wednesday session. Currently, EUR/USD is trading at 1.2452, up 0.17% on the day. On the release front, Eurozone Revised GDP posted a gain of 0.6% for a fourth straight quarter. This matched the estimate. In the US, today’s key indicator is ADP nonfarm payrolls, which is expected to drop sharply to 199 thousand. On Thursday, the ECB sets its benchmark rate, and the US will publish unemployment claims.
Investors are keeping a close eye on the ECB, which will set the benchmark rate on Thursday. This will be followed by a press conference with Mario Draghi. The interest rate has been pegged at a flat 0.0% for the past two years, and no change is expected. The markets will be keeping a close eye on the language of the rate statement; in particular, whether the easing bias stance will be removed. If so, this would likely be interpreted as a plan to eventually tighten policy and would be bullish for the euro. Inflation remains weak, so there is little pressure on the ECB to tighten policy anytime soon. Recent indicators show that inflation in the eurozone is steady, but remains well below the ECB target of around 2 percent.
In the US, tensions over proposed tariffs on steel imports continue to hurt the US dollar, and the euro has gained closed to 1% in the past week. President Trump appears set on applying stiff tariffs of 25% on steel, much to the consternation of the European Union and other US trading partners. However, there is plenty of domestic opposition to Trump’s plan, as Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, have come out strongly against the move. If Trump doesn’t back down, the Republicans could even resort to legislation to limit Trump’s authority on tariffs. The announcement of the tariffs last week sent the dollar broadly lower, and if the tariffs are introduced, negative investor sentiment could continue to weigh on the dollar.
Market Update – European Session: Cohn’s Exit From White House Gives Conservatives And Protectionists More Influence Over Policy
Notes/Observations
China Feb FX Reserves fall for the 1st time in over a year
UK Feb Halifax House Prices beat expectations but registers its lowest level in 5 years
Trade war concerns escalate
Gary Cohn departure gives conservatives and protectionists much more influence over White House policy
Asia:
Australia Q4 GDP misses expectations with quarterly growth at slowest pace since Q1 of 2017 (/Q: 0.4% v 0.5%e; Y/Y: 2.4% v 2.5%e)
RBA Gov Lowe reiterated there was no strong case for a near-term policy adjustment; likely that next RBA rate move would be up
China PBoC conducts 1-year MLF facility at unchanged rate of 3.25%; skips daily OMO for third straight session
BoJ Dep Gov Nominee Wakatabe: Won't automatically propose more easing, but did not exclude proposing extra easing
BoJ Dep Gov Nominee Amamiya ('Mr BoJ') reiterated Japan economy making progress toward CPI goal
Europe:
EU internal report argued that UK PM May was 'double cherry-picking' on Brexit and called her model unworkable; Report dismissed May’s Brexit speech as "being more about Conservative Party management than putting forward sensible solutions on trade"
Americas:
White House economic adviser Gary Cohn to resign; Expected to leave Administration in coming weeks
Fed Kaplan (non-voter, dove) reiterated base case was approx 3 interest rate hikes in 2018
Fed Brainard (voter, dove): Had greater confidence Fed to achieve 2% inflation target; tailwinds could speed up pace of rate hikes
Energy:
Weekly API Oil Inventories: Crude: +5.7M v 0.9M prior
Economic Data:
(ZA) South Africa Feb Gross Reserves: $50.1B v $50.5B prior; Net Reserves: $43.3B v $43.7Be
(RO) Romania Q4 Preliminary GDP (2nd reading) Q/Q: 0.6% v 0.6%e; Y/Y: 6.9% v 6.9%e
(MY) Malaysia Central Bank (BNM) left the Overnight Policy Rate unchanged at 3.25%; as expected
(DK) Denmark Jan Industrial Production M/M: +2.6% v -1.4% prior
(NO) Norway Q4 Current Account (NOK): 35.0B v 21.2B prior
(MY) Malaysia End-Feb Foreign Reserves: $103.7B v $103.6B prior
(FR) France Jan Trade Balance: -$5.6B v -$4.5Be
(FR) France Jan Current Account: -€1.6B v -€0.8B prior
(TW) Taiwan Feb CPI Y/Y: 2.2% v 2.0%e; CPI Core Y/Y: 2.4% v 0.8% prior, WPI Y/Y: -0.3% v -0.7% prior
(TW) Taiwan Feb Trade Balance: $2.9B v $3.7Be; Exports Y/Y: -1.2% v +3.7%e; Imports Y/Y: 0.9% v 4.9%e
(CH) Swiss Feb Foreign Currency Reserves (CHF): 732.8B v 732.0Be
(HU) Hungary Jan Industrial Production M/M: 1.5% v 1.3%e; Y/Y: 6.7% v 5.4%e
(CN) China Feb Foreign Reserves: $3.135T v $3.155Te (1st decline in 13 months)
(UK) Feb Halifax House Prices M/M: 0.4% v 0.4%e; 3M/Y: 1.8% v 1.6%e (lowest annual pace since 2013)
(SE) Sweden Feb Budget Balance (SEK): 49.9B v 0.0B prior
(CZ) Czech Feb International Reserves: $150.9B v $152.1B prior
(SG) Singapore Feb Foreign Reserves: $282.8B v $282.4B prior
(ZA) South Africa Feb Sacci Business Confidence: 98.9 v 99.7 prior
(EU) Euro Zone Q4 Final GDP Q/Q: 0.6% v 0.6%e; Y/Y: 2.7% v 2.7%e
Fixed Income Issuance:
(IN) India sold total INR140B vs. INR140B indicated in 3-month, 6-month and 12-month bills
(DK) Denmark sold total DKK2.38B in 2020 and 2027 Bonds
(SE) Sweden sold SEK1.5B vs. SEK1.5B indicated in 0.75% May 2028 Bonds; Avg Yield: 0.8080% v 0.9046% prior; Bid-to-cover: 3.16x v 4.33x prior
(NO) Norway sold NOK2.0B vs. NOK2.0B indicated in 1.75% Feb 2027 Bonds; Avg Yield: 1.93% v 1.81% prior; Bid-to-cover: 3.49x v 2.48x prior
SPEAKERS/FIXED INCOME/FX/COMMODITIES/ERRATUM
Equities
Indices [Stoxx600 -0.3% at 370.1, FTSE flat at 7146, DAX -0.3% at 12077, CAC-40 -0.5% at 5146 , IBEX-35 -0.2% at 9569, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 22156 , SMI -0.3% at 8739, S&P 500 Futures -1.0%]
Market Focal Points/Key Themes:
European Indices trade mostly lower tracking sharp declines in US futures as President Trump's White House Economic adviser Gary Cohn announced his resignation, which has hit sentiment.
On the corporate front Rolls Royce reported a beat on the top and bottom line, with shares trading sharply higher, while Legal and General, Esure also trade higher after results. To the downside
Deutsche Post trades lower after earnings, with Paddy Power, Agfa Gevaert and Page Group also trading lower.
Looking ahead looking notable earnings include Dollar Tree and Brown Forman.
Movers
Consumer Discretionary [Paddy Power Betfair [PPB.UK] -3.2% (Earnings), Lookers [LOOK.UK] +1.3% (Earnings), Pagegroup [PAGE.UK] -5.6% (Earnings), Restaurant Group [RTN.UK] +11.6% (Earnings) ]
Industrials [ Rolls Royce [RR.UK] +13.6% (Earnings), Smurfit Kappa [SKG.UK] +3.4% (Follow through following rejected bid from IP), Deutsche Post [DPW.DE] -1.2% (Earnings)]
Financial [ Legal and General [LGEN.UK] +1.1% (Earnings), Esure [ESUR.UK] +1.5% (Earnings) ]
Technology [Agfa Gevaert [AGFB.BE] -1.1% (Earnings)]
Speakers
EU's Dombrovskis: EU ready to discuss banking cooperation with UK
China FX Regulator SAFE stated that falling asset price led to decline in FX reserves but reiterated its view that FX reserves expected to remain stable overall
Currencies
USD was slightly lower against most major pairs in quiet trading on Wed. The headwinds did loom for the greenback as analysts commented on the departure of While House Economic advisor Cohn. Overall view that Cohn was the most important and powerful pragmatic, pro-business member of the President's inner circle with the immediate impact to be on trade policy
EUR/USD was higher by 0.2% at 1.2425 and seemed poised to retest the upper-end of its 2018 range with 1.25 in sight
GBP/USD bucked the trend and was softer in session. The UK Feb Halifax House Prices beat expectations but still registered its lowest level in 5 years. Pair off by 0.2% at 1.3865
USD/JPY was hovering around the 105.60 level and within striking distance of re-testing Nov 2016 lows
Fixed Income
Bund Futures trades 18 ticks higher at 156.68 popping higher after President Trump’s top economic advisor Cohn’s resigned. Upside targets 157.50, while a return lower targets the155.75 level.
Gilt futures trade at 122.13 up 26 ticks as Gilts resume their push higher. Support continues to stand at 120.75 then 120.15, with upside resistance at 122.85 then 123.35.
Wednesday's liquidity report showed Tuesday's excess liquidity rose to €1.879T from €1.878T prior. Use of the marginal lending facility fell to €40M from €51M prior.
Corporate issuance saw 2 issuers raise $1.7B in the primary market
Looking Ahead
(EU) EU President Tusk presents Brexit strategy
(IE) Ireland Debt Agency (NTMA) to sell 2022 and 2028 IGB bonds
(IL) Israel Feb Foreign Currency Balance: No est v $117.6B prior
(UR) Ukraine Feb CPI M/M: 0.8%e v 1.5% prior; Y/Y: 14.0%e v 14.1% prior
05:30 (DE) Germany to sell €4.0B in 0% Apr 2023 BOBL; Avg Yield: % v 0.08% pior; Bid-to-cover: x v 1.3x prior (Jan 31st 2018)
06:00 (TR) Turkey Central Bank (CBRT) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Benchmark Repurchase Rate unchanged at 8.00%
06:00 (IE) Ireland Jan Retail Sales Volume M/M: No est v -0.1% prior; Y/Y: No est v 7.2% prior
06:00 (IE) Ireland Jan Industrial Production M/M: No est v 3.0% prior; Y/Y: No est v 3.0% prior
06:00 (PL) Poland Central Bank (NBP) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Base Rate unchanged at 1.50%
06:00 (BR) Brazil Feb FGV Inflation IGP-DI M/M: 0.1%e v 0.6% prior; Y/Y: -0.2%e v -0.3% prior
06:00 (RU) Russia to sell RUB 40B in OFZ Bonds
06:30 (CL) Chile Central Bank Traders Survey
06:30 (CL) Chile Feb Trade Balance: $1.1Be v $1.2B prior; Exports: $6.5Be v $6.7B prior; Imports: $5.4Be v $5.5B prior; Copper Exports: No est v 2.6B prior
06:30 (CL) Chile Feb International Reserves: No est v $38.7B prior
06:45 (US) Daily Libor Fixing
07:00 (US) MBA Mortgage Applications w/e Mar 2nd: No est v 2.7% prior
07:00 (CL) Chile Jan Nominal Wage M/M: No est v 0.5% prior; Y/Y: 4.6%e v 4.6% prior
08:00 (PL) Poland Feb Official Reserves: No est v $117.5B prior
08:00 (RU) Russia Feb Official Reserve Assets: $457.7Be v $447.7B prior
08:00 (RU) Russia Gold and Forex Reserves w/e Mar 2nd: No est v $450.9B prior
08:00 (US) Fed's Dudley (dove, FOMC voter) speaks in Puerto Rico
08:00(US) Fed's Bostic (2018 voter, dove) speaks on the Economic Outlook
08:05 (UK) Baltic Dry Bulk Index
08:15 (US) Feb ADP Employment Change: +200Ke v +234K prior
08:30 (US) Q4 Final Nonfarm Productivity: -0.1%e v -0.1% prelim; Unit Labor Costs: 2.1%e v 2.0% prelim
08:30 (US) Jan Trade Balance: -$55.0Be v -$53.1B prior
08:30 (CA) Canada Q4 Labor Productivity Q/Q: +0.1%e v -0.6% prior
08:30 (CA) Canada Jan Int'l Merchandise Trade (CAD): -2.5Be v -3.2B prior
09:30 (TR) Turkey Feb Cash Budget Balance (TRY): No est v -1.6B prior
10:00 (CA) Bank of Canada (BOC) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Interest Rate unchanged at 1.25%
10:00 (PL) Poland Central Bank Gov Glapinski to hold post rate decision press conference
10:30 (US) Weekly DOE Crude Oil Inventories
14:00 (US) Federal Reserve Beige Book
15:00 (US) Jan Consumer Credit: $17.7Be v $18.4B prior
18:50 (JP) Japan Q4 Final GDP Q/Q: 0.2%e v 0.1% prelim; Annualized GDP Q/Q: 1.0%e v 0.5% prelim; Nominal GDP Q/Q: 0.1%e v 0.0% prelim
(JP) Bank of Japan (BOJ) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Interest Rate on Excess Reserves (IOER) Unchanged at -0.10%
EURUSD – Threatens Further Upside Pressure
EURUSD -With the pair continuing to hold on its upside pressure, more strength is envisaged. On the upside, resistance comes in at 1.2450 level with a cut through here opening the door for more upside towards the 1.2500 level. Further up, resistance lies at the 1.2550 level where a break will expose the 1.2600 level. Conversely, support lies at the 1.2350 level where a violation will aim at the 1.2200 level. A break of here will aim at the 1.2150 level. Below here will open the door for more weakness towards the 1.210. All in all, EURUSD faces further bull threats on correction.
USDJPY Now Bearish Below 106.00 Level
The U.S dollar has erased Tuesday's gains against the Japanese yen as risk-off trading sentiment quickly returns to financial markets, following top U.S economic advisor Gary Cohn's resignation. The USDJPY pair has slumped back towards the key 105.50 support level, with MACD and RSI technical indicators now turning bearish as sellers once again gain control of price-action. Traders now look towards the release of the U.S ADP jobs report and the U.S stock market open, with futures markets pointing to heavy declines.
The USDJPY pair is likely to decline further below the 105.50 level, sellers will likely target the 105.23 and 104.60 support region.
If the USDJPY pair can hold the 105.50 support area, a technical test of the key 106.00 resistance level seems likely.







