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Market Morning Briefing: Aussie Is Moving Up As Expected
STOCKS
Dow (25803.19, +0.89%) has risen sharply breaking above our target of 25600. A test of 26000 or higher is also possible in the coming sessions. Overall the index looks bullish.
Dax (13245.03, +0.32%) is holding well below resistance at 13400 and while that holds, we could see further fall in the index towards 13000 before pausing.
Nikkei (23708.63, +0.23%) is trading below 24000 but follow through after a sharp rejection seems to be missing. If the resistance at 24000 is strong enough, the index is likely to come off towards 23250-23200 levels in the coming sessions; else some sideways consolidation may be seen in the 23500-24000 region and the price may start moving beyond 24000 in the longer term.
Shanghai (3430.08, +0.03%) has almost tested the previous highs of 3450 and is likely to pause or come off from here in the coming sessions.
Nifty (10681.25, +0.28%) and Sensex (34592.39, +0.26%) look bullish towards 10750 and 34750 respectively as we have been mentioning for quite some time. The rise may take some time and we could soon see a reversal indication for the medium term.
COMMODITIES
Brent (69.88) is trading just below important resistance at 70. No indication of a corrective dip is visible yet. On the other hand, WTI (64.42) has marched upwards moving closer to our mentioned levels of 65. Failure to come off from current levels could take the crude prices to higher levels in the near term. But before that a short corrective dip is preferred.
Gold (1341.06) has risen sharply as expected to test 1340. There is scope of testing 1350-1360 in the current rally before a short dip is seen. Near to medium term looks bullish.
Copper (3.2575) is stuck in the 3.20-3.30 region and is likely to trade sideways for a couple of sessions before starting to move on either side. Near term looks stable.
FOREX
Strong rise in the Euro (1.2204) on Friday. But now we see important/ strong Resistance near 1.2220, visible on the Weekly candles, which might hold for a week or two.
As it turns out, there's been a strong rise in the Euro-Yen (135.04) as well and there seems to be room up to 136-138 at least.
Although Dollar-Yen (110.70) is on its way to the target of 110, it might see a sharp bounce back up from there towards 112+, given the bullishness in the Euro-Yen.
As expected, the Pound (1.3743) has moved up to and past 1.37 after its sideways consolidation. May run into profit-taking at channel resistance near 1.3825-50 on the Daily candles.
Aussie (0.7934) is moving up as expected and may test 0.80, horizontal Resistance on the Weekly Line chart.
With Euro-Rupee (77.65) having risen strongly, downside might be limited to 63.50-45 on Dollar-Rupee.
INTEREST RATES
The US 10Yr (2.5462%) continues to see consolidation around levels seen on Friday, as there is some rebuilding of confidence in US Treasury bonds after last week’s scare of China halting its bond purchases. With US core CPI data reflecting a rise in inflation, the bond market stands at a delicate juncture where a break of resistance near 2.62% on the short term charts could pull yields higher towards the medium term target of 3% rather quickly.
The US 10 Yr- 5 Yr spread (0.1997%) is also near support on the short term chart and could bounce soon, leading to some much awaited yield curve steepening. The 30-10 Yr Spread (0.30%) is nearing 10 year lows near 0.22% - 0.25% last reached in 2008-09 and is raring for a bounce as well.
We will have to wait and watch over the next few weeks how quickly global bond yields rise in this bearish scenario.
Japanese 10 Yr Yield (0.08%) has again started moving up towards resistance near 0.088-0.09% on the short term chart. We can expect this resistance to hold for some time now while the downside could be restricted to 0.07% (previous resistance level on long term charts which could now act as support).
GOLD – Biased To The Upside On More Bull Pressure
GOLD - The commodity faces further upside pressure after it closed higher the past week. On the downside, support comes in at the 1,330.00 level where a break will turn attention to the 1,320.00 level. Further down, a cut through here will open the door for a move lower towards the 1,310.00 level. Below here if seen could trigger further downside pressure towards the 1,290.00 level. Conversely, resistance resides at the 1,350.00 level where a break will aim at the 1,360.00 level. A turn above there will expose the 1,370.00 level. Further out, resistance stands at the 1,380.00 level All in all, GOLD looks to strengthen further.

EURUSD – Bullish, Triggers Long Term Uptrend
EURUSD - The pair closed higher the past week triggering the resumption of long term uptrend. On the upside, resistance comes in at 1.2250 level with a cut through here opening the door for more upside towards the 1.2300 level. Further up, resistance lies at the 1.2350 level where a break will expose the 1.2400 level. Conversely, support lies at the 1.2150 level where a violation will aim at the 1.2100 level. A break of here will aim at the 1.2050 level. Below here will open the door for more weakness towards the 1.2000. Its weekly RSI is bullish and pointing higher. All in all, EURUSD faces further upside weakness on further bullishness.

USDCHF – Bearish, Extends Weakness
USDCHF - The pair closed lower the past week to extend its bearishness. On the downside, support lies at the 0.9650 level. A turn below here will open the door for more weakness towards the 0.9600 level and then the 0.9550 level. Its weekly RSI is bearish and pointing lower supporting this view. On the upside, resistance resides at the 0.9700 level where a break will clear the way for more strength to occur towards the 0.9750 level. Further out, resistance comes in at the 0.9800 level. Above here if seen will turn attention to 0.9850. All in all, USDCHF faces further weakness short term

FX Traders Are Not Impressed By Surging US CPI
Foreign Exchange traders were not impressed by the robust US CPI and Retail Sales prints and continued to flood into the top 2018 consensus trades.The Euro had an astonishing day closing above 1.2200 level as Euro bulls have not satisfied their appetite nor did they apparently own enough EUR in the size they want. But the fact the dollar barely blinked at the core CPI beat emphasises the lack of conviction in the US dollar early in 2018. The week will probably get off to a slow start with Martin Luther King Day celebrations in the US. However, the US calendar is light this week, and the dollar could continue to falter in the absence of any tier one data catalysts to halt the trend.
Hopes for an immigration deal in the USA were dealt a blow as in typical partisan fashion; lawmakers continued to exchange brickbats derailing any hope for a settlement and raising the possibility of a government shutdown. An agreement on this issues would have guaranteed stopgap funding and broader budget consensus Given the paper-thin margin of a majority the Republican holds in the Senate and the possibility the fiscal hawks will vote no for a funding extension, its believed Democratic votes are needed.
The most prominent story’s on the markets remain higher Oil prices and rising US bond yields. And by extension, the far-reaching implication of higher energy prices lifting inflation expectations which are providing the most meaningful signal for higher US Bond Yields.
Oil Markets
Oil prices remained firm despite US Rig count rising by ten last week, according to Baker Hughes. So far the rise has done little to dent bullish sentiment despite growing signs oil prices are topping out. However, with oil executives basking in the afterglow of OPEC production cuts and recent supply disruptions, the big question emerges: will shale producers get back into the swing of things in a more substantial way?
The real wildcard in the deck, however, is the possibility of significant supply disruptions from the fragile five OPEC countries which could add another $5 -$ 10 per barrel from the geopolitical risk premium alone. Iran presents a considerable tail risk as a mix of populist, political and terrorism-related disturbances could lead to higher instability knocking out oil production and precipitating a massive oil supply shock.
US Bond Markets
The US Bond yields move higher with two-year Treasuries hurdling above the significant 2 percent levels as Friday’s CPI data cemented the odds of a March rate hike. Two-year US Treasury yields are the markets most robust gauge of Federal Reserve expectations. With higher oil prices and a stronger inflationary signal generated from CPI, traders are now moving towards the Feds three rate hike dots for 2018. But the data did little to influence the pace of Fed normalisation beyond 2018 or alter the long-term ” terminal rate. “
Ten year Treasuries closed the week at 2.55 % up .37% In addition to higher inflation signals, supply concerns are weighing on sentiment as the prospect of the Feds scaling back on their massive Bond buying orgy comes to the fore. The latest move by the BoJ to scale back the pace of QE has sent jitters through Global Bond markets, but dealers are waiting for some possible policy confirmation in today’s Sakura report.
Gold Markets
Gold was initially dragged lower by a robust US CPI print and stronger than expected Retail Sales data, triggering intraday stops. However, the yellow metal rebounded quickly when USD dollar demand failed to materialise and then Gold roared higher in the NY afternoon session when EURUSD demand accelerated driving the DXY below the critical 91 level suggesting the USD downtrend is resuming.
While the weaker USD remained Golds primary driver, investors are keeping an eye on the simmering geopolitical hot spot in the Middle East. A war of words escalated when Iran promised to retaliate after US President Donald Trump’s decision to target the head of its judiciary with sanctions, but Tehran fell short of saying what type of action they may take. Iran remains among the most poignant of geopolitical risks this year following President Trump’s decision not to ratify Iran’s compliance on the nuclear deal. Gold investors are likely under-positioned for a significant escalation which could lead to considerable price increase.
Equity Markets
There is a broader gap forming between investor expectations and market reality which is starting to wave multiple yellow cautionary flags. Higher interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty have to enter the picture at some point. But Investors continue basking in the afterglow of US Tax Reform assuming there will be no end to this unstoppable run which is now feeding off US domestic economic strength and a stronger global growth narrative. As we enter earnings season, the fear of missing out mindset takes hold, but if the markets remain at this pace, we could breach my 2018 year-end Global stock market forecast before the end of February which will for once leave me honestly lost for words.
The strong performance in Friday’s US stock market session is pointing to a healthy start to the week for Asian equity markets.
G-10
The Euro
Remarkable best describes Friday’s Euro rally which looks poised to make further gains after signalling a bullish outside week. While it’s conceivable Euro will trade 1.30+ this year, but interim targets towards 1.24-1.25 near-term look like a logical take profit zone and probably the next congestion point. In the meantime, the hawkish ECB minutes and diminishing political risk should continue to drive sentiment. Politics will remain a key driver of opinion with both CDU and SPD converging to a Grand Coalition. But of interest this week will be ECB speakers Weidmann and Coeure whose comments will be carefully watched after the release of the hawkish ECB minutes. Not a great time to be short Euro.
The Japanese Yen
Today’s Yen focus is on the Sakura report with the market keying on Kuroda’s opening speech. At the October meeting, he was happy with the level of monetary accommodation.But if he mentions any adverse implications from the current pace of QE, especially towards the banking sector, the likelihood of a policy shift will escalate dramatically and send USDJPY towards 110. But certainly, if last weeks not so stealthy taper was a trial balloon, the stronger Yen response, could lessen the chance for further QE policy shifts
The Canadian Dollar
NAFTA headlines will continue to be tricky to trade.But look for the Bank of Canada to provide the most precise signal for continuous direction. However, with a substantial build-up on long CAD positions risk skews to the downside especially if the rate hike theme turned one and done for 2018. Or the whole position blows out if no rate hike is offered up. Poloz has tossed a few curveball in the past, and implications around NAFTA could give cause for pause.
The Australian Dollar
Gold and energy sectors look solid which provides a decent footing for commodity-related currencies. The weaker US dollar trend seems to be re-emerging which should play favourably into the stronger Australian Dollar narrative despite Chinese steel prices falling and by default weighing on Iron Ore prices on Friday
The Australian employment data comes into focus Thursday, but given the volatility in this series it generates poor trading signals and has minimal impact on RBA policy.
Perhaps more significant is the China Data Dump also due out Thursday where market watchers will be intently monitoring for any economic slowdown on the back of Pboc tighter monetary policy amidst significant Mainland administrators financial reforms. GDP is expected to come in around 6.7 % while industrial production is expected to hit 6.1 %. There is a real possibility the regulatory facelift could weigh on all indicators, but we would need to see GDP drop below 6.6 % and or Retail Sales to fall below 10% to raise any significant consternation. While an upside surprise will likely produce a significant lift in commodity prices and support the Aussie dollar along with the regional currency basket
The Chinese Yuan
The Yuan surged on the back of broader USD weakness and is poised to make further gains this week. The DXY falling below 91 suggests a deeper USD sell-off is on the cards, but traders will key on Monday Fix which usually provides the best gauge for Pboc policy as well as dictating broader regional sentiment. While there was a lot of focus on the suspension of the Counter-Cyclical mechanism, active traders in the RMB space were more baffled by the Yaun sell-off than anything else as the policy shift implies neither a ” line in the sand” nor does it represent a weaker RMB policy. The argument for the stronger Yuan remains solid as regulators do not want currency weakness to divert attention from economic growth, investment inflow and regulatory reform.
Over the weekend China has reportedly tightened rules on property loans made by non -bank firms, signalling further evidence that regulators are determined to rein in the runaway shadow banking sector.
Asia FX
Korean Won
The markets recovered soundly from the midweek equity wobble after China’s SAFE denied the US bond market rumours. Also and as expected the market has shown little respect or regulators jawboning the Won which ultimately proved ineffective and did little else than provide the market better levels to buy KRW. So much for the apparent so-called line in the sand as traders cut through the psychological 1060 level like a hot knife through butter. Despite the BoK to steady policy rates, capital inflow remains significant as the robust US economic data and the stronger global growth narrative have major exporting nations riding the wave of positive risk sentiment.
The Malaysian Ringgit
The Stars continue to align for the Ringgit with higher oil prices, a weaker USD trend emerging, US equities surging, stable domestic economic landscape and a BNM rate hike in the offing.But from a technical perspective, the breach of the critical 3.98 barriers brings the 3.95 level well within reach short-term. However, given that the market has been milking the same signals for the past three months, the real question is where the next major catalyst will emerge?Malaysia will be the clear winner from Belt & Road Initiative (BRI)as China will continue to export excess capacity through Foreign direct investment while expanding construction contracts to improve critical forks in BRI transport networks.This resulting domestic economic growth from BRI will add significant points to the recent MYR outperformance.
Cable Highest Since Brexit
Last week's strong finish helped the pound break some critical levels and break through the September high. The euro was the top performer last week, while the Canadian dollar lagged. CFTC positioning showed the market's infatuation with the euro. On Friday, we closed the Premium USDJPY short at 111.10 from 112.45 entry for a 135-pip. The EURUSD short was stopped out, while the existing EURUSD and GBPUSD longs netting a over a 450-pip gain so far.
The pound has some of its swagger back. No doubt it's benefiting from the struggles of the US dollar but it's also about better domestic news and hope for a better Brexit deal. On Friday, a report said Dutch and Spanish finance ministers had agreed to work for a Brexit deal that would keep the UK as close to Europe as possible.
This is a potentially huge development as it's the first crack in the united EU front against Britain. The Germans and French had hoped to carve up the UK's financial services industry but others – like Spain – benefit from closer ties via things like tourism and agricultural exports.
It's far-from-clear which faction will rule out. At this point, Holland and Spain appear to be alone, but it's a desperately-needed opening for Theresa May and an opportunity for cable bulls.
At the same time, the chart is increasingly positive as is shown below. With Friday's break of the September high, cable is trading at the best levels since the Brexit vote. There isn't much resistance standing in the way of 1.40 but watch out for UK CPI numbers Tuesday and retail sales on Friday.

Note that Monday is a holiday in the US.
CFTC Commitments of Traders
Speculative net futures trader positions as of the close on Tuesday. Net short denoted by - long by +.
EUR +145K vs +128K prior GBP +26K vs +16K prior JPY -126K vs -122K prior CAD +17K vs +15K prior CHF -22K vs -16K prior AUD +K vs -20K prior NZD -11K vs -17K prior
Euro longs have risen 63% in the past two weeks but it hasn't stalled the euro, which was up nearly 2% last week. At some point the jitters will hit, but something will need to happen to inspire some USD buying. In contrast, sterling longs are still relatively low with cable breaking out as is shown on this chart, that could be the new darling of the market.
