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Silver Remains Stuck Inside Triangle Pattern
- Silver trades between trendlines that form a triangle
- Outlook is neutral, moving averages have flattened
- Break on either side of triangle will reveal next big move
Silver prices continue to trade within a symmetrical triangle pattern, formed by a longer-term uptrend line drawn from the lows of September 2022 and a downtrend line connecting the peaks of May. Hence, the picture seems neutral for now. A break on either side of the triangle is required to signal the next directional move.
The fact that the 50- and 200-day moving averages (MAs) have converged and have also flattened is a testament to this neutral outlook. Similarly, the RSI is near its midpoint of 50, reaffirming the absence of any momentum.
Should buyers remain in control, the first barrier to overcome would be the 23.35 zone. The 200-day MA is just above at 23.45, and can be considered part of the same zone. If violated, the next major obstacle would be the intersection of the 24.30 region and the downtrend line that’s part of the triangle.
If sellers take back the reins instead, there isn’t much support until the 22.20 territory and the uptrend line that forms the lower boundary of the triangle. A clean break below this crossroads would shift the picture to negative, opening the doors for extensions towards the 21.25 area.
Summarizing, the outlook seems neutral as long as silver continues to trade within the triangle.
Sunset Market Commentary
Markets
Investors positioned for a ‘hawkish pause’ over the previous days, with Fed Chair Powell/the governors’ summary of economic projections tomorrow seen cementing the higher for longer narrative while at the same time keeping the door open for a final rate hike in one of the two remaining meetings of the year. The ‘by default’ uptrend in yields unabatedly continues today (US 2-y yield +3 bps, 10-y +5 bps). US yields across all tenors are within striking distance of cycle peak levels (5-y testing highest level since 2007). One would expect a push beyond key technical references to be delayed till after tomorrow’s Fed meeting. However, momentum remains remarkably strong. German/EMU yields initially held near unchanged levels, but finally also joined the US momentum (+ 2-4 bps across the curve, with the 30-y (2.88%) reaching the highest level since end 2011). Recent talk on more ‘technical, non-interest rate ECB tightening’ (higher reserve ratio, faster reduction of CB balance sheet) supported the rend. In this context, UK Gilts’ outperformance did catch the eye even as a yields’ decline of 5 bps + evaporated in US trading (UK 10-y currently minus 2.5 bps). Markets still see a 80% chance of a 25 bps BoE rate hike on Thursday. However, the odds of an additional step further out have diminished to <50%. This is quite an aggressive call. Concerns on overtightening always have been an important factor in the internal BoE debate. That said, August headline inflation scheduled for release tomorrow morning is expected to reaccelerate to 0.7% M/M and 7.0% Y/Y (was -0.4% M/M and 6.8% Y/Y in July). Core inflation is seen only marginally lower at 6.8% from 6.9%. The BoE will continue to look forward when assessing the need for further tightening. Even so, only one additional inflation release will be available before the Bank will (have to) reevaluate its policy with a new in extenso Policy Report at the November 2 meeting. Persistent high inflation and the BoE sticking to only a conditional commitment to raise rates further might be a further headwind for sterling. EUR/GBP yesterday jumped above 0.86, but with no follow-through gains for now (EUR/GBP 0.8625). In other major FX cross rates the euro gains slightly further on the debate of the ECB potentially further reducing excess liquidity (1.0695). USD/JPY (147.8) is again near the 147.95 recent ceiling. An unexpected jump both in Canadian headline (4.0% from 3.3%) and core inflation (3.9% from 3.6%) propelled yields (2-y + 11 bps) and the loonie (USD/CAD 1.3400 from 1.3485 close yesterday). Maybe the current BoC pause isn’t the end of the cycle yet.
News & Views
Czech National Bank vice governor Frait said that the central bank will almost certainly keep its benchmark rate unchanged at 7% next week, while discussing the strategy for future rate cuts in depth. Even if the board agreed to lower rates in a following meeting (November and/or December), Frait thinks that money-market bets for about 70 bps of cuts this year are very unlikely to materialize. When policy easing starts, it will be slow and gradual unlike the National Bank of Poland’s 75 bps rate cut kick-off. A “fairly tight” labor market, combined with a weaker-than-expected koruna and more expensive oil are inflationary risks that warrant later and more cautious easing than implied by the central bank’s forecast, the vice governor said. CNB board member Holub in separate remarks stressed that risks to the baseline (rate cut) scenario are significant and tilted to the upside given the threat of inflation expectations becoming unanchored, risks of a wage-price spiral and longer effects of the expansionary fiscal policy. CNB governor Michl yesterday pushed back against early rate cuts as well, hinting to keep a restrictive policy until it will be certain that inflation will stay around 2%, not only in H1 2024 but also thereafter. CZK manages to hold on to yesterday’s gains, trading just north of 24.40.
The Flemish Community today raised €2.75bn in 2-part debt offering consisting of a short 9y regular benchmark (€1.25bn Jun2032) and a 19y sustainable benchmark (€1.5bn Sep2042). The 9y bond was priced to yield 37 bps above the Belgian OLO curve, down from revised guidance at +39 bps and initial price takings in the +41 bps area. The 19y bond was squeezed 5 bps from early guidance in the OLO +35 bps area to eventually + 30 bps. Order books were respectively above €5bn and above €12.7bn highlighting especially interest in the sustainable deal. The Flemish community now raised maximum objectives for both regular (€2.75bn) and sustainable benchmarks (€1.5bn) as set out on its funding plan. Short term financing and private placements (max €1.25bn) will be used to bridge the remainder of this year’s €8bn funding need.
Canadian Inflation Pressures Accelerated in August
Headline CPI rose to 4.0% year-over-year as surging oil prices pushed energy costs higher. The increase was above market expectations for a 3.8% reading with growth in broader 'core' measures also accelerating more than expected.
Most of the acceleration in year-over-year price growth came from rising energy costs - gasoline prices edged above year-ago levels for the first time since January with oil prices boosted by supply caps from key major oil producers.
And higher mortgage costs (a direct lagged result of Bank of Canada interest rate hikes over the last year and a half) are still accounting for about a quarter of year-over-year CPI growth.
But broader inflation pressures showed signs of reaccelerating in August. The BoC's preferred CPI-trim and CPI-median measures rose more than expected on a year-over-year basis (to 3.9% and 4.1%, respectively) and the closely-watched more recent 3-month run rate accelerated to a 4 1/2% annualized rate for both.
CPI trim services ex-shelter (sometimes called BoC 'supercore') rose 4.3% at an annualized rate over the last three months (by our calculation), in line with the July increase.
One silver lining was that grocery price growth showed further signs of easing. Grocery prices were still up 6.9% year-over-year, but that was smaller than the 8.5% increase in July and the 11%+ readings last winter. Food price growth should continue to ease in the near-term as lower raw food commodity prices and easing domestic supply chain pressures pass through to retail prices with a lag.
The BoC will be happy to see some signs of easing in food price growth. Higher mortgage interest costs are part of the central bank's plan to help cool off consumer demand and there is not much the BoC can do about global energy prices. But the acceleration in 'core' measures is concerning and will be watched closely.
Bottom line: The economic backdrop has been showing clear signs of slowing (with a decline in GDP in Q2 and drift higher in unemployment in recent months.) And that should signal that inflation pressures will ease going forward. But the BoC has one mandate, and that is to target a 2% inflation rate. And the August CPI data took a significant step away from that target rather than towards it. We expect the economic backdrop will continue to soften, and don't look for more interest rate hikes this year. But the central bank won't hesitate to hike interest rates further if inflation pressures don't show signs of easing.
Canada: Inflation Mercury Spikes to 4% in August
Consumer price inflation heated up again in August to 4.0% on a year-on-year (y/y) basis, up from 3.3% in July, largely thanks to higher prices at the pump.
Gasoline prices rose 4.6% on a monthly basis, thanks to higher prices for crude oil. Prices at the pump are only up 0.8% versus a year ago, but base year effects – or the swing from -12.9% y/y in July – drove the acceleration in headline CPI.
Shelter was another key source of upward pressure on inflation in August, heating up to 6.0% y/y, up from 5.1% y/y in July, and 4.8% in June. The acceleration was led by rents which were up 6.5% y/y in August, up from 5.5% in July.
Food inflation took a step down in August to 6.9% y/y from 8.5% in July, as prices for groceries fell 0.4% m/m in August. However, that is still the highest pace of inflation of the eight main CPI categories.
Scratching beneath the surface, our measure of "supercore" inflation, or services inflation excluding shelter costs cooled to 1.2% y/y from 2.1% y/y in July, thanks to a massive drop in travel services costs.
Somewhat surprisingly, the Bank of Canada's underlying inflation measures also heated up in August. CPI-trim increased to 3.9% y/y from 3.6% y/y in July and CPI-median was 4.1% y/y, up from 3.7% y/y in July.
Inflation for core goods appears to be behind the surprise in core inflation measures in August. Core goods inflation rose to 2.9% y/y from 2.6% in July. Notably, prices accelerated for clothing and footwear to 1.7% y/y in august from 1.0% in July.
Key Implications
Headline inflation moving back up to 4% on higher energy prices would likely be tolerated by the Bank of Canada. But, core inflation measures heating back up to 4% y/y, and 4.5% on a three month annualized basis is going to ring some alarm bells at the Bank.
August's inflation reading stands in contrast to other measures that have shown momentum cooling in Canada's economy. The housing market, and new home construction cooled in August, and the unemployment rate has risen half a percentage point over the past few months. Fortunately, the Bank of Canada will see another inflation report before it's next rate decision on October 25th. We expect further signs of slowing will help the Bank to continue to stand on the sidelines, as outlined in our recent forecast. However, today's inflation report has raised the odds they may need to make another move.
EUR/USD Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.0666; (P) 1.0682; (R1) 1.0710; More...
No change in EUR/USD's outlook and intraday bias stays neutral. Strong rebound from current level, followed by break of 1.0767 resistance, should confirm short term bottoming. Intraday bias will be back on the upside for 1.0944 resistance. However, sustained break of 1.0609/34 support zone will carry larger bearish implication, and target 1.0515 support next.
In the bigger picture, fall from 1.1274 medium term top is seen as a correction to up trend from 0.9534 (2022 low). Strong support could be seen from 1.0634 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 0.9534 to 1.1274 at 1.0609) to bring rebound, at least on first attempt. However, sustained break of 1.0609/0634 will raise the chance of bearish trend reversal, and target 61.8% retracement at 1.0199.
GBP/USD Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.2367; (P) 1.2389; (R1) 1.2407; More...
Intraday bias in GBP/USD is turned neutral with current recovery. Some consolidations could be seen but further decline is expected as long as 1.2547 resistance holds. Below 1.2368 will resume the fall from 1.3141 to 100% projection of 1.3141 to 1.2618 from 1.2799 at 1.2276. On the upside, though, firm break of 1.2547 resistance will now indicate short term bottoming, and bring stronger rebound.
In the bigger picture, fall from 1.3141 medium term top is seen as a correction to up trend from 1.0351 (2022 low). Deeper decline would be seen to 38.2% retracement of 1.0351 to 1.3141 at 1.2075. Strong support would be seen there to bring rebound on first attempt. However, sustained break of 1.2075 will raise the chance of bearish trend reversal.
USD/CHF Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.8955; (P) 0.8969; (R1) 0.8984; More....
Intraday bias in USD/CHF is turned neutral with current retreat and some consolidations could be seen. But further rally is expected as long as 0.8893 support holds. Above 0.8981 will resume the rally from 0.8551 to 0.9146 cluster resistance. However, firm break of 0.8893 will argue that a short term top is possibly formed, and turn bias back to the downside for 55 D EMA (now at 0.8858).
In the bigger picture, rebound from 0.8551 medium term bottom is currently seen as a correction to the downtrend from 1.0146 (2022 high). Further rally would be seen to 0.9146 cluster resistance (38.2% retracement of 1.0146 to 0.8551 at 0.9160). Strong resistance could be seen there to limit upside, at least on first attempt.
USD/JPY Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 147.48; (P) 147.68; (R1) 147.80; More...
Intraday bias in USD/JPY is turned neutral first as it continues to lose upside moment. Some consolidations could be seen, but further rally is expected as long as 145.88 support holds. Break of 147.94 will resume larger rise from 127.20 to retest 151.93 high.
In the bigger picture, while rise from 127.20 is strong, it could still be seen as the second leg of the corrective pattern from 151.93 (2022 high). Rejection by 151.93, followed by break of 137.22 support will indicate that the third leg of the pattern has started. However, sustained break of 151.93 will confirm resumption of long term up trend.
USD/CAD Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3462; (P) 1.3496; (R1) 1.3519; More....
Intraday bias in USD/CAD stays on the downside at this point. Current fall from 1.3693 is seen as another falling leg in the corrective pattern from 1.3976. Deeper decline would be seen to 61.8% retracement of 1.3091 to 1.3693 at 1.3321. Sustained break there will target 1.3091 support next. On the upside, above 1.3492 minor resistance will turn intraday bias neutral and bring consolidations first, before staging another decline.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3976 are viewed as a corrective pattern to the up trend from 1.2005 (2021 low). Deeper decline could be seen as the pattern is now extending. But downside should be contained by 50% retracement of 1.2005 to 1.3796 at 1.2991. Rise from 1.2005 is still expected to resume after the correction completes.
Canadian Dollar Rides High on Inflation Data, Dollar and Euro Struggle
Canadian Dollar's rally gathers additional momentum during early US session, buoyed by data that depicted faster re-acceleration in Canadian inflation than anticipated. It is noteworthy that the surge in headline inflation figure was chiefly influenced by escalating gasoline prices, yet inflation excluding gasoline did not decelerate as BoC would love to see. This scenario is poised to raise eyebrows at BoC, prompting concerns over whether current interest rates are restrictive enough to pull inflation back to target. This data also escalates the importance of BoC's summary of deliberations slated for release tomorrow.
Beyond Loonie, Australian and New Zealand Dollars follow suit as the day's strong performers. In contrast, Yen lags, primarily due to an increasing yield gap with other major economies. Dollar and Euro are similarly struggling, only slightly outperforming Yen, while Sterling and Swiss Franc find themselves sandwiched in between. However, this dynamic could undergo a radical transformation, with pivotal releases such as FOMC decision and UK CPI data set to unravel tomorrow, coupled with featured policy announcement from BoE, SNB, and BoJ later this week.
On the technical front, the longevity of Canadian Dollar's rally is in the spotlight. Can this surge push EUR/CAD beyond 1.4236 cluster support level? Given that ECB has already signaled an extended pause in its tightening cycle, any hawkish tones from BoC officials in the coming days could further depress the cross. Should the 1.4236 support be taken out decisively, it opens the doors to further decline to the next cluster level at 1.4, aligned closely with 50% retracement of 1.2867 to 1.5111 at 1.3989, and 100% projection of 1.5111 to 1.4280 from 1.4822 at 1.3991.
In Europe, at the time of writing, FTSE is up 0.01%. DAX is down -0.37%. CAC is down -0.02%. Germany 10-year yield is up 0.0395 at 2.751. Earlier in Asian, Nikkei dropped -0.87%. Hong Kong HSI rose 0.37%. China Shanghai SSE dropped -0.03%. Singapore Strait Times dropped -0.69%. Japan 10-year JGB yield rose 0.0086 to 0.719.
Canada CPI jumps to 4% yoy on gasoline, above expectation of 3.8% yoy
Canada CPI accelerated to 4.0% yoy in August, up from July's 3.3% yoy, above expectation of 3.8% yoy. The in CPI was largely the result of higher year-over-year prices for gasoline in August (+0.8%) compared with July (-12.9%). Excluding gasoline, CPI was unchanged at 4.1% yoy.
CPI median rose from 3.7% yoy to 4.1% yoy, above expectation of 3.7% yoy. CPI trimmed rose from 3.6% yoy to 3.9% yoy, above expectation of 3.5% yoy. CPI common was unchanged at 4.8% yoy, matched expectations.
On a monthly basis, CPI rose 0.4% mom in August, double expectation of 0.2% mom.
Eurozone CPI finalized at 5.2% in Aug, core CPI at 5.3%
Eurozone CPI was finalized at 5.2% yoy in August, down from 5.3% yoy in July. CPI core (all-items ex-energy, food, alcohol & tobacco) was finalized at 5.3% yoy, down from 5.5% yoy in July. Services prices slowed from 5.6% yoy to 5.5% yoy. Energy prices rose from -6.1% yoy to -3.3% yoy.
EU CPI was finalized at 5.9% yoy, down from 6.1% yoy in July. The lowest annual rates were registered in Denmark (2.3%), Spain and Belgium (both 2.4%). The highest annual rates were recorded in Hungary (14.2%), Czechia (10.1%) and Slovakia (9.6%). Compared with July, annual inflation fell in fifteen Member States, remained stable in one and rose in eleven.
ECB's Villeroy advocates for sustained 4% deposit rate to counter inflation
In an interview with BFM television, ECB Governing Council member Francois Villeroy de Galhau emphasized the pivotal role of interest rates in curbing inflation, which he starkly referred to as a "disease." Drawing a clear line of action against inflationary pressures, he advocated for maintaining a firm grip on the existing measures.
Villeroy underscored the effectiveness of the current strategy by stating, "Inflation is a disease and rates are the medicine. The medicine is starting to work." T
Diving into specifics, he highlighted the appropriateness of the 4% deposit rate level, voicing his opinion that this rate should be upheld for a "sufficiently long time" to ensure that it effectively counters inflationary trends.
Looking to the future, Villeroy elucidated that once the inflation rate cools down to hover around 2% target, it would then be feasible to consider a reduction in ECB rate.
RBA minutes flag risks on growth, consumption and China
RBA's meeting held on September 5, the minutes revealed that officials weighed two courses for monetary policy: increasing cash rate target by 25 bps or standing pat.
After a thorough consideration of the prevailing economic circumstances, members resolved that maintaining the current cash rate was the more compelling choice, highlighting the necessity to allot more time to gauge the comprehensive impacts of monetary policy tightening enacted since May 2022. This consensus is grounded in an understanding of the substantial delays that characterize transmission of policy repercussions through the economy.
Amid these considerations, members also highlighted potential risks. Specifically, there were concerns regarding the possibility that "the economy could slow more sharply than forecast." Factors like potentially weaker consumption and mounting downside risks to the Chinese economy were flagged.
However, the minutes reflected a cautiously optimistic tone, with members deducing that "recent developments had not materially altered the outlook." The general consensus remained that the economy still seems to be on a balanced path where inflation is poised to return to the target range, and employment growth is anticipated to sustain its momentum.
OECD downgrades 2024 global growth, interest rate close to current levels into 2024
The latest OECD Interim Economic Outlook has revealed revised global growth forecasts, with an incremental uptick for 2023 followed by a slight dip in 2024. The updated predictions reflect a blend of uplifted expectations for some economies and dampened hopes for others, amidst a backdrop of inflation concerns and the repercussions of a more sluggish recovery in China.
For 2023, the global economic growth forecast now stands at 3.0%, marking a 0.3% increase from previous predictions. Conversely, projections for 2024 have seen a decrease of -0.2%, bringing the anticipated growth down to 2.7%.
Dissecting the outlook on a regional basis unveils a mixed bag of prospects:
- US: A positive revision with growth estimates standing at 2.2% for 2023, up by 0.6%, and a 1.3% prediction for 2024, reflecting a 0.3% increase.
- Eurozone: Here the expectations have been trimmed down with 2023 forecasts reduced by -0.3% to a mere 0.5%, and a 2024 estimate of 1.1%, down by -0.4%.
- Japan: The outlook for 2023 appears brighter with a 0.5% increase to 1.8%, although the 2024 forecast has been slightly reduced by -0.1%, standing at 1.0%.
- China: Forecasts have been negatively revised to 4.1% in 2023, a drop of -0.3%, and 4.6% in 2024, reflecting a decrease of -0.5%.
The OECD outlook points out considerable downside risks, emphasizing potential persistency in inflation accompanied by potential disruptions in the food and energy markets. Slowdown in China's economy stands as a prominent concern, with ripple effects expected to diminish growth in global trading partners and possibly undercut business confidence universally.
Projections for headline inflation in G20 nations indicate a gradual decrease through 2023, moving from 7.8% in 2022 to 6.0% in 2023, and further dwindling to 4.8% in 2024. However, core inflation, primarily fueled by the services sector and relatively taut labour markets, is predicted to linger, necessitating a sustained restrictive posture in monetary policy across several countries.
As economies globally grapple with these changing dynamics, the emphasis remains on steering a cautious course, with a keen eye on inflation patterns as a decisive factor in shaping future policy directions. The evolving economic narrative dictates a necessity for many countries to maintain interest rates close to their present markers, extending well into 2024.
USD/CAD Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3462; (P) 1.3496; (R1) 1.3519; More....
Intraday bias in USD/CAD stays on the downside at this point. Current fall from 1.3693 is seen as another falling leg in the corrective pattern from 1.3976. Deeper decline would be seen to 61.8% retracement of 1.3091 to 1.3693 at 1.3321. Sustained break there will target 1.3091 support next. On the upside, above 1.3492 minor resistance will turn intraday bias neutral and bring consolidations first, before staging another decline.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3976 are viewed as a corrective pattern to the up trend from 1.2005 (2021 low). Deeper decline could be seen as the pattern is now extending. But downside should be contained by 50% retracement of 1.2005 to 1.3796 at 1.2991. Rise from 1.2005 is still expected to resume after the correction completes.
Economic Indicators Update
| GMT | Ccy | Events | Actual | Forecast | Previous | Revised |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01:30 | AUD | RBA Minutes | ||||
| 06:00 | CHF | Trade Balance (CHF) Aug | 4.05B | 4.23B | 3.13B | |
| 08:00 | EUR | Current Account (EUR) Jul | 20.9B | 30.2B | 35.8B | |
| 09:00 | EUR | Eurozone CPI Y/Y Aug F | 5.20% | 5.30% | 5.30% | |
| 09:00 | EUR | Eurozone CPI Core Y/Y Aug F | 5.30% | 5.30% | 5.30% | |
| 12:30 | USD | Building Permits Aug | 1.54M | 1.45M | 1.44M | |
| 12:30 | USD | Housing Starts Aug | 1.28M | 1.44M | 1.45M | |
| 12:30 | CAD | CPI M/M Aug | 0.40% | 0.20% | 0.60% | |
| 12:30 | CAD | CPI Y/Y Aug | 4.00% | 3.80% | 3.30% | |
| 12:30 | CAD | CPI Median Y/Y Aug | 4.10% | 3.70% | 3.70% | |
| 12:30 | CAD | CPI Trimmed Y/Y Aug | 3.90% | 3.50% | 3.60% | |
| 12:30 | CAD | CPI Common Y/Y Aug | 4.80% | 4.80% | 4.80% |













