New Zealand gives US dollar birds

Prepared by Jeff Halley, Senior Market Analyst

 

New Zealand gives US dollar birds

The sell-off in the US dollar (USD) fizzled as fast as it began overnight, strengthening across the board after positive noises from the trade talks in Beijing. President Trump indicated he would give China more time to complete a deal if necessary as long as progress had been made. US government shut-down fears receded with Trump indicating that not putting another brick in the wall wasn’t a deal breaker.

As the USD marched inexorably higher, the exception was the New Zealand Dollar. The Kiwi (a flightless bird) consolidated its gains against the USD overnight and the Aussie dollar is following the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) refusal to follow the central bank’s party line and turn dovish.

US stock-markets went about their work quietly, rising around 0.50% with the S&P notably holding above its 200-day moving average, on much the same news as the USD. We expect a similar story in Asia this morning with indices tracking the S&P gains higher and regional currencies easing against the USD.

In terms of data, Japan’s GDP will be released today and is expected to rise by 1.20%. Its effects will only be transitory though as there are bigger stories to consider. Things will get more interesting in Europe with the release of Eurozone and German GDPs, with Europe’s industrial bell-weather expected to post a 0.80% gain. With the euro giving back much of its previous day’s gains overnight, a poor read could see sellers of the single currency return with renewed vigour.

 

FX

You can’t keep a good dollar down, be it the US or New Zealand’s it seems. Both have rallied vigorously overnight, perhaps highlighting the importance of short-term yields on sentiment (both have them). The market will remain highly sensitive to any headlines from the trade talks and therefore, so will both dollars.

USDJPY pushed higher to 111.00 with its eyes on the next significant resistance at 111.50. Sterling (GBP) fell 100 points from its highs overnight to 1.2850 this morning, with a break of the 1.2825 zone opening up a more substantial move down. The euro gave up all of its previous day’s gains to limp in at 1.1260 today. 1.1200 is looming as a must-hold support zone.

AUDNZD collapsed yesterday following the RBNZ, and the cross trades at 1.0425 this morning ahead of important support at 1.0400. Sentiment should keep up pressure on the pair, however traders would be wise to avoid extreme pessimism or talk of parity. Selling AUDNZD below 1.0300 has often ended in tears over the last 20 years. It’s unlikely this will change.

 

Stocks

We expect Asian markets to track North America gently higher this morning. Stocks in particular though will be susceptible to news headlines out of Washington or Beijing, whether good or bad. Traders should remain nimble in such a fragile sentiment environment.

 

Gold

We saw a peaceful night for gold as it remains anchored around 1,310.00 awaiting clarity in the bigger geopolitical picture.

 

Oil

Oil shrugged of higher-than-expected US inventory figures overnight with both Brent and WTI posting 1.80% gains. Oil was boosted by positive trade talk news allaying global growth fears, lowered OPEC production and the US warning countries not to buy Venezuelan oil. US National Security Advisor John R Bolton has warned countries who ignore the sanctions, “Won’t be forgotten.”

All of this has given a very constructive look to both contracts from a technical perspective with both Brent and WTI poised for higher gains. One cautionary note is they are also vulnerable to news headlines, good or bad.

 

 

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Andrew Robinson

Andrew Robinson

Senior Market Analyst at MarketPulse
A seasoned professional with more than 30 years’ experience in foreign exchange, interest rates and commodities, Andrew Robinson is a senior market analyst with OANDA, responsible for providing timely and relevant market commentary and live market analysis throughout the Asia-Pacific region. Having previously worked in Europe, since moving to Singapore he worked with several leading institutions including Bloomberg, Saxo Capital Markets and Informa Global Markets, proving FX strategies based on a combination of technical and fundamental analysis as well as market flow information. Andrew began his career as an FX dealer with NatWest and the Royal Bank of Scotland in the UK.
Andrew Robinson

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