Tuesday, May 26, 2015

GBPUSD – Dollar Regains Control in Cable Battle

The dollar extended gains against the pound on Tuesday following a batch of encouraging US economic data and hawkish comments on Friday from Fed Chair Janet Yellen.

The rally in cable already appeared to be over prior to this having run into a brick wall around 1.58 (previous support and resistance, 50 fib level – 15 July highs to 13 April lows – and 233-day SMA). Following this we’ve seen potential support levels being taken out (and the ascending trend line broken) and the pair make new lower highs and lows, a sign that the recent uptrend has indeed reversed.

gbpusd daily

With so much disagreement among investors on when the Fed will hike interest rates, I think what we’ll see now is the pair find a new trading range with the 233-DMA providing the top end of the range. The bottom end could be determined in the coming week or two but I think the 1.5170-1.5220 region could be interesting.

Aside from being a key level of support and resistance on numerous occasions in the past, it also marks the 50% retracement of the move from 13 April lows to 14 May highs. The 89-DMA, which has been reliable support and resistance level in the past, may also provide additional support here.

An early sign of this may come if divergences appear between the oscillators and price action on the 4-hour chart as we near that key area.

gbpusd 4hr

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US Capital Goods Orders Climb, a plus for Business Investment

Orders for capital equipment rose in April for a second straight month, a sign U.S. business investment could pick up in the second half of the year.

Bookings for non-military capital goods excluding aircraft, a proxy for future corporate spending on new equipment, advanced 1 percent after a 1.5 percent gain in March that was larger than previously estimated, data from the Commerce Department showed Tuesday in Washington. Total durable goods demand declined 0.5 percent, as forecast.

Oil and mining companies are counting on a reprieve as crude prices rebound from the rout that pummeled business activity, while the strong dollar continues to undermine exports of American-made goods to overseas markets. Domestic demand should keep factories churning out goods such as cars, as the labor market proves hardy.

“Without question, this is an extremely strong report, if you think about how the year started,” said Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at RBC Capital Markets LLC in New York. “You’re looking at a pretty nice profile for growth.”

Stock-index futures and Treasury securities fell after data added to evidence the economy is emerging from a first-quarter slowdown. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 maturing in June declined 0.3 percent to 2,117.6 at 8:46 a.m. in New York. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note was 2.20 percent, little changed from Friday, after having been as low as 2.17 percent before the report.

Bloomberg

US Home Prices Increase 5% in Year to March

Home prices in 20 U.S. cities rose at a faster pace than projected in the year through March, reflecting a limited number of available properties on the market.

The S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values increased 5 percent from March 2014 for a second month, the group said Tuesday in New York. The median estimate of 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a 4.6 percent year-over-year advance. Nationally, prices rose 4.1 percent from March 2014.

Higher home prices along with lean inventory and limited income growth have tempered the recovery in residential real estate. More construction, particularly of cheaper properties, would help boost supply and bring purchases within reach of more Americans looking to take advantage of low borrowing costs.

“We’ve got an increase in demand at the same time supply has been pretty modest — that’s pushing prices up,” David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide Insurance in Columbus, Ohio, said before the report. “I think house-price gains will moderate, because we’ll start to see more people put houses on the market and more builders building more.”

Economists’ estimates in the Bloomberg survey ranged from gains of 4.3 percent to 5.4 percent. The S&P/Case-Shiller index is based on a three-month average, which means the March figure also was influenced by transactions in February and January.

Home prices in the 20-city index adjusted for seasonal variations increased 1 percent in March from the prior month, in line with the Bloomberg survey median of 0.9 percent.

Bloomberg

Modi’s first 365 days: ‘Sparks but no fireworks’

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s charm appears to be wearing off as the leader’s first year in office draws to a close, with investors looking for less rhetoric and more action.

There were “sparks but no fireworks,” Shilan Shah, India economist at Capital Economics said, summing up Modi’s maiden year.

“Our view that the economic reform agenda would fall short of (at times frenzied) expectations appears to have been proved correct for the time being,” Shah wrote in a note.

Modi was sworn in as Prime Minister on May 26, 2014 after a sweeping election victory earlier in the month. Seen as the “man who would remake India,” the former Gujarat chief minister came into office amid much fanfare and great expectations – from both inside and outside the country.

His government’s strong mandate had given rise to optimism for reforms that would unlock India’s economic potential.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s charm appears to be wearing off as the leader’s first year in office draws to a close, with investors looking for less rhetoric and more action.

There were “sparks but no fireworks,” Shilan Shah, India economist at Capital Economics said, summing up Modi’s maiden year.

“Our view that the economic reform agenda would fall short of (at times frenzied) expectations appears to have been proved correct for the time being,” Shah wrote in a note.

Modi was sworn in as Prime Minister on May 26, 2014 after a sweeping election victory earlier in the month. Seen as the “man who would remake India,” the former Gujarat chief minister came into office amid much fanfare and great expectations – from both inside and outside the country.

His government’s strong mandate had given rise to optimism for reforms that would unlock India’s economic potential.

Admittedly, Modi has made strides in a few crucial areas: putting India back on the global radar, cracking down on corruption and improving transparency and accountability in governance, say analysts.
“But progress on pushing through the ‘big bang’ reforms that many had hoped for, including on land, tax and labor laws, has been underwhelming. So far, not enough has been achieved to suggest that India can fulfil its economic potential over the medium term,” said Shah.

Investors’ fading optimism has manifested in the country’s stock market, which has undergone a pullback in recent months. The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex is down almost 7 percent since the end of January.

One reason Modi’s agenda has stalled is because his coalition – the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) – lacks a majority in the upper house of parliament, the Rajya Sabha, making it more difficult to push through contentious reforms.

“This parliamentary infighting has stalled and derailed a series of Modi’s plans to revitalize India’s sagging infrastructure and slowing economic growth,” global intelligence firm Stratfor wrote in a recent note.

In an effort to maintain momentum, Modi has focused on securing diplomatic and economic victories abroad.

He has gone on more than a dozen official visits to strengthen ties with neighbors and world powers, from China to the United States.

“Although Modi has attempted several charm offensives throughout the year, his domestic policy quagmire has kept many potential diplomatic and economic breakthroughs from developing further,” Stratfor said.

“Bilateral visits with Japanese, American and Australian heads of state have generated billions of dollars (in investment pledges that have yet to be actualized.”

CNBC

What Would Happen If Greece Doesn’t Pay the IMF: Q&A

Cash-strapped Greece needs to repay almost 1.6 billion euros ($1.76 billion) to the International Monetary Fund next month, an obligation Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis said the country can’t and won’t meet, if there’s no deal to unlock bailout funds in the meantime.

Here’s a list of questions and answers on what can happen next:

Q: When are the next IMF payments due?

A: Greece owes the IMF about 20 billion euros in principal over the next nine years for the bailout loans it has received. Four payments, totaling almost 1.6 billion euros are due next month, starting with a 308 million-euro payment on June 5. Another 347 million euros are due June 12, followed by a payment of 578 million June 16, and 347 million euros June 19. Payments to the Fund are denominated in Special Drawing Rights, a virtual reserve currency, so sums cited in euros are approximate and depend on the exchange rate between euros and SDRs.

Q: Why are payments due in June a concern?

A: Greece has lost access to bond markets and relies on bailout loans from the euro area and the IMF to refinance its debt. The country’s anti-austerity coalition is locked in talks with its creditors over the terms attached to those emergency loans. Even though no aid disbursements have been made since last summer, the government has managed to meet external payments through a combination of measures, including budget under-execution, building up arrears to suppliers and vendors, overdue taxes settlement incentives, and seizing of cash reserves of regional governments, hospitals, universities, and even the country’s bank recapitalization fund, for use in short-term state financing operations.

Whether the anti-bailout coalition will choose to exhaust its depleting reserves on IMF payments, or opt for a default if there’s no deal with creditors in sight, is a political decision.

Q: What do Greek officials say about the payment?

A: Greek government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis said Monday the state will strive to meet all external and internal obligations for as long as it can, adding that the country’s liquidity problems are well known. He declined to say whether state coffers have enough cash for the June payments, while the government in Athens has said on several occasions it will prioritize payment of pensions and salaries.

Greece has flirted with the idea of falling into arrears with the IMF in the past.

The country’s interior minister, Nikos Voutsis, who has no economic decision-making powers, said Sunday that payments to the IMF due in June can’t be made, and won’t be made if there’s no deal to unlock bailout funds in the meantime. Spiegel Online on April 1 cited Voutsis as saying Greece should delay an April 9 payment to the Fund and that payment was made.

Earlier this month, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had told creditors in a letter that his government wouldn’t make the payment due to the IMF May 12. In the end, the country paid the Fund, using the reserves of its own SDR holding account at the IMF.

Q: Can Greece afford to pay?

A: A person with direct knowledge of the country’s liquidity position said Greece has enough cash at least for the payment due June 5. A prompt payment then would buy Greek officials and representatives of creditor institutions another week of time to negotiate an agreement which will unlock bailout funds and solve the problem, before the next payment is due.

Sakellaridis has said the government aims to reach a deal with creditors by the end of this month, or early June, while no issues will arise with end-May payments of pensions and salaries.

An international official involved in Greek bailout talks said earlier this month that Greece can stay afloat possibly until the last week of June, if it drains all available reserves.

But the country’s liquidity situation is so tight that an accident can happen anytime. For example, if tax revenue comes in lower than projections, the government may only realize that a payment due is not possible when it’s already too late.

Q: Can Greece ask for an IMF payment to be deferred?

A: The IMF is a preferred creditor, and doesn’t restructure its loans, nor does it accept write-offs. When multiple principal payments are due over the course of a month, a country can ask permission to bundle them into a lump payment. This bundling is intended to reduce red tape in payment processing, and there are precedents of countries using this option. In the case of Greece, it would buy the country time until June 19, when the last payment is due, to reach an accord with creditors.

But the government would have to ask IMF permission to bundle payments, and Sakellaridis said Monday that this option is not being examined.

Q: What will happen if an IMF payment is missed?

A: All three of the major rating firms consider official creditors such as the IMF as a different class to holders of tradable securities like bonds. Failure to service official loans wouldn’t necessarily cause a downgrade to a “default” category. Rather, that may come into play with a failure to pay private bondholders.

At the end of the day, whether Greece is officially considered being in a state of default may not matter that much. The most immediate fallout after a missed payment would be felt by Greek lenders.

Without access to capital markets, Greek banks are bleeding deposits and rely on more than 80 billion euros of Emergency Liquidity Assistance to stay afloat. The European Central Bank can restrict or discontinue access to this lifeline all together, if it rules that Greek banks aren’t solvent or don’t have enough eligible collateral.

Much of the collateral that Greek banks have pledged against ELA is government-guaranteed bonds, and Greek sovereign notes, including treasury bills. A missed payment to the IMF would probably lead euro-area central bank governors to conclude that these guarantees are no longer eligible for emergency cash, as the guarantor is not solvent.

In a best case scenario, they would then give Greece a very short deadline to strike a deal with creditors and restore its solvency, and hence the solvency of its banks, like they didin Cyprus. Alternatively, the ECB’s Governing Council could decide to discontinue ELA immediately, thus forcing the immediate imposition of a prolonged bank holiday, followed by draconian capital controls.

Q: What will happen next?

A: Greek banks don’t rely on government guarantees just for liquidity. Much of their regulatory capital also consists of deferred tax claims against the state. The Frankfurt-based regulator could also conclude that these claims are no longer eligible. In short, the solvency of Greek banks, whose biggest shareholder is the Greek state, is directly dependent on the solvency of the Greek sovereign. And the call on whether they are solvent will be made by the ECB and its Single Supervisory Mechanism in Frankfurt.

A bank holiday and a cap on ELA, after a missed IMF payment, may give the government a short-time window to strike an agreement with creditors. If an agreement is not reached, Greek banks will fail, incurring losses on depositors, and setting the country on course to exit the currency bloc.

Q: What will the IMF do?

A: A missed payment date starts the clock ticking. Two weeks after the initial due date and a cable from Washington urging immediate payment, the fund sends another cable stressing the “seriousness of the failure to meet obligations” and again urges prompt settlement. Two weeks after that, the managing director informs the Executive Board that an obligation is overdue. For Greece, that’s when the serious consequences kick in. These are known as cross-default and cross-acceleration.

Q: What are cross-default and cross-acceleration?

A: Failure to pay the IMF would entitle some of Greece’s other creditors, including the European bailout fund, to declare a default. They would then have the option to demand immediate repayment of all their loans, a process known as acceleration. Other lenders could then follow suit. While calling a default preserves creditors’ claims, acceleration — the bit that hurts — isn’t automatic. Each creditor decides on its own.

To varying degrees the debt is linked in a web of cross-default and cross-acceleration clauses that make it safe to assume that one default and acceleration would trigger demands for repayment on most, if not all, of the rest.

Greek debt features a variety of structures, with different terms and conditions and governed principally by Greek and English law. The obligations include bonds whose holders voted not to take part in a 2012 restructuring; notes issued in that restructuring; bonds held by the ECB; a series of loans from Europe’s bailout fund, including one used to sweeten the restructuring pill; notes issued last year; the 2010 Greek Loan Facility; and the IMF loans.

Bloomberg

IMF official: Chinese yuan no longer undervalued

China’s currency is no longer undervalued, a senior official of the International Monetary Fund said Tuesday.

“While undervaluation of the renminbi (yuan) was a major factor causing the large imbalances in the past, our assessment now is that the substantial real effective appreciation over the past year has brought the exchange rate to a level that is no longer undervalued,” IMF first deputy managing director David Lipton said.

Speaking to reporters in Beijing after meeting with Chinese officials as part of annual discussions on China’s economy, he said China should make quick progress in the area of greater exchange-rate flexibility and try to achieve a floating exchange-rate system in two to three years.

“Greater flexibility, with intervention limited to avoiding disorderly market conditions or excessive volatility, will also be key to prevent the exchange rate from moving away from equilibrium in the future,” he said.

Mr. Lipton told reporters that the IMF welcomes China’s bid to have the yuan included in the Special Drawing Rights, the organization’s basket of special reserve assets, which is currently made up of the dollar, euro, Japanese yen and the British pound.

The IMF is expected to make a decision on a re-evaluation of the composition of the basket this year.

Mr. Lipton also said that China should step up fiscal policy measures if economic growth slips below 6.5%, although the IMF expects growth to come in at 6.8% this year. The official Chinese government target is for 7% growth.

China has moved too slowly on its program to reform the state sector, he said, adding that Beijing needs to level the playing field between the public and private sectors.

Market Watch

UK retail sales bounding ahead, says CBI

Retail sales are “bounding ahead”, with growth accelerating strongly in the year to May, the CBI has said.

The employers’ organisation said growth in the volume of retail sales and orders exceeded expectations.

Sixty percent of firms said volumes were up on a year ago, while 9% said they were down, giving a positive balance of 51%.

And expectations for the year to June were even more optimistic, its survey of 134 businesses found.

“Low inflation, which we expect to remain below 1% for the rest of the year, has given household incomes a much-needed boost and greater spending power,” said Rain Newton-Smith, the CBI’s director of economics.

“Overall, the outlook is bright for firms on the High Street, but challenges still remain, especially for food retailers, who are still feeling the heat of stiff price competition from new entrants to the sector.

“And investment plans have also taken a hit.”

Retailers expect sales volumes to grow again in the year to June, with 63% expecting them to rise and 4% to fall, the CBI said.

‘Cracking survey’

Last week, figures from the Office for National Statistics showed that UK retail sales rose by 1.2% in April, the strongest increase since November, after the warm weather encouraged shoppers to buy summer clothes.

Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight, called the CBI’s latest findings “a cracking survey” and said it indicated the pace of growth in the UK economy was accelerating.

“It is looking increasingly likely that robust consumer spending will help the UK economy regain momentum in the second quarter after GDP growth moderated to just 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in the first quarter.

“We currently forecast second-quarter GDP growth to improve to 0.7% quarter-on-quarter.”

BBC

Dollar In Vogue Trading Dominates

Markets are back to Greece watching

Greek saber rattling supports Gilts and Bunds

Yen trades at eight-year low to the dollar

Commodity prices fall on dollar outlook

This morning after a long-three day weekend, market participants jump straight back into the fray to find the U.S dollar has built strongly on the gains seen after last Friday’s upside U.S CPI surprise, and comments from Fed Chair Yellen that a rate hike remains on the cards for this year.

In Europe, dealers return to the grindstone where the Greek debt dance has Euro capital markets very much starting this shortened trading week on the back foot. The single unit trades at new one-month lows outright (€1.0890), while German and UK debt rallies on Greek risk aversion trading and on the surprise weekend Spanish vote results. Spanish yields have backed up after a negative reaction to the region polls in Spain where a strong showing for the opposition antiausterity parties (Podemos) is a clear threat to the incumbent government and to the Euro periphery stability.

Market worries that Greece will be incapable of fulfilling its debt obligations to the IMF next week will only continue to weigh on the EUR in the short term, while U.S bond yields will favor the dollar against a host of G10 currencies. JPY trades at an eight-year low (122.79). It seems that the recent stability in the pair over the past few months had greatly reduce speculative yen shorts – the market wants to play catch up to the potential upside momentum due to U.S and Japanese interest rate differentials.

Investors are looking ahead to this morning’s U.S data menu (durable goods and new home sales) for key touch point guidance. Both reports are expected to show improvement over the previous months readings, which would only add value to the dominant current trading strategies. The market is most interested in the U.S housing data points – was last week’s surge in starts and permits a coincidence or not for the housing sector?

EUR’s Freefall Attempt to Parity

The two-prone attack on the EUR, Greek saber rattling and stronger U.S domestic data, has the unit -0.7% lower in overnight trading and threatening to build up further momentum to test its multi-year lows sub the €1.05 handle. The EUR is down close to -10% this year and -20% over the past 12-months.

Greek two-year yields have climbed a further +1.3bp to +23.9% amid growing fears over a default. Greek officials continue to take the hard stance by raising doubts over whether they will have enough money to fulfill its debt obligations to the IMF next month (€1.6b). What’s making the situation worse is the internal fighting within the Syriza party over creditors conditions – some officials it seems are willing to accept certain terms.

In Spain, bond prices reveal a similar scenario. Bonos have come under further pressure from the weekend’s election results, which showed the ruling Popular Party lose ‘big’ in municipal elections to the anti-austerity Podemos Party (Spanish 10-year yield has climbed +8bp to +1.85%). It’s the reason why European officials and policy makers will only ever take a hardline stance approach to Greece – they do not want to legitimize Syriza’s claims, nor set a precedent that cannot be unwound that favor ant-austerity party claims.

Both U.K Gilts and German Bunds, which are considered somewhat safe haven, are benefitting from the periphery debt market underperformance. German bunds are down -6bp to +0.55% while 10-year Gilts are trading at +1.86%. It’s no surprise to see that U.S treasuries are being dragged along for the safe haven ride. U.S 10’s currently yield +2.18%, much tighter than this month’s low yield print of +2.32% amidst the global sovereign yield saga.

Commodities Fall on Dollar Direction

The USD remains the best of a ‘bad lot’ for most traders. Mixed domestic data, neutral comments from Fed Chair Yellen and risk aversions strategies certainly outweigh the current Euro/Greek saga, a weaker China and Japan requiring a lower currency value. Nevertheless, a dominant dollar strategy will weigh heavily on commodity prices and their affiliated currency pairs (CAD, AUD, NZD etc.), albeit crude, gold or dairy.

Again this morning, crude oil trades under pressure (Brent -0.8% to $65.02 and West Texas -0.7% to +$59.29), while the yellow metal seeks to discover what lies below the psychological $1,1200 handle (-1% to $1,194.5). The recent upward strength for oil was supported mostly by cuts in production (supply gluts remain an ongoing concern), and the mighty dollar shakeout over the past six-weeks, rather than on sustainable economic growth. With the USD finding favor, and a growing concern for both crude and gold fundamentals, being long this sector may require some nimble trading in the short term.

Forex heatmap

US Open – Surveys Eyed for Signs of Turnaround

US futures are pointing lower ahead of the first trading day of this shortened week, as a negative lead from Europe and surprisingly hawkish stance from Fed Chair Janet Yellen weighs on risk appetite.

Yellen’s comments on Friday weren’t entirely surprising as they were consistent with the minutes from the last FOMC meeting that were released earlier in the week. I think investors were expecting her to acknowledge that the poor data had spread beyond the first quarter, potentially contradicting the Fed’s view that it is just “transitory” but Yellen appeared to have no desire to do this. Instead she claimed once again that a rate hike is likely this year which in the absence of strong earnings is harmful for stocks and supports the dollar.

There is plenty of US data being released today that will either support or discredit Yellen’s claims. The fact that these weaker figures have carried on into April should act as a red flag to the Fed that the economy may not necessarily be experiencing the strong recovery that the final three quarters of 2014 suggested. If it continues into May, they may need to accept that the economy is facing stronger headwinds and is slowing as a result, which would suggest rate hike would need to be delayed. I still don’t think this will be the case but a fifth month of poor data would be hard to ignore.

The fact that the economy continued to show signs of slowing in April is old news now, making the April figures today a little less relevant. That’s not to say they’re not important, the core durable goods orders release for example is a great barometer of both current spending habits and confidence in the outlook. We’re expecting to see a 0.4% rise in orders from March which suggests people are not concerned by the slow down and maybe agree that it is just temporary.

Of greater importance in my opinion are the two May surveys for the services sector and consumer confidence. The flash services PMI gives great insight into expectations for the sector when taking into consideration the slower start to the year. I would expect it to fall slightly as the start of the year can’t be completely ignored but if it stays in the high 50’s, it still suggests they are very confident about the outlook.

The CB consumer confidence ready similarly is expected to fall slightly to 95 from 95.2 which despite heading in the wrong direction is still a very strong reading. When paired with the fact that consumers have a little extra cash as a result of lower oil prices and purchasing power has improved as a result of the stronger currency, this would set the US up for a strong consumer driven recovery this summer. Unfortunately, the UoM consumer sentiment reading a couple of weeks ago fell much harder than expected and I fear the same could be reflected in today’s CB reading.

The S&P is expected to open 7 points lower, the Dow 41 points lower and the Nasdaq 19 points lower.

Economic Calendar

For a look at all of today’s economic events, check out our economic calendar.

European Open – Greece and Spain Weigh on Futures

It’s been a very slow start to the week in the financial markets with yesterday’s bank holiday in much of Europe and the US severely weighing on trading volumes.

Those markets that were open in Europe suffered a rough start to the week, particularly in the periphery where Spanish regional and local elections highlighted the risks facing the recovery this year while the Greek interior minister confirmed that the country would not be able to pay the IMF next month.

Spain’s economy has really turned a corner recently and was one of the fastest growing EU countries in the first quarter, posting 0.9% growth. Unfortunately, the general election later this year was always going to pose a threat to any recovery this year as despite overseeing a turnaround, the popularity of the ruling People’s Party is at a more than 20 year low.

The voting over the weekend was also very fragmented making an overall majority for any party very unlikely while the rise of parties like Podemos could pose further problems for the eurozone down the road. The success of Podemos at the election later this year could be supported or severely hampered by the success of failure of the Alexis Tsipras’ negotiations with the country’s creditors in the next couple of weeks. Podemos have been likened to Tsipras’ Syriza party and so negotiations here could set a precedent for other similar minded parties in other countries where people are growing tired of austerity.

As it stands, negotiations aren’t going to well for Tsipras and I would bet that the rise of parties like Podemos aren’t helping his cause. Leaders across the eurozone will not want to be seen giving in to the demands of these parties and the harder the stance they take with Tsipras, the less likely it is that they will have to go through it over and over again in the future.

With Greece’s interior minister confirming that the country will not be able to repay €1.6 billion to the IMF in June, it really is now crunch time in talks between both parties. They are set to resume tomorrow and will likely dominate most of the week with it not offering too much on the data front and earnings season having eased off greatly.

The bulk of today’s data will come from the US where we’ll get the latest durable goods orders for April followed by this month’s CB consumer confidence reading. The UoM consumer sentiment number fell dramatically this month which was quite worrying following the disappointing retail sales figures throughout the winter months. I would expect to see a similar result today, although market expectations are currently for only a small decline to 95.

We’ll also get new home sales from the US as well as the May services and composite PMI readings. On top of this we’ll hear from Fed member Stanley Fischer who is due to speak about the global economic outlook at Tel Aviv University.

The FTSE is expected to open 1 point higher, the CAC 11 points lower and the DAX 48 points lower.

Economic Calendar

For a look at all of today’s economic events, check out our economic calendar.

Fed’s Mester: ‘Time Is Near’ for U.S. Rate Increase

Accelerating inflation and strong employment growth are pushing the U.S. economy close to the point where it can support higher interest rates, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Loretta Mester said.

“If the data comes in according to my forecasts then the time is near where we’re going to be wanting to raise rates,” Mester said Monday in an interview in Reykjavik, Iceland.

The Fed’s rate-setting committee will go into its June meeting with an “open mind” about whether to raise the central bank’s benchmark rate, Mester said after delivering a speech at a conference on the financial system.

Bloomberg

Greece Points to June IMF Payment

The Greek government is priming investors for another cliffhanger on June 5.  While Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis insisted on Monday that the government will pay salaries and pensions due at the end of this month, he refused to be drawn in on whether the administration will be able to find the roughly 300 million euros ($329 million) it’s due to pay the International Monetary Fund at the end of next week.

“This government has the responsibility to pay its obligations, both within Greece and externally,” Sakellaridis told reporters in Athens. “The liquidity problems are well known. We want to honor our obligations, and that’s exactly why we’re seeking this agreement soon.”

Greece looks set to miss the May 31 deadline German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande set last week for reaching an agreement on aid, with no more meetings of euro-area finance ministers scheduled before then and its creditors still to sign off on Tsipras’s economic plans. Greek Economy Minister George Stathakis said in an interview with Le Monde newspaper that it may still be several weeks until the two sides can reach an agreement, though a deal remains the most likely outcome.

Bloomberg

ECB Slows Bond Purchases

The European Central Bank slowed purchases of public-sector bonds, even after saying it would accelerate buying before liquidity dries up during Europe’s summer vacation period.

Holdings of government and agency debt under its quantitative-easing program climbed by 11.8 billion euros ($13 billion) to 134.2 billion euros in the week ended May 22, data on the ECB website showed on Monday. That’s the smallest increase in three weeks.

ECB Executive Board member Benoit Coeure said on May 18 that the central bank would increase the pace of its bond buying this month and next to counter lower liquidity in July and August. The comments helped German 10-year bunds, the region’s benchmark sovereign securities, bring to an end their longest run of weekly declines since June 2012.

Bloomberg

Fed’s Fischer: Rate Hike Debate to be Data Driven

Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said central bankers are weighing the risk of raising interest rates prematurely against the danger of having to play catch-up if they wait too long.

“Which is better, early and gradual or late and steep? If we raise the rate from zero it will be harder to go back to zero if there is a problem,” Fischer said Monday in a speech at IDC Herzliya in Herzliya, Israel.

The U.S. economy is emerging from a shaky first quarter. Payrolls grew by 223,000 in April after a March slump that was worse than initially thought while the unemployment rate fell to 5.4 percent, the lowest in almost seven years. Third quarter growth was just 0.2 percent at an annualized pace after a 2.2 percent gain in the final three months of 2014.

Bloomberg

Asian Equities Head for First Drop in Four Days

Asia’s regional benchmark stock gauge headed for the first decline in four days, with South Korean shares slipping as the market reopened from a holiday. Healthcare and consumer companies led declines.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index retreated 0.1 percent to 153.73 as of 9:06 a.m. in Tokyo. The dollar-denominated measure added 0.7 percent over the past three days. Investors await a report on U.S. durable goods Tuesday after last week’s reading on inflation was stronger than expected, bringing the Federal Reserve a step closer to raising interest rates.

“The central scenario still points to a September liftoff” for U.S. rates, Cameron Bagrie, chief economist in Wellington at ANZ Bank New Zealand Ltd., wrote in a note to clients. “We look set to enter a heightened period of sensitivity. Higher rates will be a good thing; the challenge is to ensure, or be satisfied, there is enough in the fundamentals to ensure equities don’t freak out.”

Bloomberg

Singapore Economy Expands More Than Estimated

Singapore’s economy grew more than initially estimated last quarter as demand for the island’s exports improved amid a recovery in the U.S.

Gross domestic product rose an annualized 3.2 percent in the three months through March from the previous quarter, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said in a statement on Tuesday, compared with an April estimate of 1.1 percent. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey was 2 percent.

The island’s central bank held back from further monetary policy easing last month and the trade ministry today said global growth is expected to “improve marginally” this year. The U.S. jobless rate in April fell to the lowest since May 2008, indicating the economy is settling into a moderate pace of expansion, while China’s leaders have stepped up stimulus measures.

Bloomberg

Asian Equities Open Mixed

Asian shares opened mixed on Tuesday amid a lack of fresh cues offshore, with Japan shares tapping and then retreating from a fresh 15-year high.  Wall Street was closed for a public holiday on Monday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 reversed direction to trade marginally below the flatline, after briefly opening at a fresh 15-year peak of 20,456. In the previous session, the Tokyo bourse advanced for the seventh straight session and finished at its highest level since June 2000.

Australia’s S&P ASX 200 index opened at a nearly three-week high, a day after posting its biggest single-day gain in a month.  A report by the Australian Financial Review said Fortescue Metals has held discussions to get investment from Chinese companies and according to the Foreign Investment Review Board, several Chinese-linked companies have applied to seek permission for investment involving the Australian miner. Shares of Fortescue Metals leaped 11.52 percent from the get-go.

CNBC

Concerns Over China Stocks at Seven Year Highs

Chinese stocks rallied for their fifth successive day Monday to breach seven-year highs but growth prospects for the world’s largest economy this year are yet to pick up according to economists.

China’s key Shanghai Composite finished at its highest level since January 2008 for the second consecutive day, led by infrastructure and transport groups after the country’s state planning agency announced a list of more than 1,000 proposed projects that it is inviting private investors to help fund and build on Monday.

The country’s Ministry of Finance also said it would slash import tariffs on consumer goods including skincare product, clothes, shoes and nappies from next month which also helped stocks rise 3.4 percent to 4,813.798. According to the International Monetary Fund, last October China overtook the U.S. as the world’s largest economy with a $17.6 trillion gross domestic product.

CNBC

High Expectations for Japan Stocks

Japanese stocks seem to be on an irresistible rally, hitting fresh fifteen-year highs for seven straight days, and cheap valuations are expected to propel them to greater heights, analysts say.

“We are bullish on Tokyo stocks – we don’t see a major correction before the next consumption tax hike in April 2017,” BofA-Merrill Lynch’s equity strategist Kenji Abe told CNBC by phone. BofA-Merrill Lynch has a 22,700 Nikkei target for the end of March 2016.

For decades, global investors have steered clear of Japan. Not only was the country plagued by decades of deflation but its companies were notorious for hoarding cash. But a sharply weaker yen since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s return to power at the end of 2012 has not only bumped up corporate profits but is also making their stock valuations look cheap in U.S. dollar terms.

CNBC

U.S. Dollar at One Month High after Yellen Comments

The dollar hit a one-month high against a basket of major currencies on Monday after stronger-than-expected underlying U.S. inflation bolstered the Federal Reserve’s case for an interest rate hike later this year.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s comments that the central bank was poised to raise rates in 2015 also shored up sentiment towards the dollar, traders said.

Amid low volumes, with most of Europe as well as the United States shut for a holiday, the dollar index, which measures the greenback against other major currencies, was up 0.3 percent at 96.475, a one-month high.

CNBC

Gold Steady Around $1205 after Yellen Comments

Gold prices fell slightly on Monday, as the dollar gained traction against major currency rivals, on signs the Federal Reserve is preparing to tighten monetary policy for the first time in six years in 2015.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen indicated on Friday that the U.S. central bank was poised to raise rates this year, with the world’s largest economy set to bounce back from an early-2015 slump.  Higher U.S. interest rates increases the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

Spot gold was down 0.2 percent at $1,203.46 an ounce by 1127 GMT, just above a near-two-week low of $1,201.20 hit in the previous session. It posted its biggest weekly drop in a month last week, down 1.4 percent.

CNBC

Monday, May 25, 2015

West TX Oil Steady Around $59

U.S. crude was steady early on Tuesday as firm demand supported prices and ample supply dragged.

Robust demand in Asia as well as from the driving season in the United States is being met by near record output, especially from the Organization Of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), although U.S. production seems to have been peaked, at least temporarily.

“Crude oil prices were essentially unchanged … Crude oil markets were supported by a reported decline in U.S. production and crude oil inventories last week but prices failed to re-test the highs set earlier in the month,” ANZ bank said in a note on Tuesday.

CNBC

Optimism is Building Around Oil

A quiet consensus appears to be coalescing in the oil market, as some traders now expect mild gains for crude through the summer — and into the rest of the year.

That represents a sharp turnaround from earlier in the year, when surging U.S. production, and OPEC’s powerlessness to stop it, sent crude reeling. Although Brent is off by nearly 40 percent year to date, prices have rebounded significantly enough for market players to expect those gains to continue.

“I’m looking for it to trade $65, $70 by the Fourth of July, and I don’t think the market gets much above that,” said NYMEX-based energy trader Anthony Grisanti.

CNBC

Asian Equities Ease as Dollar Stands Tall

Asian shares fell in early trading on Tuesday, while the dollar held near highs scaled in holiday-thinned trading in the previous session.  European shares marked a weak finish in thin trade on Monday, with many markets in the region closed for holidays. U.S. markets were also closed for Memorial Day.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was down 0.2 percent in early trade, after eking out a late gain in the previous session.  Japan’s Nikkei stock index .N225 edged up 0.1 percent, after logging seven straight gains and closing at a fresh 15-year high on Monday.

The dollar hit a one-month high against a basket of major currencies on Monday in the wake of Friday’s comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, who rekindled market expectations that the central bank was gearing up to hike interest rates.  The dollar index .DXY rose as high as 96.475 on Monday, after Yellen said she expected economic data to strengthen and noted that some of the U.S. economy’s weakness at the start of the year might be due to “statistical noise.”

Reuters

Oil Steady on Muted Trading

Crude oil futures rose on Monday as firm global demand offset a strong dollar, although a holiday in the United States and much of Europe kept trading muted.  Front-month Brent crude LCOc1 gained 53 cents to $65.90 a barrel by 1750 GMT (01:50 p.m. EDT), after touching an intraday low of $64.72. U.S. crude CLc1 was up 8 cents at $59.80 a barrel.

The market drew support from figures showing strong demand across Asia and the United States.  “Global oil demand continues to surprise to the upside, with April data showing no signs of slowdown despite a pick-up in prices,” Energy Aspects said in a note.

Japan’s customs-cleared crude oil imports rose 9.1 percent year-on-year to 3.62 million barrels per day (bpd) in April, the Finance Ministry said.  In China, crude imports hit a record 7.4 million bpd last month, with healthy car sales countering a slowing economy.

Reuters

Fed’s Fischer: First Rate Hike is not that Important

U.S. Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said it was “misleading” to give so much importance to the Fed’s first interest rate hike since the process of returning to a more normal level will take a few years.  Fischer, speaking in Israel, said that while markets largely expect the first rate hike in September, it will be determined by data and not by date.

“If the (U.S.) economy is growing very, very slowly we will wait. If the economy is growing faster we will do it quicker,” he said in a speech.  “What we are thinking about is raising the interest rate from zero, which is an ultra expansionary monetary policy to a quarter percent, which is an extremely expansionary monetary policy. This will be a gradual process,” he said.

Fischer noted that the Federal Reserve board expects the interest rate will reach 3.25 to 4 percent by 2017-2018.

Reuters

Greece Needs Aid Urgently and Wants to Make Debt Payments

Greece intends to make good on its debt obligations but needs aid urgently to be able to do so, the government said on Monday, after several senior officials insisted Athens had no money to pay a loan installment falling due next week.  Shut out of bond markets and with bailout aid locked, Greece is running out of cash to pay its bills. It must repay four loans totaling 1.6 billion euros ($1.76 billion) to the International Monetary Fund next month, starting with a 300 million euro payment on June 5 that is seen as the next crunch point for state coffers.

Athens has the money to make monthly wage and pension payments this week, government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told a news conference. But he was less direct when asked about the June 5 payment, reiterating the government’s official stance that it has the responsibility to pay all its obligations.  “Based on the liquidity problems that we have, there is an imperative need for us and the euro zone to have a deal as soon as possible,” Sakellaridis said. “To the degree to which we are able to pay our obligations, we will pay our obligations. It’s the government’s responsibility to be in a position to pay all of these obligations.”

A growing list of senior members of the government — the interior minister among them — have openly said Athens does not have the means to pay the IMF, and would prioritize paying civil servants and pensioners instead.  “We haven’t got the money. We won’t pay. It’s that simple,” Deputy Foreign Minister Nikos Chountis, who holds the European affairs portfolio, told Greek TV on Monday.

Reuters

Fed’s Mester: Central Banks Should Focus on Regulation

Central bankers should be aware of the potentially destabilizing effects of super-easy policy on financial systems, a top U.S. Federal Reserve official said on Monday, even if monetary policy should not be used as a main tool to prevent bubbles.

“I would opt to use the macroprudential tools as the first line of defense, since they can be more targeted to the markets and institutions where the risks are emerging,” Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said in remarks prepared for delivery to the annual conference in of the Financial Intermediation Research Society, a group she helped found, meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland. “However, I do think that when we are making policy decisions, we should be cognizant of the linkages between our nonconventional monetary policy of an extended period of essentially zero interest rates and financial stability.”

The concern that the Fed’s near-zero rates, in place since December 2008, could be creating new bubbles and an eventual crisis has motivated a few Federal Reserve officials to push for the U.S. central bank to start raising rates sooner than later.  But Mester’s view that the Fed can best prevent a new crisis through regulation and supervision of the banking and financial system is in keeping with that of most of her colleagues, who believe that despite imperfect understanding of financial system risks, monetary policy should be only a second-line defense against bubbles.

Reuters

U.S. Dollar Steady Higher in Holiday Lull

The dollar held near one-month highs against a basket of major currencies early on Tuesday, having remained bid in a session made sluggish by public holidays in the United States and Britain.  The dollar index .DXY last traded at 96.381, not far from a high of 96.475 set late in the Asian session on Monday, when dollar bulls were still cheering comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.

In a highly anticipated speech on Friday, Yellen made clear the central bank was poised to raise interest rates this year. She said recent softness in economic data was largely due to “transitory factors” including a harsh winter and labor disputes on West Coast ports.  “The central scenario still points to a September lift-off,” analysts at ANZ wrote in a note to clients.

“That leaves the USD bulls marginally with the upper hand; we say marginally because markets are already largely expecting the same and you need something additional to trigger fresh momentum.”  Yet, Yellen was quick to stress that incoming economic data will be vital in determining the pace of the tightening process.

Reuters

China’s Premier Li: I See Growth of 7% in 2015

China’s economy is expected to grow at 7.0 percent this year, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said on Monday.

Speaking at the headquarters of the United Nations’ Latin American arm ECLAC in Chilean capital Santiago, Li said that data in April and May data showed the Chinese economy had maintained momentum.

Economists expect China’s economy to expand 7.0 percent this years, which would be the slowest rate in 25 years.  Li has been visiting a number of countries in South America, overseeing a series of deals to boost China’s trade and investment in the region.

Reuters

Gold – Continues to Consolidate Above $1205

Gold for Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Over the last week gold has slowly but surely drifted lower back to the key $1200 level where it is presently consolidating above. In the week prior gold enjoyed a solid week surging to a three month high above $1225 before returning most of those gains easing back to and enjoying support from around the key $1200 level. A few weeks ago gold enjoyed support at $1180 which allowed it to rally back to $1190 and beyond to resistance at $1200. Several weeks ago Gold fell sharply back down through the key $1200 level down to below another support level around $1180, before dropping further to a six week low below $1170. To start that week Gold was trying to rally higher and regain lost ground from the end of the previous week which saw it drop to near $1175. Over the last couple of months Gold has had an attraction to the key $1200 level as every time it ventures away it returns quickly to trade right around it.

Back at end of March gold eased a little for a few days to below $1185, although for the best part of the last few weeks gold has moved strongly off the support at $1150 and then found some new support from the $1200 level. Throughout the second half of February gold enjoyed rock solid support from the key $1200 level which held it up on numerous occasions. For about a month gold drifted steadily lower down to a one month low near the key $1200 level before finding the solid support at this key level. At the beginning of December gold eased lower away from the resistance level at $1240 yet again back down to below $1200. During the second half of November gold made repeated runs at the resistance level at $1200 failing every time, before finally breaking through strongly. Throughout the first half of November Gold enjoyed a strong resurgence back to the key $1200 level where it has met stiff resistance up until recently.

Throughout the second half of October gold fell very strongly and resumed the medium term down trend falling from above $1250 back down through the key $1240 level, down below $1200 to a multi year low near $1130. It spent a few days consolidating around $1160 after the strong fall which has allowed it to rally higher in the last couple of weeks. Earlier in October Gold ran into the previous key level at $1240, however it also managed to surge higher to a five week high at $1255. In late August Gold enjoyed a resurgence as it moved strongly higher off the support level at $1275, however it then ran into resistance at $1290. In the week prior, Gold had been falling lower back towards the medium term support level at $1290 however to finish out last week it fell sharply down to the previous key level at $1275.

(Daily chart / 4 hourly chart below)

g_20150526g_20150526_4hour

Gold May 26 at 00:20 GMT   1207.4   H: 1208.8   L: 1202.9

Gold Technical

S3

S2

S1

R1

R2

R3

1200

1180

1150

1240

1300

During the early hours of the Asian trading session on Tuesday, Gold is consolidating right around $1205 after its testing of support around $1200 over the last few days. Current range: trading right above $1205.

Further levels in both directions:

• Below: 1200, 1180 and 1150.

• Above: 1240 and 1300.

OANDA’s Open Position Ratios

g_20150526_ratio

(Shows the ratio of long vs. short positions held for Gold among all OANDA clients. The left percentage (blue) shows long positions; the right percentage (orange) shows short positions.)

The long position ratio for Gold has moved back to above 70% as it has eased back towards $1200. The trader sentiment is strongly in favour of long positions.

Economic Releases

10:00 UK CBI Distributive Trades (May)

12:30 US Durable goods (Apr)

13:00 US FHFA House Price Index (Mar)

13:00 US S&P Case-Shiller Home Price (Mar)

14:00 US Consumer Confidence (May)

14:00 US New Home Sales (Apr)

* All release times are GMT

This article is for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solution to buy or sell securities. Opinions are the authors; not necessarily that of OANDA Corporation or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. You could lose all of your deposited funds.

Australia 200 – Looking Upwards Back at 5800

Australia 200 for Tuesday, May 26, 2015

In the last couple of weeks the ASX200 index has moved back and forth around the key 5650 level, but in doing so has temporarily halted the medium term down trend it was in from 6000.  During this time it has experienced both support and resistance from the 5650 level and presently it will be hoping to receive some more support from there.  The key 5800 level is still looming large and is still likely to offer resistance if and when the index returns. Since the end of April, the Australia 200 index has seen significant declines which has resulted in it reaching a three month low near 5550. Several weeks ago the Australia 200 index pushed higher to a multi-year high to just above the key resistance level at 6000, before easing lower throughout the last month back to around 5650.

Back in mid-March the ASX200 index found some support at the key 5800 level which has propped it up and allowed it to rally a little and move higher, and of course it will be hoping to receive the same again. Back in early March the ASX200 index reversed from its highs near 6000 and started to establish a new medium term down trend before rallying higher a couple of weeks ago. It enjoyed a strong move higher throughout February moving from below the key 5800 level up to another multi-year high near 6000, where it met stiff resistance. At the beginning of February it spent a week or so battling with resistance at the key 5800 level which repeatedly fended off the index, resulting in it easing back a little. This level has resumed its key role and is currently having an impact on the index.

Throughout the second half of January the Australian 200 index did very well and surged higher to move back above the key 5400 level and push on through to the new highs. At this time, the resistance at 5500 stood tall and fended off all advances, however this now been broken strongly through. Throughout most of November and December, the Australia 200 Index fell steadily lower down towards support around 5150 and two month lows before rallying back above 5400 again. Over the last few weeks the Australia 200 index has struggled with resistance at 5400 which has forced it lower time and time again. The 5400 level has been a major player for the last 12 months and the index must get back above this level to encourage more buying and bullish sentiment.

(Daily chart below)

asx_20150526

Australia 200 May 26 at 00:15 GMT   5723   H: 5744   L: 5669

Australia 200 Technical

S3

S2

S1

R1

R2

R3

5500

5400

5800

6000

During the hours of the Asian trading session on Tuesday, the Australia 200 Index will be looking to stay above the key 5650 level and potentially make another push back to 5800.

Further levels in both directions:

• Below: 5500 and 5400.

• Above: 5800 and 6000.

Economic Releases

10:00 UK CBI Distributive Trades (May)

12:30 US Durable goods (Apr)

13:00 US FHFA House Price Index (Mar)

13:00 US S&P Case-Shiller Home Price (Mar)

14:00 US Consumer Confidence (May)

14:00 US New Home Sales (Apr)

* All release times are GMT

This article is for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solution to buy or sell securities. Opinions are the authors; not necessarily that of OANDA Corporation or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. You could lose all of your deposited funds.

Singapore Q1 GDP up 2.6%

Singapore’s economy grew at a faster than expected pace in the first quarter than earlier thought, data showed on Tuesday.  The city-state’s gross domestic product (GDP) expanded an annualized 2.6 percent from the year before, beating the advance estimate of 2.1 percent and better than the 2.2 percent forecast in a Reuters poll.

Quarter on quarter, the economy expanded an annualized 3.2 percent, much stronger than the 1.1 percent advance estimate and topping the 1.8 percent print expected.

The figure was boosted by resilience in the manufacturing and services sectors. Manufacturing activity shrank 2.7 percent from a year earlier, but that was still an upward revision from a 3.4 percent contraction in the advance estimate. Growth in services-producing industries was revised up to 3.8 percent on year from the advance estimate of 3.1 percent.

CNBC

AUD/USD – Consolidates Below Key 0.7850 Level

AUD/USD for Tuesday, May 26, 2015

To start this new week the Australian dollar has been consolidating just below the key 0.7850 level where it is likely to now meet some resistance.  Throughout last week the Australian dollar fell sharply from above 0.8150 down to a two week low below 0.7850 to close out last week. It did enjoy support from this key level for a few days late last week before giving way. In the week prior the Australian dollar enjoyed a solid week which culminated in a new three month high above 0.8150 before easing lower. The last few weeks has seen the Australian dollar on a roller-coaster ride moving from below 0.78 and up to near 0.82. A few weeks ago the Australian dollar surged higher however it ran into resistance right around 0.7950 and 0.80 before easing slightly and consolidating in a narrow range between 0.7850 and 0.79 to finish out the week.

Back in early March the Australian dollar made a statement and broke down strongly through the key 0.77 level which then provided significant resistance for the following few days. It was also able to enjoy some short term support around 0.7550 which propped it up and allowed it to rally strongly back up to above 0.79. Throughout February the Australian dollar made repeated attempts to move up strongly to the resistance level at 0.7850 however it was rejected every time and sent back easing lower, which is why this level remains significant presently. Just prior to that towards the end of February the Australian dollar moved through the resistance at 0.7850 to reach a new four week high around 0.7900. In the second half of January, the Australian dollar fell very sharply and break lower from the trading range that had been established roughly between 0.8050 and 0.8200.

Back in mid-January it made numerous attempts at the resistance level at 0.82 only to be sent back often before finally finishing that week moving through this key level. In doing so it was able to reach a one month high near 0.83 before being sold back down again towards 0.82 as the resistance and selling activity above this level kicked in. Over the Christmas / New Year period, the Australian dollar seemed to have been content with trading in a narrow range below the resistance at 0.82, which continues to remain a key level as it is presently provides resistance. The Australian dollar experienced a disappointing November and December moving from resistance around 0.88 down to the new lows recently. For a couple of months from September through to November, the Australian dollar did well to stop the bleeding and trade within a range between 0.8650 and 0.88 after experiencing a sharp decline throughout September which saw it move from close to 0.94 down to below 0.8650.

(Daily chart / 4 hourly chart below)

a_20150526

a_20150526_4hour

AUD/USD May 25 at 23:55 GMT   0.7829   H: 0.7831   L: 0.7822

AUD/USD Technical

S3

S2

S1

R1

R2

R3

0.7700

0.8200

During the early hours of the Asian trading session on Tuesday, the AUD/USD is trading in a very narrow range above 0.7820. Current range: trading right above 0.7820.

Further levels in both directions:

• Below: 0.7700.

• Above: 0.8200.

OANDA’s Open Position Ratios

a_20150526_ratio

(Shows the ratio of long vs. short positions held for the AUD/USD among all OANDA clients. The left percentage (blue) shows long positions; the right percentage (orange) shows short positions.)

The long position ratio for the AUD/USD has moved back to 60% as the Australian dollar has eased back below 0.7850. The trader sentiment is in favour of long positions.

Economic Releases

10:00 UK CBI Distributive Trades (May)

12:30 US Durable goods (Apr)

13:00 US FHFA House Price Index (Mar)

13:00 US S&P Case-Shiller Home Price (Mar)

14:00 US Consumer Confidence (May)

14:00 US New Home Sales (Apr)

* All release times are GMT

This article is for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solution to buy or sell securities. Opinions are the authors; not necessarily that of OANDA Corporation or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. You could lose all of your deposited funds.

Bank of England Sends Brexit Email to Press by Mistake

The Bank of England was forced on Friday night to confirm that it was secretly researching the financial impact of a possible decision by Britain to leave the EU, after it mistakenly emailed a journalist with the details.

The confidential email, mis-sent to the Guardian newspaper, is reported to include details of the study, dubbed “Project Bookend”. It also stated that the press and most staff at the BoE should be kept in the dark about the work under way.

The decision by the central bank comes only weeks after the Conservative party secured a majority in the UK general election, paving the way for a referendum by 2017 on British membership of the EU.
On Friday, David Cameron began discussing with European partners how to renegotiate the position of the UK in the EU in advance of the referendum.

The BoE issued a statement responding to the revelation, saying it was entitled as a regulator to conduct studies over possible financial shocks that could hit the UK.

via CNBC

Oil Lower on Stronger USD

Crude oil futures edged lower toward $65 a barrel as the dollar strengthened on Monday, with a public holiday in the United States and much of Europe keeping trading muted.

Front-month Brent crude shed 17 cents to $65.20 a barrel by 1052 GMT. U.S. crude was down 35 cents at $59.37 a barrel.

The dollar pared early gains but remained near to two month-highs against the euro and yen as well as a one-month high against a basket of currencies.

A strong dollar makes crude oil less attractive for holders of other currencies.

“The overall fundamentals still point to a well-supplied market, a fact that should continue to put a ceiling on prices,” Barclays said.

However, the market drew support from strong demand figures across Asia and the United States.

“Global oil demand continues to surprise to the upside, with April data showing no signs of slowdown despite a pick-up in prices,” Energy Aspects said in a note.

via Reuters

Radical Greek Coalition Wants to Stops IMF Payment

Crude oil futures edged lower toward $65 a barrel as the dollar strengthened on Monday, with a public holiday in the United States and much of Europe keeping trading muted.

Front-month Brent crude shed 17 cents to $65.20 a barrel by 1052 GMT. U.S. crude was down 35 cents at $59.37 a barrel.

The dollar pared early gains but remained near to two month-highs against the euro and yen as well as a one-month high against a basket of currencies.

A strong dollar makes crude oil less attractive for holders of other currencies.

“The overall fundamentals still point to a well-supplied market, a fact that should continue to put a ceiling on prices,” Barclays said.

However, the market drew support from strong demand figures across Asia and the United States.

“Global oil demand continues to surprise to the upside, with April data showing no signs of slowdown despite a pick-up in prices,” Energy Aspects said in a note.

via Reuters

Gold Dollar After Fed Boosts USD

Gold edged lower on Monday as the dollar strengthened to a one-month high on signs the Federal Reserve is readying to raise interest rates for the first time in six years in 2015.

In a speech to a business group on Friday, Fed Chair Janet Yellen indicated the U.S. central bank was poised to raise rates this year as the world’s largest economy was set to bounce back from an early-year slump and headwinds at home and abroad waned.

Higher U.S. interest rates would increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

Spot gold was down 0.1 percent at $1,204.46 an ounce by 0847 GMT, just above a near-two-week low of $1,201.20 hit in the previous session. It posted its biggest weekly drop in a month last week, down 1.4 percent.

Liquidity was likely to remain thin on Monday as British and U.S. markets are shut for holidays.

“The Fed raising the rates is certainly not a electrifying news for the precious metal, which is on track to extend its biggest weekly decline since April,” AvaTrade chief market analyst Naeem Aslam said.

“Yellen last week has confirmed that she is still confident that the rates will rise this year and (gold) traders are not fond of this news at all.”

The prospect of higher rates later in 2015 boosted the dollar to its highest in a month against a basket of major currencies on Monday. Stronger-than-expected underlying U.S. inflation and persisting Greek debt worries also supported the greenback.

via Reuters

Greek Concerns Drive European Stocks Down

European stocks have fallen after a Greek minister said that Athens would struggle to meet its upcoming debt payments.

Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis made his comments during a weekend TV programme.
Stocks on Greece’s ATG index are trading 2.13% lower on the day at 822.34.

Greece needs to strike a deal with its creditors in order to release €7.2bn (5.1bn) in remaining assistance.

“The four instalments for the IMF in June are €1.6bn, this money will not be given and is not there to be given,” Mr Voutsis said.

The country’s finance minister meanwhile has told the BBC on Sunday that progress was being made.

“Greece has made enormous strides at reaching a deal,” Yanis Varoufakis told the Andrew Marr Show.

Other benchmark indexes across Europe have also fallen.

The IBEX is down 2.21% to 11,298.3 after Spain’s voters punished the ruling Popular Party (PP) in local and regional elections.

France’s Cac-40 is down 0.84% to 5099.5, and Italy’s MIB is down 1.99% to 23,308.

via BBC

China Cuts Import Taxes on Consumer Goods

China will cut import taxes on consumer goods by more than 50% on average in a bid to boost consumer spending.

High tariffs for imported goods have prompted some Chinese consumers to shop abroad or through agents.
By lowering the fees, China may hope to bring some of that consumer spending home.

The government is particularly keen to promote domestic demand as the country is growing at its slowest rate since 2009.

The tariff reduction is an “important measure to create stable growth and push forward structural reform”, said the Ministry of Finance.

From 1 June tariffs for Western-style clothing will be reduced to 7-10% from 14-23%.

Taxes on ankle-high boots and sports shoes will be halved to 12%. Import tariffs on skincare products will fall from 5% to 2%.

However, its not just import taxes that drive up the prices of imported consumer goods in China. VAT and other taxes also play a part.

Analysts say consumers in China pay around 20% more for luxury goods than those in Europe.

via BBC

Greek Interior Minister Says Country Can’t Make IMF Payment

Greece cannot make a repayment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) due on 5 June as it does not have the money, the interior minister says.

“The four instalments for the IMF in June are €1.6bn, this money will not be given and is not there to be given,” Nikos Voutsis told Greek TV.

Greece has to come to a deal with the IMF and EU to secure the final tranche of its bailout from the institutions.

The finance minister meanwhile told the BBC that progress was being made.

via BBC

Spanish Local Elections Highlight Ruling Party Decline

Spain’s ruling People’s Party (PP) took a battering in regional and local elections on Sunday after voters punished Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy for four years of severe spending cuts and a string of corruption scandals.

In a test of the national mood ahead of general elections expected in November, the PP suffered its worst result in more than 20 years to herald an uncertain era of coalition as new parties rose to fragment the vote.

Spaniards rejected the stability offered by the PP and rival Socialists which have alternated in power since the end of dictatorship 40 years ago and opted for change in the shape of new parties – market-friendly Ciudadanos (‘Citizens’) and anti-austerity Podemos (‘We Can’).

Rajoy’s future looked bleak as his strategy to bet on an accelerating economic rebound to win a second term later this year was seriously undermined by his party’s poor showing.

“It’s a drubbing for the PP. The fear factor did not come into play and people voted for Podemos and Ciudadanos,” said Jose Pablo Ferrandiz of leading pollster Metroscopia.

via CNBC

UK’s Cameron to Embark in Brexit Tour Ahead of Referendum in 2017

Most citizens of other European Union countries living in Britain will not get to vote in a planned referendum on Britain’s membership of the bloc, the government said on Monday.

Prime Minister David Cameron, who has promised to renegotiate Britain’s EU ties ahead of a vote by the end of 2017, will embark on a tour of five European capitals later this week to hold talks with key EU leaders over his reform plans.

Cameron’s office said only those eligible to vote in British national elections, plus members of the upper house of parliament and Commonwealth citizens in Gibraltar, will get a say in the EU referendum.

That means British, Irish, Maltese, Cypriot and other Commonwealth citizens aged over 18 and resident in the UK, as well as UK nationals who have lived overseas for less than 15 years will be able to vote, but no other EU nationals.

“This is a big decision for our country, one that is about the future of the United Kingdom. That’s why we think it’s important that it is British, Irish and Commonwealth citizens that are the ones who get to decide,” a source in Cameron’s office said.

via CNBC

Greek PM says Deal is on Final Stretch

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said on Saturday his government was on the final stretch of negotiations with its international lenders on a cash-for-reforms deal that would not involve further pension cuts and harsh austerity.

After four months of talks with its euro zone partners and the International Monetary Fund, Athens is scrambling for a deal that could release up to 7.2 billion euros ($7.9 billion) in remaining aid to avert bankruptcy as it remains shut out of bond markets.

Talks have stumbled over pensions, labour reform, fiscal targets and increases in value-added tax.

“We are on the final stretch of a painful and tough period shaped by the government’s negotiations with the institutions,” Tsipras, back from an EU summit in Riga, told his party’s central committee.

Tsipras, who flew to Riga to press German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande for a political push to break the impasse, faces potential challenges from the hard-left faction in his Syriza party which opposes any deal that would involve further belt-tightening.

“Rest assured that in this negotiation we will not accept humiliating terms,” Tsipras said. “The overwhelming majority of Greek people want a solution and not just an agreement … it supports the government in this tough negotiation.”

via CNBC

U.S Dollar Gets the Green Light from Fixed Income

Thin Trading Conditions Dominate Holiday

Greece: No “Mula” for the IMF

Rising Prices Makes Fed Hike Timing Difficult

Fixed Income Looks to September for First Hike

Over the past few weeks the dollar bull had been trading with their backs against the wall, pressured by the spike in global sovereign bond yields, and the questionable timing of the Fed’s first-rate hike that seemed to have been pushed further out the curve due to soft U.S data.

However, dollar bulls can breathe a little easier, supported by Friday’s upbeat U.S inflation data and comments by Fed Chairwomen Janet Yellen have managed to push the USD higher against G10 currencies. The dollar is looking to build upon its gains last week in which it saw it best weekly performance in four-years.

With U.S markets and most of Europe on holiday today, the thinned trading conditions will have most investors looking ahead to tomorrow’s forward-looking U.S durables data and Friday’s release of second estimate of U.S GDP as key fundamental touch points for the dollars direction. Obviously, any in-between Greek or Grexit sound bites is expected to have an immediate impact on the EUR, similar to what happened in the overnight session in Asia.

Greece’s Cupboard is Bare

The single currency (€1.0970) saw some early session weakness, as the standoff between Athens and European creditors appears to have gone from bad to worse with Greece announcing that they will not have the money to repay the €1.6b to the IMF next month unless a new deal with creditors is reached. Greece remains steadfast with PM Tsipras reiterating that there is a limit to what the Greek government is prepared to accept from the creditors. Even if the standoff does result in a stalemate, a national referendum is not likely to break the situation – a weekend poll shows that +59% support the government’s position, but +71% still want to keep the EUR. The rest of Europe doesn’t want to talk alternatives, as Athens needs to deliver what it promised.

Investors should expect the EUR to remain vulnerable to Greek rhetoric; at least until there is clarity around what’s real or not. The currency is likely to trade with risks to the downside this week as long as the EUR/USD stay’s below Friday’s high of €1.1208. A breach through €1.0920 on the downside would expose the single unit to last months low of €1.0819.

Rising U.S Core-Inflation Makes Fed’s Job Harder

The +0.3% month-over-month increase in core-consumer prices in April, which pushed the three-month annualized rate of core-inflation up to a four-year high of +2.6%, leaves Yellen and company with less scope to delay raising interest rates until it sees more evidence of a rebound in ‘real’ activity.

With the employment cost index suggesting that U.S wage growth is accelerating and the CPI indicating that underlying price inflation is rising, the Fed really cannot wait forever before beginning to raise interest rates from near zero.

Since the FOMC’s late April meeting, U.S. economic news has been generally mixed, keeping rate hike odds favoring a September liftoff and possibly as late as December. Last week’s FOMC minutes noted that there was a lengthy discussion about the possibility that the recent weakness in the economic pace may persist. A number of Fed officials suggested that the earlier impact of the dollar’s strength and weak oil prices could be longer lasting than anticipated.

However. Friday’s data has influenced a number of fixed income traders to consider pulling in the timing of the first Fed hike. September is still the most likely lift-off date, but July is not out of the question, particularly not if there are another couple of robust rises in core-consumer prices.

Fixed Income Hangs on Yellen’s Every Word

On Friday, Fed Chair Janet Yellen argued that the slowdown in Q1 GDP growth was “largely” due to temporary factors, such as the record cold weather and port dispute. The market took “largely” as being more important/convincing than Ms. Yellen’s “in part” used in the most recent FOMC statement (there will be a rebound in growth in the Q2).

Ms. Yellen also seems to be warming up to the idea that some of this “apparent” Q1 slowdown “may just be statistical noise”. The market is looking to the U.S Bureau of Economic Analysis to revise the GDP figures to eradicate any “residual seasonality.”

Yellen repeated her assessment that “it will be appropriate at some point this year to take the initial step to raise the federal funds target.” Not a very transparent statement on timing, but, if you include rebounding economic growth, plus a pick up in consumer prices, supported by wage growth and you have a fixed income market now pricing in a rate hike no later than this September.

Forex heatmap

Fed’s Yellen Still Sees Rate Rise in 2015

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said she still expects to raise interest rates this year if the economy meets her forecasts, with a gradual pace of tightening to follow.

While the labor market is nearing full strength, “we are not there yet,” she said Friday in a speech in Providence, Rhode Island.  “If the economy continues to improve as I expect, I think it will be appropriate at some point this year to take the initial step to raise the federal funds rate,” she said.

Even after the first rate increase since 2006, “I anticipate that the pace of normalization is likely to be gradual,” Yellen, 68, said.  Echoing the Fed’s April statement, Yellen said she expects the economy to return to a “moderate” pace of growth after a disappointing first quarter as headwinds including a cooling global economy gradually abate.

Bloomberg

China’s Central Bank Lowers Borrowing Costs

China’s government needed lower borrowing costs to clean up a local debt mess. The central bank obliged.

The three-month Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate has tumbled 200 basis points since March 31, heading for the biggest two-month drop since 2008. That coincides with the government kicking off a municipal bond program and the exchange of regional loans into lower-yielding notes. Jiangsu province and Xinjiang autonomous region both sold three-year debt for less than 3 percent last week, almost matching the sovereign, after the start of issuance was delayed in April.

Central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan has accelerated monetary easing just as local authorities kick off more than 1.77 trillion yuan ($286 billion) of bond issuances, a four-fold jump from 2014. Banks are the biggest buyers of government debt and will have more appetite for the securities as loan rates decline. Local-government obligations may have reached 25 trillion yuan, more than the size of Germany’s economy, Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd. estimates.

Bloomberg

China Stocks Reach Seven Year Highs

China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rallied for a fifth day to a seven-year high as investors sought underperforming companies and rotated out of overvalued, small-company stocks.

Financial and utility companies led gains with Citic Securities Co., Haitong Securities Co., Huadian Power International Corp. and GD Power Development Co. advancing more than 2 percent. Beijing VRV Software Corp. and Feitian Technologies Co. paced declines for companies in the ChiNext index of smaller companies, slumping at least 5 percent.

The Shanghai Composite climbed 2.6 percent to 4,780.55 at 1:05 p.m., heading for the highest close since January 2008. The ChiNext slid 1 percent, trimming a loss of as much as 4.2 percent. The ChiNext is valued at 115 times reported earnings, compared with the Shanghai Composite’s multiple of 24 times, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Bloomberg

Asian Equities Advance Led by Japan

Asian stocks advanced, with Japan’s Topix index climbing from a 7 1/2-year high. The euro slipped against most peers as Greek leaders said the country can’t take any more austerity and it’s time for creditors to compromise.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index increased 0.3 percent by 12:08 p.m. in Tokyo, as the Topix gained 0.7 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index added 2 percent after its biggest weekly jump this year, while the ChiNext index of small Chinese companies retreated. The euro slipped 0.2 percent against the U.S. currency and Poland’s zloty declined after an opposition candidate won the presidency. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed near a one-month high. Palladium fell 1 percent.

Markets in the U.S., U.K., Hong Kong and South Korea are closed Monday. The dollar capped its biggest weekly advance since September 2011 as faster-than-estimated U.S. inflation reinforced comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen that she expects to boost borrowing costs this year. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said over the weekend that the country can’t accept crushing austerity.

Bloomberg

Japan Exports Rise More Than Forecast

Japanese exports rose more than forecast in April, providing support for an economy that’s expanded for two straight quarters after a recession in 2014.

The value of overseas shipments rose 8 percent from a year earlier, the Ministry of Finance said on Monday, compared with a median estimate for a 6 percent increase. Imports slid 4.2 percent, leaving a 53.4 billion yen ($440 million) trade deficit. Japan’s exports exceeded imports in March for the first time in almost three years.

Strengthening large exporting companies has been one of the pillars of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic policies as the yen’s decline boosts the competitiveness of Japanese products overseas. The International Monetary Fund said on May 22 that weaker-than-expected growth in China and the U.S. could trip Japan’s export-led recovery.

Bloomberg

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Asian Equities Slightly Higher on U.S. Rate Hike Bets

Asian shares got off to a lackluster start on Monday, after rising inflation and a hawkish tone from the U.S. Federal Reserve Chair rekindled expectations that the Fed is on track to hike interest rates.  Activity was likely to be thin this session, as UK and U.S. markets are shut on Monday for the Spring Bank Holiday and Memorial Day respectively. European centers such as Germany will be observing the Whit Monday holiday.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down about 0.1 percent in early trade.  Japan’s Nikkei stock index added 0.3 percent, getting a tailwind from a weaker yen and trade data released before market open showed a better-than-expected rise in April exports.

U.S. shares fell and Treasury yields and the dollar rose on Friday, after the U.S. Labor Department’s gauge on core consumer goods prices rose by 0.3 percent last month, bringing the year-on-year rise to 1.8 percent, the highest since October.  “For the first time in nearly two months, investors began rewarding the dollar for good economic data rather than punishing it for weaker data,” Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York, said in a note to clients.

Reuters

Iran: OPEC Unlikely to Change Output Ceiling

OPEC is unlikely to change its production ceiling when the group meets in June, Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh said on Sunday, according to the semi-official Mehr news agency.  “Lowering OPEC’s production ceiling requires consensus between all members … under current conditions it seems unlikely that the OPEC production ceiling will change,” Zanganeh was quoted as saying.

Last month, Zanganeh said the producing group should cut its target daily crude production by at least 5 percent, or approximately 1.5 million barrels per day.  The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet on June 5. At its last meeting in November, OPEC, led by oil kingpin Saudi Arabia, decided against cutting output to defend its market share, resisting calls by some members such as Iran and Venezuela to reduce production to shore up prices.

Brent oil LCOc1 settled down $1.17, or 1.8 percent, at $65.37 a barrel on Friday. Lower oil prices have caused pain for OPEC’s less wealthy producers, including Iran. While the June 5 meeting in Vienna is likely to hear renewed demands from some OPEC members for a reduction in the amount of oil pumped, even officials from countries which favor a curb see it as unlikely.

Reuters

Greece Doesn’t Have June IMF Repayment Money

Greece cannot make debt repayments to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) next month unless it achieves a deal with creditors, its interior minister said on Sunday, the most explicit remarks yet from Athens about the likelihood of default if talks fail.  Shut out of bond markets and with bailout aid locked, cash-strapped Athens has been scraping state coffers to meet debt obligations and to pay wages and pensions. With its future as a member of the 19-nation euro zone potentially at stake, a second government minister accused its international lenders of subjecting it to slow and calculated torture.

After four months of talks with its euro zone partners and the IMF, the leftist-led government is still scrambling for a deal that could release up to 7.2 billion euros ($7.9 billion) in remaining aid to avert bankruptcy.  “The four installments for the IMF in June are 1.6 billion euros. This money will not be given and is not there to be given,” Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis told Greek Mega TV’s weekend show.

Voutsis was asked about his concern over a ‘credit event’, a term covering scenarios like bankruptcy or default, if Athens misses a payment.  “We are not seeking this, we don’t want it, it is not our strategy,” he said.  “We are discussing, based on our contained optimism, that there will be a strong agreement (with lenders) so that the country will be able to breathe. This is the bet,” Voutsis said.

Reuters

Oil Edges Higher on Asian Demand

Crude oil futures edged up on Monday, buoyed by healthy Asian appetite and demand from the U.S. driving season.  Front-month Brent crude prices were up 6 cents at $65.43 per barrel at 0045 GMT. U.S. crude prices were also up 6 cents at $59.78 a barrel.

“Global oil demand continues to surprise to the upside, with April data showing no signs of slowdown despite a pick-up in prices,” Energy Aspects said.  Japan’s customs-cleared crude oil imports rose 9.1 percent to 3.62 million barrels per day (17.28 million kilolitres) in April from the same month a year earlier, the Ministry of Finance said on Monday.

In China, crude imports hit a record 7.4 million barrels per day in April despite a slowing economy, driven largely by healthy car sales.  “We expect Chinese imports to be high in H2 15, potentially averaging 7.5 million barrels per day. This is due to the start-up of 39 mb (million barrels) of commercial storage, five SPR (strategic petroleum reserve) sites and linefill for Kunming refinery—buying for which is ongoing we believe, even though the refinery won’t start up till early 2016,” Energy Aspects said.

Reuters

USD/JPY Above 121.50 After CPI Boost

The dollar hovered at a two-month high versus the yen and stood firm against other peers after surging on a higher-than-expected U.S. core consumer price index that supported the Federal Reserve’s case for a rate hike later this year.  Data on Friday showed the core U.S. CPI increased 0.3 percent in April amid rising shelter and medical care costs. It was the largest rise in the core CPI since January 2013 and followed a 0.2 percent gain in March.

The dollar traded near a two-month high of 121.70 yen after jumping from a low of 120.64 on Friday, helped by a rise in U.S. Treasury yields triggered by the CPI data. A rise above 122.04 would take the greenback to an eight-year high against the yen.  “Whether the dollar can breach the 122.04 yen threshold depends on upcoming U.S. data. While a June rate hike is no longer a likelihood, upbeat indicators that would back up Friday’s CPI numbers will fan hopes that the Fed will provide hints at the June meeting on when it might hike rates,” said Junichi Ishikawa, market analyst at IG Securities in Tokyo.

The euro was down 0.3 percent at $1.0986, having touched a one-month low of $1.0964 earlier in the session.  The common currency reached a three-month peak of $1.1468 as recently as May 15, along with a surge in euro zone bond yields and lessened pessimism towards the European economy.

Reuters

Gold – Creeping Back Towards $1200

Gold for Monday, May 25, 2015

Over the last week gold has slowly but surely drifted lower back to the key $1200 level where it is presently consolidating above.  In the week prior gold enjoyed a solid week surging to a three month high above $1225 before returning most of those gains easing back to and enjoying support from around the key $1200 level.  A few weeks ago gold enjoyed support at $1180 which allowed it to rally back to $1190 and beyond to resistance at $1200.  Several weeks ago Gold fell sharply back down through the key $1200 level down to below another support level around $1180, before dropping further to a six week low below $1170. To start that week Gold was trying to rally higher and regain lost ground from the end of the previous week which saw it drop to near $1175.  Over the last couple of months Gold has had an attraction to the key $1200 level as every time it ventures away it returns quickly to trade right around it.

Back at end of March gold eased a little for a few days to below $1185, although for the best part of the last few weeks gold has moved strongly off the support at $1150 and then found some new support from the $1200 level. Throughout the second half of February gold enjoyed rock solid support from the key $1200 level which held it up on numerous occasions. For about a month gold drifted steadily lower down to a one month low near the key $1200 level before finding the solid support at this key level. At the beginning of December gold eased lower away from the resistance level at $1240 yet again back down to below $1200. During the second half of November gold made repeated runs at the resistance level at $1200 failing every time, before finally breaking through strongly. Throughout the first half of November Gold enjoyed a strong resurgence back to the key $1200 level where it has met stiff resistance up until recently.

Throughout the second half of October gold fell very strongly and resumed the medium term down trend falling from above $1250 back down through the key $1240 level, down below $1200 to a multi year low near $1130. It spent a few days consolidating around $1160 after the strong fall which has allowed it to rally higher in the last couple of weeks. Earlier in October Gold ran into the previous key level at $1240, however it also managed to surge higher to a five week high at $1255. In late August Gold enjoyed a resurgence as it moved strongly higher off the support level at $1275, however it then ran into resistance at $1290. In the week prior, Gold had been falling lower back towards the medium term support level at $1290 however to finish out last week it fell sharply down to the previous key level at $1275.

(Daily chart / 4 hourly chart below)

g_20150525g_20150525_4hour

Gold May 25 at 01:05 GMT   1204.2   H: 1206.1   L: 1203.5

Gold Technical

S3

S2

S1

R1

R2

R3

1200

1180

1150

1240

1300

During the early hours of the Asian trading session on Monday, Gold is consolidating right around $1205 after its testing of support around $1200 over the last couple of days. Current range: trading right below $1205.

Further levels in both directions:

• Below: 1200, 1180 and 1150.

• Above: 1240 and 1300.

OANDA’s Open Position Ratios

g_20150525_ratio

(Shows the ratio of long vs. short positions held for Gold among all OANDA clients. The left percentage (blue) shows long positions; the right percentage (orange) shows short positions.)

The long position ratio for Gold has moved back to above 70% as it has eased back towards $1200. The trader sentiment is strongly in favour of long positions.

Economic Releases

23:50 (Sun) JP CSPI (Apr)

JP BoJ Publish Monthly Report

* All release times are GMT

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