• After last-week’s softer than expected US CPI data, global investors gained ever greater confidence that the Fed will embark for a genuine, protracted easing cycle soon. Yields turned south, especially at the short end of the (US) yield curve. The dollar faced an uphill battle, but losses after all remained modest. Key support levels mostly survived. Even as (US) yields steadied, FX markets today tried/succeded some kind of catching up move. Remarkably, this USD decline occurred even as equities mostly trade in red, pondering the impact of a protectionist Trump trade policy regarding IT-related exports to China (amongst others). It has been different of late and a yen rebound after presumed BOJ interventions stalled earlier this week. Even so, today the Japanese currency was first to profit from a weak USD and forced the break. USD/JPY dropped below the 157.19 correction low, triggering further stop-loss unwinding of stale yen-short/USD-long positions. At 156.40, USD/JPY trades about 3.5% below the multi-year peak touched early this month. The euro isn’t the front-runner to profit from the USD setback, but the USD/JPY decline also pushed EUR/USD beyond 1.0916/20 resistance (currently 1.0945). The 1.0981 March top is the last stop before the 1.10 barrier. The broader USD decline and easing of global financing conditions broadly supports smaller currencies that are often sensitive to global (risk)sentiment (NOK, SEK, AUD, CAD and NZD, the latter after mixed domestic CPI data). In CEE, the Czech krone and the forint also succeded modest gains. The zloty, regional outperformer YTD, for the second day in row lost ground. We saw no obvious trigger for PLN underperformance. The technical break in several major USD cross rates is noteworthy, but we look out whether/how long this combination of USD-weakness and equity risk-off lasts.
• Cable (1.3035) today was squeezed beyond the 1.30 barrier, a level last seen this time last year. Aside from USD weakness, sterling strength was also in play. The UK currency of late profited from a return of political stability after the UK Parliamentary election. Today, UK inflation data didn’t provide a clear trigger for the BoE to aggressively downsize sterling’s interest rate support anytime soon. At 0.1% M/M and 2% Y/Y, UK inflation for the second consecutive month matched the BoE target. Still, core- 3.5 % Y/Y and services inflation (5.7% Y/Y) flagged a clear warning signal that there is some work to do for the BoE. The minutes of the June meeting showed that the unchanged decision at that time was a rather close call as several members wanted to gradually scale back policy restriction. Today’s data don’t make it easier for ‘middle-of-the-road’ MPC members to change camp already at the August meeting. UK monetary policy is again drifting closer to the Fed’s path rather than to an ECB scenario. UK yields added between 3.5 bps (2-y) and 2.5 bps (30-y). The market now only sees a <40% chance on an August rate cut vs almost 50% before to data. UK labour data (tomorrow) and retail sales (Friday) might further finetune the debate. EUR/GBP (0.8385) is trading at the lowest level in almost 2-year with the Augst 2022 low (0.834) the next reference on the technical charts.
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