Intraday Market Thoughts Archives

Displaying results for week of Oct 11, 2020

Stimulus Exhaustion & European Woes

Oct 16, 2020 18:47 | by Adam Button

Markets moved from US-Stimulus exhaustion to shrugging Boris Johnson's threats to leave the Brexit talks without a deal. Traders turn to end of Oct-late Nov as the next calendar point for a Brexit possible agreement. Europe got a double dose of bad news on Thursday as Brexit talks went badly and new virus cases jumped. Today's market flows are more of the same --further retracing of Wednesday's losses with a potential adding of gains on Monday..before fresh declines next Tuesday (??). Higher than expected US retail sales proved a non-event. The US dollar led the way while the kiwi lagged as risk trades stumbled. Look out for the US retail sales report on Friday. Earlier this week, the DAX Premium trade hit the final target in less than 24 hrs. Each of the current 4 Premium trades are currently in the green.   

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Stimulus Exhaustion & European Woes - Cases Oct 16 2020 (Chart 1)

Back to the virus story. A number of countries set new-case records this week including Germany on Thursday with 7313 cases. Granted that comes on many tests and hosptializations remain low but what is frightening governments into lockdowns is the pace of increase. A week earlier there were 4010 cases in Germany. The +80% w/w rise is terrifying and quick increases in the region have already led to partial shutdowns in Spain, France, the Netherlands and elsewhere.

This is all likely to lead to Q4 growth downgrades. The clearest signal Thursday came from the German bund market where yields fell for the fourth day and broke the April low of -0.59% to end a medium-term consolidation pattern.

With that the euro grows increasingly vulnerable, particularly against the Swiss franc and yen.

 

Boris’ Deadline Looms & Four in One

Oct 14, 2020 23:52 | by Adam Button

Sterling rebounded Wednesday on signs that negotiations will continue but the situation remains fluid. It looks like Brexit talks will extend til the last week of December. The pound was the top performer while the Canadian dollar lagged. US initial jobless claims are due up next. Four (4) new Premium trades were posted today for Premium subscribers, including 2 instruments never ever offered in our service. Below is some input from members of the WhatsApp Broadcast Group following Ashraf's reading of gold and metals trades. 

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Boris’ Deadline Looms & Four in One - Whatsapp Dragan Saqer (Chart 1)

A call between Boris Johnson and Ursula von der Leyen didn't achieve any visible progress. Johnson lamented the lack of progress afterward and said he had to “reflect”. Von der Leyen said that they're working on a deal but not at any price.

Johnson is approaching his deadline for talks and will make a decision Thursday or Friday. Sterling bounced on reports suggesting his aides will tell him that a deal is still possible if intensive talks begin in the coming days. Both sides believe that early November is the real deadline, according to reports.

This is a critical point in negotiations but – as we often write – negotiations are always the hardest at the end. Boris is well-known for playing games of brinksmanship and that's how he got his previous deal. No doubt he will do the same this time and that will entail stubbornness. The EU will surely have seen this though and could dig in, leading to a messy outcome.

In all likelihood, a deal is eventually made but like in the US election, the ride may not be worth it for traders.

In terms of the US economy, we get back to some data on Thursday with the Empire and Philly manufacturing surveys along with initial jobless claims. Claims are expected to remain sky high at 825K, a small dip from 840K last week.

Appetite for Consumption

Oct 14, 2020 14:05 | by Adam Button

Lost in the political vortex of Brexit and the US election at the moment is a hard look at where the global economy stands and where it's headed. Ashraf reminds us to loo at the head-&-shoulder formation in Facebook, the 128 barrier in Apple and USD is being dragged again after a solid Tuesday performance, while jitters returned and gold tumbled. Ashraf also warned metals bulls of a possible breakout in the Gold/Silver ratio below below. We look now at the neglected medium-term outlook. A new Premium Index trade has been posted moments ago. 

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Appetite for Consumption - Gold Silver Pct 13 2020 (Chart 1)

The rejection of the range-top in Treasuries Tuesday underscores the broader range trade in markets. That shouldn't be surprising ahead of a pivotal and uncertain US election. That question won't be answered for at least three weeks but there is a risk of losing focus on the global economy.

The IMF was out with its latest forecasts Tuesday and now sees the global economy shrinking 4.4% this year compared to its -5.2% estimate in June.

The pandemic was a true global shock but the sharpness of the recovery has been a surprise itself. Thankfully, it didn't expose any hidden fault lines in the global economy or financial system that would have led to a deeper breakdown. Or if it did, those vulnerabilities were quickly covered up by unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus.

At the beginning of the crisis, economists were front and centre predicting harder times than it has been. Once bitten, twice shy.

There's certainly no shame in not seeing every eventuality of an unknown virus and unbelievable stimulus. Even those who preached the power of central banks underestimated the power of zero rates and balance sheet expansion.

Yet we're now in an uneasy spot in the recovery. Economic data has leveled off and the virus is resurging. Governments are preparing various levels of stimulus but it's less than in earlier rounds; central banks are largely out of ammunition. 

The IMF is forecasting 5.2% global growth next year but that's highly dependent on stimulus; or on your view of how much that stimulus has held economies together.

Early lockdowns and then reopenings much better for consumption than anticipated. People redirected spending towards the home and a shift to remote working. In a second lockdown people may hunker down and stop spending, they might rebel. The virus could spiral.

The US election and Brexit are highly uncertain but relative to the next 8 months of the pandemic, they're a life raft of certainty. Since the pandemic bottoms, the news flow and market flow has been almost entirely positive. How prepared are we – really – for disappointment?

China Move Highlights Looming Vacuum

Oct 12, 2020 14:13 | by Adam Button

China's surprise move to liberalize FX trading halted a weeks-long rally in the yuan but also highlights the window of opportunity on the US political scene (more below). The Canadian dollar was the top performer last week while the US dollar lagged. CFTC data showed euro longs the least-stretched since July. Moments ago, the stop has been changed on one of the existing Premium trades. 

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China Move Highlights Looming Vacuum - Cny Dxy Oct 12 2020 (Chart 1)

The US Presidential election is a chance to transfer power every four years but it also creates a scheduled power vacuum that rivals may look to exploit.

China loosened FX hedging rules on the weekend to allow banks to hold no cash reserves against client yuan forward contracts. Previously they needed to hold 20% and that extra cost filtered back to clients.

The net effect is that it will now be easier to sell yuan forwards and that led to a 0.6% dip in the yuan at the open.

The timing also raises the risk that China could do more to weaken the yuan between now and the election or during the transfer of power if Biden wins. Last quarter was the best for the yuan in 12 years as China reopened much more broadly than almost anywhere and the government unleashed stimulus.

The trade front has been a particularly sore spot for US partners in the Trump administration. Some may simply hope for better under Biden but other may try to use this moment to recalibrate. China in particular bears watching. The yuan weakened to 6.98 from 6.68 from October to year end in 2016, during the prior election period. It finished last week at 6.68 and it would be no surprise if China wanted to start a new administration much closer to 7.00.

CFTC Commitments of Traders

Speculative net futures trader positions as of the close on Tuesday. Net short denoted by - long by +.

EUR +174K vs +188K prior GBP -11 vs +13K prior JPY +21K vs +25K prior CHF +13K vs +13K prior CAD -18K vs -19K prior AUD +11K vs +9K prior NZD +5K vs +3K prior

Euro longs remain near extremes but they have pulled back in the last two weeks and the net is the narrowest since late July. The resurgence in virus cases – particularly in France – highlights the euro's vulnerability in the months ahead. The other notable move is the switch in cable positioning to net short ahead of a big week of Brexit negotiations.