There were two key narratives driving FX markets last week; at the beginning of the week the main focus was a spike in US government bond yields whilst the end of the week was dominated by the blow-out Non-Farm Payrolls jobs data.
A recent sell-off of US government bonds has led to yields hitting multi-year highs. As investors dump bonds, supply and demand forces dictate that yields increase to entice new investors, however, this comes at the expense of making government borrowing more expensive and ultimately increases the risk of a government default at some stage in the future. There are several potential reasons for the sell-off, most notably; asset managers may be overweight in bonds and need to rebalance their portfolios; there is an oversupply of bonds in the market; rising oil prices or simply the fact that investors are starting to come to terms with the idea that central banks will maintain high rates for a long time.
In terms of Friday’s job data; markets were surprised by a significant increase in job creation which rose by 336K vs the estimated 170K. Whilst this signals that the US economy remains resilient, it also indicates that inflation may remain stickier for longer due to an increase in consumer spending and opens the door for further rate hikes in the coming months. The one positive that came out of the jobs data was that average month-on-month earnings seemed to be plateauing as they came in, in-line with the previous reading of 0.2%. Average earnings year-on-year also surprised as they only rose 4.2% in September, down from the 4.3% reading in August.
Ultimately, allocations into USD denominated government bonds and heightened expectations of further interest rate hikes will likely lead to a continuation of the recent dollar strength and upward trend we have seen in previous months.
The key news to look out for this week will come from the US in terms of the release of FOMC minutes on Wednesday and CPI data out on Thursday. Investors will also be closely monitoring the UK GDP data release on Thursday for any signs of growth in the economy.
Technicals
GBP/USD: Daily Chart
Sterling managed to break the recent trend of depreciation last week with a solid 3-day rally to end the week.
The Pound initially took a nose dive on Monday but eased up on Tuesday before reversing on Wednesday and continued higher until Friday. The reversal was quite timely as price was approaching the 1.20 support level and buyers managed to defend this area. As it stands, price currently sits around the 1.22 level but has been muted in early trading thus far today.
Whilst last week’s reversal was a positive sign for Sterling strength, it is by no means a definitive indication of a shift in sentiment.
USD buyers should probably take advantage of the recent spike up in case price plummets once more this week to get a better test of 1.20. As for USD sellers, any move back below 1.22 would represent a good opportunity to get active with a further target down at 1.20.
GBP/EUR: Daily Chart
The key psychological 1.15 level continued to prop the Pound up last week as price failed to break below despite an early test.
Last Tuesday started with a move down towards 1.15, however, buyers stepped in to defend the key level and reversed all of the day’s losses. The remainder of the week was subsequently followed by a decent 3-day rally which saw price edge back up towards the 1.16 level. A break back above 1.16 this week would be a meaningful sign of strength for the Pound and likely lead to further appreciation. EUR buyers may want to target a test of 1.16 as price ascends, with a worst case rate of 1.1550 should sentiment shift downwards. For EUR sellers, any intraday reversal would be worth getting active as price is still at the lower end of a 4 month range between 1.1750 & 1.15.
GBP/JPY: Daily Chart
Despite what looked like a capitulation early on last week, Sterling managed to recover strongly and reverse all losses by Friday.
Monday set the tone with a sharp drop which was followed up on Tuesday with an impressive decline from around 181 down to 178. Whilst the Pound did manage to pare back more than half of its losses on Tuesday, the day still ended down close to the 180 level. Sterling completely shifted gears on Wednesday with an unexpected, yet modest, rally which pushed price towards the underside of 181. The real momentum, however came into the market on Friday after a muted session on Thursday with price surging back up to 183. Anything above 181 seems good value for JPY buyers at the moment. For JPY sellers, a move below 181 would be a good trigger to get active.
Economic Calendar (BST)
Wednesday
15:00 – US PPI MoM (Sep)
19:00 – US FOMC Minutes
Thursday
07:00 – UK GDP YoY & 3-Month Avg (Aug)
12:30 – EU ECB Monetary Policy Meeting Accounts
13:30 – US Inflation Rate & Core Inflation Rate YoY (Sep)
Friday
02:00 – CHN Inflation Rate MoM & YoY (Sep)
15:00 – US Michigan Consumer Sentiment Prel (Oct)
You're in, welcome!
You can now look forward to regular FX reports, chart analysis and exchange rate updates.
If you would like insights on specific currency pairs just drop us an email at info@theberkshireexchange.co.uk and we'll do our best to accomodate you.