Market Brief
In the Asian session, risk appetite mildly crept back into FX markets. Yet volume was low and direction unconvincing. In the equity space, the Nikkei 225 was up slightly at 0.03%, Shanghai Composite up 0.35% but the Hang Seng was down -0.32%. Geopolitical tensions still dominate price action as reports indicate that German and French ministers are participating in emergency talks with Ukraine and Russian in order to diffuse immediate tensions (reported results have been mixed). The Ukraine is still expressing considerable concern over a potential escalation, which is weighting on investors sentiment.
The EURUSD was range-bound, trading between 1.3380 and 1.3400. USDJPY caught a late afternoon bid trading up to 102.40 yet remained well within its daily range. Risks to JPY are balanced between the currencies role as a safe-haven trade verse evidence that the Japanese economy is falling backwards (Q2 P read of -6.8%). The AUDUSD quickly dropped from its high at 0.9328 as China’s new housing price data printed on the softer side. However, with the RBA minutes out on Tuesday and RBA Governor Stevens speaking to a parliamentary economic committee on Wednesday, traders didn’t push the AUD lower. In broad terms, EM FX gained against the USD, but moves were minor as Asian rates were little changed. Oil continues to trade softly as concerns over supply disruptions from Russian and Iraq have been neutralized by increased oil output in Libya.
China new-house price Fall
In China, new-house prices fell in July in almost all cities, as tighter mortgage lending hurt buyers. The National Bureau of Statistics stated that prices fell in 64 of the 70 cities last month from June. This was the biggest price fall since January 2011 which was then a result of the government adjusting how it complies data. In other news, China’s foreign direct investment dropped 17.0% y/y in July verse the market expection of 0.8% and prior growth of 0.2%. Elsewhere, Thailand’s GDP recovered in Q2 expanding 0.9% q/q after a contraction of -1.9% q/q. This suggest that the Thai economy has expand 0.4% in Q2 after a contraction of 0.5% in Q1.
Carney might not wait for wage growth
In the UK, it was reported that BoE Governor Mark Carney stated that the central bank might now wait for real wages to actually increase before hiking policy rates. Then Carney went on to say that the underlying trend of the economic data was more important to the decision making process. As with the US, the UK economy has been producing jobs at a rapid pace, yet wage growth has been weak and even declined last week. The ability for the UK economy to grow without producing lasting inflation gives the BoE more time to maneuver. We suspect that the lag between a tight labor market and wage growth will catch up with the UK (and US) shortly, pressuring policy-makers to act. Based on this premise, we remain constructive on the GBP. Elsewhere, UK’s Rightmove house prices dropped 2.9%m/m in August verse -0.8% in July, the largest fall since December 2012. Todays light economic calendar will keep FX trading subdued barring any unexpected events from Ukraine / Russia.
EUR/USD
R 2: 1.3433
R 1: 1.3410
CURRENT: 1.3387
S 1: 1.3356
S 2: 1.3336
GBP/USD
R 2: 1.6888
R 1: 1.6844
CURRENT: 1.6735
S 1: 1.6692
S 2: 1.6671
USD/JPY
R 2: 103.15
R 1: 102.76
CURRENT: 102.45
S 1: 102.14
S 2: 102.04
USD/CHF
R 2: 0.9070
R 1: 0.9048
CURRENT: 0.9041
S 1: 0.9020
S 2: 0.9006