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Currency Speculators Edged USD Bullish Positions Lower Last Week

Published 01/15/2017, 04:33 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

US Dollar: COT Large Speculators Sentiment vs UUP ETF Chart

US dollar net speculator positions leveled at $24.95 billion last week

The latest data for the weekly Commitment of Traders (COT) report, released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on Friday, showed that large traders and currency speculators slightly decreased their bullish bets for the US dollar last week following two weeks of gains.

Non-commercial large futures traders, including hedge funds and large speculators, had an overall US dollar long position totaling $24.95 billion as of Tuesday January 10th, according to the latest data from the CFTC and dollar amount calculations by Reuters. This was a weekly decline of $-0.48 billion from the $25.43 billion total long position that was registered the previous week, according to the Reuters calculation (totals of the US dollar contracts against the combined contracts of the euro, British pound, Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar and the Swiss franc).

The US dollar speculative positions have now been over the +$20 billion level for eleven consecutive weeks with weekly gains seven out of the last eleven weeks.

Weekly Change In US Dollar Speculators Aggregate Positions

Weekly Speculator Contract Changes:

The major currencies that improved against the US dollar last week were the just the Japanese yen (6,925 weekly change in contracts) and the euro (4,233 contracts).

Meanwhile, the currencies whose speculative bets fell last week versus the dollar were the Mexican peso (-6,140 weekly change in contracts), Canadian dollar (-4,064 contracts), New Zealand dollar (-2,547 contracts), British pound sterling (-1,089 contracts), Swiss franc (-807 contracts) and the Australian dollar (-592 contracts).

Table of Weekly Commercial Traders And Speculators Levels & Changes

This latest COT data is through Tuesday and shows a quick view of how large speculators or non-commercials (for-profit traders) as well as the commercial traders (hedgers & traders for business purposes) were positioned in the futures markets. All currency positions are in direct relation to the US dollar where, for example, a bet for the euro is a bet that the euro will rise versus the dollar while a bet against the euro will be a bet that the dollar will gain versus the euro.

Weekly Charts: Large Traders Weekly Positions vs Price

EuroFX:

Euro FX Futures: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs EUR/USD

British Pound Sterling:

British Pound: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs GBP/USD

Japanese Yen:

Japanese Yen: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs FXY ETF

Swiss Franc:

Swiss Franc: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs FXF ETF

Canadian Dollar:

Canadian Dollar: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs FXC ETF

Australian Dollar:

Australian Dollar: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs AUD/USD

New Zealand Dollar:

NZD: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs NZD/USD

Mexican Peso:

Mexican Peso: COT Large Traders Sentiment vs MXN/USD

*COT Report: The weekly commitment of traders report summarizes the total trader positions for open contracts in the futures trading markets. The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators).

The Commitment of Traders report is published every Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and shows futures positions data that was reported as of the previous Tuesday (3 days behind).

Each currency contract is a quote for that currency directly against the U.S. dollar, a net short amount of contracts means that more speculators are betting that currency to fall against the dollar and a net long position expect that currency to rise versus the dollar.

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