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FX: Risk On Trades Could Lose Steam

Published 05/28/2020, 04:35 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
U.S. equities extended their gains Thursday on the back of better-than-expected economic data. Durable goods fell less than anticipated, jobless claims hovered around 2 million and the market largely shrugged off downward revision to U.S. GDP. Currencies also rallied, with the euro, sterling the Australian and New Zealand dollars leading the gains. As U.S.-China tensions heat up, we are surprised by the nonchalant attitude in the markets. 
 
The relationship between the world’s two largest economies is expected to chill significantly over the next few days, and the ramifications could be significant. Beijing officially approved a new law that would significantly reduce Hong Kong’s autonomy. Activist groups would be banned and harsh penalties would be imposed on anyone violating national security laws. The U.S. State Department no longer sees Hong Kong as having significant autonomy, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, paving the way for President Donald Trump to impose a new set of penalties. Trump is expected to make an announcement in the next 24 to 48 hours that could include taxing Hong Kong imports and imposing investment restrictions. This would be viewed as a direct jab at China that invites retaliation. Yet, markets are up with currencies holding steady.
 
Many investors may be wondering how the broader market can ignore the deepening rift between the U.S. and China. One argument is that Hong Kong and the U.S. do very little trade with each other, so the actual impact will be small. Secondly, relations have been chilling for weeks, with the Trump administration telegraphing potential penalties on Hong Kong/China. Third, China may talk of retaliation but could hold off doing anything meaningful until after the November election. Lastly, the biggest risk for the global economy right now is not a U.S.-China trade war but the economic and social impact of COVID-19. From that perspective, the good news continues to flow in with progress on vaccine development and the easing of more lockdown restrictions.   
 
Yet, risk appetite could wane as more U.S.-China headlines hit the wires. There are also a number of central bank meetings next week that could show policy-makers are still keen to ease. The Australian and New Zealand dollars rose strongly on Thursday but they are vulnerable to deep corrections if China tensions start to weigh on the markets. We are also looking for losses in the Canadian dollar. The current account deficit was worse than expected and tomorrow, first quarter and March GDP numbers are due for release with weaker numbers expected all around. 
 
The euro took out 1.1050 before the London close despite slightly disappointing Eurozone confidence numbers. This marked the third day of strength for the single currency, but with the European Central Bank expected to increase bond purchases next week and issue grim forecasts, we believe the rally will lose steam. Sterling also traded higher shrugging off dovish comments from Bank of England member Michael Saunders. On Friday, aside from Canadian GDP, Eurozone inflation data, revisions to the U.S. University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index will be released along with U.S. personal income and personal spending numbers.
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Latest comments

Nice summary
so long as central banks print and buy gvt bonds, deflation will never happen. inflation and deflation arent inherently bad, but when you have reached the top of a debt cycle, you've got to deleverage in a balanced way between the two. Deleveraging is done by reconstructing debt contracts by altering due dates, interest rates, amount due, how long to pay, or by redistributing wealth from wealthy to poor(decreases spending, incomes and productivity throughout an organization and a market), and finally, simply cut spending to reduce debt so incomes catch up with debt. Deleveraging is not easy, and the way to balance it with these 3 forms of deflation is for the fed to print money, or lower interest rates. we already had low interest rates going into covid due to trade war, so that's why all the fed can do is print money now. but that is more debt, which will eventually collapse if incomes and productivity never meet to cut the debts we've allowed the government to take on. the govt fn up
You are right Lawrence. Do you think the trade war between China and the United States will have a great bad effect on the US dollar?
Deflation in Europe is coming.
thanks kathy for sharing useful information
what about sell in May? Tomorrow is its last day...
thanks kathy for keeping us updated with your incesive analysis.
All fraud fake
Thanks Kathy, I rode on rally of NASDAQ yester-newyork opening
hi
great article but it seems all fundamentals and analysis is like blowing in the wind... just none of it matters, someone is just pushing green bars up manually every night
Kathy thank you! I Rode that bull to 1.1094 your input & the power of Fibonacci great day 109pips
BS moves to the upside indicating massive manipulation. All foreign currencies likely to start dropping tomrrow into next week. Expect a huge dip thatll happen within a few days maybe, and then eventuallly a move up. AU poised to hop to 0.80 levels within the next 4 months. Go back and look at what they did during 08’ ... same thing this time, just opposite direction
rhe misalignment between the economy and equity market is nauseating and bewildering. This agita is exacerbated with the raging bullish up tick of SPX P/E without coherent justification. The numbers just don't add up. If nGDP contraction stays at 5%, this might tentatively justify a P/E of 25, with E=130 ( a 7% discount from 2019). However, nGDP will contract much further once April data are in. What is the rush to get to SPX of 3250? Everyone needs to calm down and take a deep breath, this inflationary trading is bicephalic; one that soothes and shred.
Skriv dinahe misalignment between the economy and equity market is nauseating and bewildering. This agita is exacerbated with the raging bullish up tick of SPX P/E without coherent justification. The numbers just don't add up. If nGDP contraction stays at 5%, this might tentatively justify a P/E of 25, with E=130 ( a 7% discount from 2019). However, nGDP will contract much further once April data are in. What is the rush to get to SPX of 3250? Everyone needs to calm down and take a deep breath, this inflationary trading is bicephalic; one that soothes and shred. tankar här
What market did you see today?
finally an article from that i can read easy 🙌
I have noted there is a decline in thr US banks share price today. What could be impact tomorrow or next week?
Excellent analysis.. i strongly believe that U.S-China rift will not impact the markets that much for now as the focus is on the overall health of the global economy..Currencies pair such as EUR /USD, AUD/JPY and AUD/USD will return to their pre-pandemic levels soon as the world eases out of lockdown.
What could be rhr impact on the US banks share price?
Kathy is improving, much less bias and much more facts than previous articles
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