Certainly, our GBP flow has been lumpy with traders magnetised to the movement post-BoE and the calls that they were engaging with regulators on how to impose negative rates. You can look at the UK bond market now and see 2-year gilts at negative 11.8bp, or looking into the UK rates markets and see 18bp of cuts priced through end-2021. Cable traded into 1.2865, before rallying back to the flat line at 1.2968.
I also have GBPJPY on the radar, where the daily really highlights the solid bid off the low and we are left with an interesting candle. In fact, I see this is there is a real battle between bulls and bears in this cross and a close above 136.60 seems key for a bull trend to emerge. Or, we see a renewed turn lower and all those who covered and bought through 135.43 will be the wrong side of the trade and price may establish a trend lower – one for the watch list, as when this goes it will compel.EURAUD is another that remains on the focus-list, with the pair getting ever closer to the low of the range it has held since May. This cross has been a true range traders paradise and once again it is holding on for dear life. I am looking for levels to be long here a low-risk trade, but I’ll wait it out and into 1.6100 price gets more stretched – should it get there. The options market puts a zero probability the pair trades sub-1.61 in the next week, so I may be waiting. AUDNZD also has potential, with the cross sitting on the 3 September swing – do we bounce here? Another for the 15-minute charts to assess price for supportive buyers.
AUDJPY has held the 9 September low well, but price is holding below the 5-day EMA and that interests me in that this could be the start of a more bearish trend. The JPY is in fashion though, even if the biggest percentage moves on the day (vs the USD) have come from the ZAR, MXN and NZD. But there has been a general shun of USDs. The move in the USDX should be noted, with price moving into the top of its range and the 9 Sept high/ 50-day MA, before sellers moved in. Perhaps the market is having a second look at the Fed meeting, as they move to their new chapter of never raising rates. It’s interesting that we see US equities lower and notably while the S&P500 closed -0.8%, we’ve seen the 55-day MA hold in yet again – the number of people who have flagged this on social and direct to me via emails tells me how many are looking at it, but it seems to be a guide for the market and the view is if this breaks we head into the 200-day MA at 3102.
Tech has underperformed again, yet risk FX has broadly worked, and there has been limited movement in the bond market (UST10 -1bp). We also see the VIX index up smalls at 26.46%, while crude is +2.0% with the Saudi’s detailing a determination for OPEC+ members to not exceed the set production quotas.
Gold (XAUUSD) sits -0.76% at 1944 having traded into 1932, and we see the move also defined by the 50-day MA, which seems to be a loose stop guide – happy to stand aside on gold for now, but will warm to longs should we see price break above 1973. Gold is just super relaxed at the moment though and needs a spark – 1-week implied volatility sits at 15.1% and trending lower, the market (by way of example) sees gold holding a range of 1979 to 1915 (with a 70% level of confidence) over the coming week, and risk reversals (the skew of call to put implied volatility) are perfectly neutral – the gold market needs awaking from its current slumber and either that means a move in the USD and/or deeper relative real rates. Not a huge amount of event risk to worry over the coming 24 hours, with UK and Canada retail sales the highlight. While in the US we get University of Michigan confidence numbers, I can’t see these being vol events.
Bei diesem Artikel handelt es sich um eine Werbemitteilung. Diese Information wurde von Pepperstone GmbH bereitgestellt. CFD sind komplexe Instrumente und beinhalten wegen der Hebelwirkung ein hohes Risiko, schnell Geld zu verlieren. Zwischen 74 % und 89 % der Kleinanlegerkonten verlieren beim Handel mit CFD Geld. Sie sollten überlegen, ob Sie verstehen, wie CFD funktionieren und ob Sie es sich leisten können, das hohe Risiko einzugehen, Ihr Geld zu verlieren. Zusätzlich zum untenstehenden Haftungsausschluss enthält das auf dieser Seite enthaltene Informationsmaterial weder eine Auflistung unserer Handelspreise noch ein Angebot oder eine Aufforderung zu einer Transaktion in ein Finanzinstrument. Pepperstone übernimmt keine Verantwortung für die Verwendung dieser Kommentare und die daraus resultierenden Folgen. Es wird keine Zusicherung oder Gewähr für die Richtigkeit oder Vollständigkeit dieser Informationen gegeben. Folglich trägt der Anleger alleinverantwortlich das Risiko für einzelne Anlageentscheidungen. Jede angebotene Studie berücksichtigt nicht das Investment spezifischer Ziele, die finanzielle Situation und die Bedürfnisse einer bestimmten Person, die sie empfangen kann. Sie wurde nicht in Übereinstimmung mit den gesetzlichen Vorschriften zur Erstellung von Finanzanalysen erstellt und gilt daher als Werbemitteilung im Sinne des Wertpapierhandelsgesetzes (WpHG).