Credit Suisse 1/5: Today’s #Forex highlights: #USDJPY remains capped as expected at our first objective of 200-day average and November high at 105.59/75 and a pause is looked for here. Big picture,with a bullish “wedge” & “reversal month” in place we continue to look for a break
Credit Suisse 2/5: in due course, with the “wedge objective” at 106.95/107.05.
#AUDUSD reverted sharply higher from the 55-day average, posting a bullish “reversal day” and is now pressuring against the “neckline” to its top at .7683.
CS 3/5: #EURUSD has posted a bullish “reversal day” from our 1.1945/14 tget – 23.6% retraceme of entire 2020/21 rally – & we continue to look for a near-term recovery from here.
We continue to watch #EUR in outright terms closely though as an important top may be close to forming
Credit Suisse 4/5: #EURGBP weakness has accelerated lower following the completion of its large bearish “head & shoulders” top and we stay bearish for .8609.
#GBPUSD above 1.3710 lessens the threat of a bear “wedge” and we look for a move back to the 1.3759 high,
Credit Suisse 5/5: with trend resistance at 1.3785 today.
#USDCHF did unwind the overbought condition on Friday, but maintains a small “head and shoulders” base with key resistance seen at .9079/95.
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Citibank 1/8: Can US exceptionalism get in the way of the bearish #USD outlook?
US relative growth outperformance versus the rest of the world (US exceptionalism) could see more sustained support for USD. Indeed, Citi analysts find that among their signals,
Citibank 2/8: one of the most reliable indicators to predict USD performance is Citi Data Change Index(DCI) spread between US & weighted average of other #G10 economies that currently favours US economic outperformance. US exceptionalism can get in the way of a dollar sell-off by
Citibank 3/8: (1) weakening the equity side of the argument for a weaker dollar, linked to Value vs Growth outperformance should the global economy stumble to the point where US assets and USD’s role as safe haven kick in again OR (2) from very strong US economic outperformance
ING Bank 1/4: Cautious #Riksbank unlikely to halt krona’s strength in 2021.
Despite a more resilient end to 2020, Sweden's #Riksbank remains cautious about the outlook. A further extension to the quantitative easing programme is possible later in the year,
ING Bank 2/4: particularly if the downside risks surrounding the virus materialise - though a return to negative rates remains unlikely.
While modestly surprising the market, the bias coming from the meeting today is not enough, on its own, to push #EURSEK below the 10.00 level.
ING Bank 3/4: For this to happen, we need to see the 2Q economic recovery in the eurozone and Sweden, which will then benefit cyclical currencies such as SEK. Near-term, we expect #EURSEK to continue hovering around the 10.10 gravity line,
TD Securities 1/4: Details for The Day Ahead: #USD Oil prices have bounced, and the gasoline component of #CPI likely rose sharply again in January (TD: 0.3% m/m), but we expect another tame reading for the trend-setting core series, even with some tendency for above-trend gains
TD Securities 2/4: in January in recent years. The rise in the core index was probably held down by a fourth consecutive decline in used vehicle prices (after sharp increases) and minimal gains once again in the rental components. Our estimate for the rise in core prices is 0.12%
TD Securities 3/4: before rounding. Our forecast implies 1.4%/1.5% y/y for total/core prices in January, little changed from 1.4%/1.6% y/y in December and down from 2.3%/2.4% y/y in February 2020 (pre-COVID).
KBC Bank 1/4: The economic calendar contains US CPI today. Consensus lies at 1.5% y/y for both headline and core measures. Inflation is gradually becoming a topic in markets thinking with US market-based inflation expectations reaching ever higher levels.
KBC Bank 2/4: For today however, the reading probably won’t have a dramatic impact. We more look forward to US 10-yr bond sale later today. Will the recent rise in long rates suffice to offset the increased inflation (and perhaps sovereign credit) risks markets see to the fiscal
KBC Bank 3/4: and monetary abundancy? A smooth auction would probably ease such fears. This could solidify the 1.2% (10-yr) and 2% (30-yr) technical resistance areas, but only for the short term. It could keep the USD in a less beneficial position as well,
KBC Bank 1/4: The big reflation trade took a moment to catch its breath yesterday. Circumstances were ideal with no important data scheduled to trigger abrupt market moves. Equities finished broadly unchanged after erasing earlier losses, both in the EMU and the US.
KBC Bank 2/4: Core bond yields traded choppy and below recent (recovery) highs. The US kicked off its bond sales with 3yr tenor. The auction went smoothly but didn’t impact markets. US Treasuries edged higher at the long end of the curve, sending rates marginally lower driven by
KBC 3/4: the real yield component. German yields ended a volatile trading day flat. Peripheral yield spreads widened just 1 bps. #USD traded on the back foot even as risk sentiment was fragile. #EURUSD took out intermediate resist around 1.208 to finish session north of 1.21again
Morgan Stanley 1/4: With consensus now on board with our V-shape recovery and cyclical bull market in the context of a new economic cycle, investors should be on the lookout for how we could be surprised. First, while we were early with our V-shape recovery narrative,
Morgan Stanley 2/4: we must admit it's been even stronger than we expected 9 months ago. Much of this has to do with the enormous stimulus provided by the Fed and Congress, which has led to a recovery in retail sales and other forms of consumption.
MS 3/4: 2nd, the advent of a new risk seeking retail investor with easier and cheap access to markets has become the marginal buyer of stocks, which has also added to the market volatility. Finally, development of multiple vaccines faster than most expected has increased investor