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Showing posts with label Forex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forex. Show all posts

Monday, 14 February 2022

EUR/JPY PRICE ANALYSIS: TEMPORARY SUPPORT COMES AT 129.65

14 February 2022, 13:45

  • EUR/JPY accelerates losses below the 200-day SMA (130.45).
  • The 55-day SMA emerges as the next support at 129.65.

EUR/JPY sinks further south of the key 200-day SMA in the mid-130.00s at the beginning of the week.

The sharp corrective downside appears to have further legs to go in the very near term. Against that, the cross could shed further ground and revisit the 55-day SMA at 129.65 ahead of the February low near 128.90 (February 1) and the 2022 lows in the 128.20 zone recorded in late January.

In the longer run, and while below the 200-day SMA, the outlook for the cross is expected to remain bearish.

EUR/JPY daily chart

14 February 2022, 13:45

  • EUR/JPY accelerates losses below the 200-day SMA (130.45).
  • The 55-day SMA emerges as the next support at 129.65.

EUR/JPY sinks further south of the key 200-day SMA in the mid-130.00s at the beginning of the week.

The sharp corrective downside appears to have further legs to go in the very near term. Against that, the cross could shed further ground and revisit the 55-day SMA at 129.65 ahead of the February low near 128.90 (February 1) and the 2022 lows in the 128.20 zone recorded in late January.

In the longer run, and while below the 200-day SMA, the outlook for the cross is expected to remain bearish.

EUR/JPY daily


USD/MYR STICKS TO ITS CONSOLIDATIVE RANGE – UOB

14 February 2022, 13:48

USD/MYR is still seen navigating within the 4.1750-4.2000 range for the time being, noted Quek Ser Leang at UOB Group’s Global Economics & Markets Research.

Key Quotes

“We highlighted last Monday (07 Feb, spot 4.1850) that daily MACD is ‘flattish’ and we held the view that USD/MYR ‘could continue to trade between 4.1620 and 4.2150 for a while more’.”

“Our view was not wrong even though USD/MYR consolidated in a quiet manner and within a narrow range of 4.1800/4.1890. The quiet price actions offer no fresh clues and USD/MYR could continue to trade sideways. Expected range for this week, 4.1750/4.2000.”

AUD/USD BOUNCES OFF ONE-WEEK LOW, STILL DEEP IN THE RED NEAR 0.7100 MARK

14 February 2022, 12:55

  • A combination of factors dragged AUD/USD lower for the third successive day on Monday.
  • Bets for a 50 bps Fed rate hike in March underpinned the buck amid geopolitical tensions.
  • The anti-risk flow contributed to the bearish pressure around the perceived riskier aussie.

The AUD/USD pair remained depressed through the first half of the European session and was last seen trading around the 0.7100 mark, just a few pips above the one-week low.

The pair extended last week's rejection slide from the vicinity of mid-0.7200s, or the 100-day SMA hurdle and continued losing ground for the third successive day on Monday. The US dollar remained well supported by the prospects for a faster policy tightening by the Fed. This, along with the risk-off impulse in the markets, weighed on the perceived riskier aussie and exerted pressure on the AUD/USD pair.

The markets seem convinced that the Fed would adopt a more aggressive policy response to combat stubbornly high inflation and have been pricing in a 50 bps rate hike in March. The bets were boosted further after data released last Thursday showed that the headline US CPI accelerated to the highest level since February 1982 during the first month of 2022. Adding to this, the core CPI climbed to 6.0% from a year ago.

Apart from this, worries over an imminent Russian invasion of Ukraine took its toll on the global risk sentiment and further benefitted the greenback's relative safe-haven status. This was seen as another factor that dragged the AUD/USD pair back below the 0.7100 mark. The downtick, however, lacked any follow-through, warranting some caution for aggressive bearish traders and before positioning for any further losses.

In the absence of any major market-moving economic releases, traders might take cues from St. Louis Fed President James Bullard's appearance later during the North American session. It is worth recalling that Bullard called for 100 bps rate hikes over the next three FOMC policy meetings and hence, his remarks, along with the US bond yields, will influence the USD and provide some impetus to the AUD/USD pair.

Apart from this, geopolitical developments and the broader market risk sentiment should allow traders to grab some short-term opportunities around the AUD/USD pair. The focus would then shift to the RBA monetary policy meeting minutes, due for release during the Asian session on Tuesday.

USD/CAD JUMPS BACK CLOSER TO 1.2800 MARK AMID RETREATING OIL PRICES, STRONGER USD

14 February 2022, 12:11

  • A combination of supporting factors pushed USD/CAD to over a one-week high on Monday.
  • Retreating oil prices undermined the loonie and extended some support amid stronger USD.
  • Hawkish Fed expectations, the risk-off impulse continued benefitting the safe-haven buck.

The USD/CAD pair quickly retreated a few pips from over one-week high touched in the last hour and was last seen trading around the 1.2765 region, still up over 0.60% for the day.

The pair caught fresh bids during the early European session and broke out its intraday consolidation phase, with bulls now looking to build on last week's rebound from the monthly low. Despite the risk of a further escalation in the conflict between Russia and the West over Ukraine, crude oil prices pulled back from a more than seven-year high touched earlier this Monday. This, in turn, undermined the commodity-linked loonie and provided a goodish lift to the USD/CAD pair amid fresh US dollar buying.

The greenback remained well supported by growing acceptance that the Fed will tighten its monetary policy at a faster pace than anticipated to combat stubbornly high inflation. In fact, the markets have been pricing in the possibility of a 50 bps Fed rate hike move in March. The bets were boosted further after data released last Thursday showed that the headline CPI reached the highest level since February 1982 and the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, climbed 6.0% from a year ago.

Apart from this, the risk-off impulse – as depicted by a sell-off across the equity markets – further benefitted the greenback's safe-haven status. This was seen as another factor that contributed to the USD/CAD pair's strong intraday positive move. The global risk sentiment took a hit after US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan warned on Sunday that “we are in the window where a Russian invasion of Ukraine could begin at any time and could happen during the Beijing winter Olympics.”

It, however, remains to be seen if bulls are able to capitalize on the move or the USD/CAD pair continues with its break through the 1.2800 mark amid absent economic releases from the US or Canada. Hence, the market focus will remain on geopolitical developments, which will influence oil price dynamics. Apart from this, traders will take cues from the broader market risk sentiment. This, along with the US bond yields, will drive the USD demand and provide some impetus to the USD/CAD pair.

GBP/USD: 1.3500 ALIGNS AS CRITICAL SUPPORT

14 February 2022, 12:20

GBP/USD has declined toward 1.3500 pressured by risk aversion. The bearish pressure could ramp up in case that levels turn into resistance, FXStreet’s Eren Sengezer reports.

1.3520 forms the first technical resistance

“1.3500 (psychological level, Fibonacci 50% retracement of the latest uptrend) aligns as critical support. If a four-hour candle closes below that level and uses it as resistance, the next bearish target is located at 1.3470 (Fibonacci 61.8% retracement) ahead of 1.3440 (static level).”

“On the upside, 1.3520 (Fibonacci 38.2% retracement) forms the first technical resistance before the 1.3550/1.3560 area (200-period SMA, Fibonacci 23.6% retracement).”

 

FOREX TODAY: EYES ON CENTRAL BANK SPEAKERS, RUSSIA-UKRAINE HEADLINES

14 February 2022, 08:54

Here is what you need to know on Monday, February 14:

Safe-haven flows dominated the financial markets ahead of the weekend amid renewed fears over a Russia-Ukraine military conflict and investors stay cautious early Monday. The economic docket will not be featuring any high-impact data releases and the risk perception is likely to remain the primary driver of financial markets. Additionally, European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde and St. Louis Fed president James Bullard will be delivering speeches later in the day.

Late Friday, several news outlets reported that Russia was expected to invade Ukraine as soon as this week. Over the weekend, the White House said that the US will respond "swiftly and decisively" to any further Russian aggression against Ukraine. US President Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, told CNN that an invasion could take place before February 20.

Japan's Nikkei 225 Index lost more than 2% on Monday and the Shanghai Composite Index is down more than 1%. US stock index futures trade flat in the early European session and the benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield, which lost nearly 6% on Friday, is up 2% at 1.95%. The US Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback's performance against a basket of six major currencies, is staying relatively quiet near 96.00 after rising 0.5% last week.

Meanwhile, oil prices continue to push higher with the barrel of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) trading at its highest level since September 2014 at $94.20.

EUR/USD fell sharply late Friday and touched its lowest level in more than a week at 1.1329. The pair is moving sideways in a relatively tight range below 1.1350 early Monday.

GBP/USD is posting small losses below 1.3550 heading into the European session. The UK's Office for National Statistics will release the labour market data on Tuesday.

USD/JPY fell nearly 100 pips on Russia-Ukraine headlines but seems to have steadied above 115.00. Recovering US Treasury bond yields are helping the pair limit its losses.

Gold surged to its strongest level since mid-November at $1,865 on Friday. XAU/USD was last seen consolidating its gains around $1,850.

Bitcoin registered small losses over the weekend after facing heavy selling pressure on Friday but it managed to stay afloat above $40,000. Ethereum moves sideways below $3,000 after closing the previous four days in the negative territory.

USD/TRY PRICE ANALYSIS: SELLERS KEEP REINS AROUND $13.50

14 February 2022, 08:57

  • USD/TRY prints mild gains after four consecutive days of losses.
  • Corrective pullback from 200-SMA fails to cross 50-DMA, steady RSI adds strength to bearish bias.
  • Fortnight-old horizontal resistance also challenges pair buyers, monthly support line restrict immediate declines.

USD/TRY fades bounce off 200-SMA while taking rounds to $13.50 heading into Monday’s European session.

In doing so, the Turkish lira (TRY) pair remains below 50-SMA amid steady RSI conditions.

Other than the immediate hurdle around $13.55, comprising the 50-SMA, a two-week-old horizontal resistance area around $13.65 will also challenge the USD/TRY bulls.

Should USD/TRY prices rise past $13.65, the pair’s run-up towards the $14.00 threshold can’t be ignored.

Meanwhile, a one-month-old ascending support line near $13.35 restricts short-term declines of the pair ahead of the horizontal support zone from January 20, close to $13.25.

During the quote’s weakness past $13.25, the $13.00 round figure and January’s low near $12.75 should lure the USD/TRY bears.

USD/TRY: Four-hour chart

USD/JPY RECOVERS TO NEAR 115.50, WITH HORIZONTAL TRENDLINE RESISTANCE BACK IN SIGHT

14 February 2022, 08:05

  • USD/JPY bounces to around 115.50 after defending 115.00.
  • Russia-Ukraine geopolitical risks continue to remain a threat.
  • Downside appears cushioned amid a bunch of healthy support levels.

USD/JPY is consolidating Friday’s sell-off around mid-115.00s, trying to find the conviction to extend the recovery momentum.

Even though the risk sentiment has somewhat recovered, worries over a potential Russia-Ukraine war persist, which keeps any renewed upside in the US Treasury yields limited. This, in turn, could stem USD/JPY’s rebound.

Bulls may also find comfort from an increasing case for rising global rates, as inflation soar worldwide. The January Fed meeting’s minutes are likely to ramp up expectations for aggressive tightening by the world’s most powerful central bank.

Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) successfully defended its key bond yield target on Monday, as attention turns towards the Japanese growth numbers due on Tuesday.

In the meantime, the speech from St. Louis President James Bullard will be closely eyed for fresh hints on the Fed’s rate hike plans.

USD/JPY: Technical outlook

USD/JPY’s daily chart shows that the price found buyers well above the bullish 21-Daily Moving Average (DMA) at 114.79.

Also, bulls remain hopeful as the spot managed to defend the 115.00 level, as the 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) continues to hold above the midline.

On the upside, daily closing above 116.00 is needed to retest Friday’s high of 116.17, above which the critical horizontal trendline resistance at 116.34 will come into play.

EUR/USD FACES SOLID SUPPORT AROUND 1.1300 – UOB

14 February 2022, 08:12

FX Strategists at UOB Group noted further downside in EUR/USD should meet decent support in the 1.1300 area in the near term.

Key Quotes

24-hour view: “The sharp drop in EUR during late NY hours to 1.1328 came as a surprise. While the rapid decline appears to be running ahead of itself, EUR could dip 1.1328 from here. That said, the major support at 1.1300 is unlikely to come into the picture. Resistance is at 1.1385 followed by 1.1410.”

Next 1-3 weeks: “Last Friday (11 Feb, spot at 1.1420), we highlighted that the recent upside risk has dissipated and we expected EUR to trade between 1.1340 and 1.1500. We did not anticipate the rapid manner by which EUR dropped below 1.1340 (low of 1.1328). Downward pressure has increased, albeit not by much. There is room for EUR to edge lower but any weakness is likely limited to a test of 1.1300. On the upside, a breach of the ‘strong resistance’ level, currently at 1.1440, would indicate that the downside risk has dissipated.”

USD/CAD STAYS DEFENSIVE ABOVE 1.2700 AS OIL PRICES GRIND HIGHER, RISK APPETITE IMPROVES

14 February 2022, 08:26

  • USD/CAD snaps two-day uptrend, grinds higher of late.
  • US-Canada trade link re-established after police cleared protests against covid restrictions.
  • Oil prices stay firmer amid Russia-Ukraine war fears even as Kyiv recently requested Moscow for a meeting.
  • Risk catalysts will be crucial for intraday moves, FOMC Minutes becomes the week’s key event.

USD/CAD holds onto mild losses around 1.2730 ahead of Monday’s European session.

The loonie pair drops for the first time in three days as easing geopolitical tensions in Canada and abroad, as well as upbeat oil prices, favor the Canadian dollar (CAD). It should be noted, however, that a light calendar and indecision over Russia-Ukraine situations, not to forget cautious mood at the Fed, restricts the quote’s immediate moves.

“North America's busiest trade link reopened for traffic late Sunday evening, ending a six-day blockade, Canada Border Services Agency said, after Canadian police cleared the protesters fighting to end COVID-19 restrictions,” said Reuters.

On the other hand, Ukraine recently requested Russia for a meeting, which in turn tamed geopolitical fears of imminent war as signaled by the Western leaders the previous day.

In adding to the ebbing risk-off mood, a lack of clarity over the Fed’s next move also weigh on USD/CAD prices, not to forget the upbeat prices of Canada’s key export WTI crude oil. It should be noted that WTI crude oil trades near the highest levels since late 2014 while taking rounds to $93.00 of late.

The markets went gung-ho about the 50 basis points (bps) of Fed-rate-hike in March versus the previous hopes of a 0.25% move during the last week. However, downbeat readings of US Michigan Consumer Sentiment for February, to 61.7 versus 67.2 prior, pushed the CME FedWatch Tool to suggest nearly 50-50 chances of such a move and drown the US Treasury yields.

Elsewhere, the recent Fedspeak also hesitates to favor a strong move on the rates and hence exert downside pressure on the USD/CAD prices.

Looking forward, USD/CAD traders await clear updates from Russia, as well as comments from St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, for intraday direction. However, major importance will be given to Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Meeting Minutes.

Read: USD/CAD Weekly Forecast: Ukraine reorders market outlook

Technical analysis

The USD/CAD pair justifies the late Friday’s ‘Hanging man’ candlestick, as well as the Momentum line’s retreat, to register daily losses for the first time in three. With this, the prices are likely to extend the latest pullback towards the 100-SMA level near 1.2680.

However, the lower line of the stated two-week-old descending trend channel, near 1.2630, will restrict the pair’s further weakness, if not then the late January’s swing low around 1.2560 should return to the charts.

On the flip side, the channel’s resistance line near 1.2750 and late January’s peak around 1.2800 will restrict short-term upside moves of the USD/CAD pair.

Friday, 11 February 2022

GBP/JPY REMAINS ON THE DEFENSIVE NEAR 157.00 MARK, DOWNSIDE SEEMS CUSHIONED

11 February 2022, 10:23

  • GBP/JPY witnessed some selling on Friday and extended the overnight modest pullback.
  • The risk-off impulse benefitted the JPY’s relative safe-haven status and exerted pressure.
  • The BoE-BoJ policy divergence should help limit any meaningful downfall for the cross.

The GBP/JPY cross remained depressed through the early European session and was last seen trading just a few pips above the daily low, around the 157.00 mark.

The cross extended the overnight modest pullback from the 158.00 round figure, or the highest level since October 2021 and witnessed some selling during the first half of the trading on Friday. The risk-off impulse in the markets underpinned the Japanese yen's relative safe-haven status and exerted some pressure on the GBP/JPY cross.

Growing market acceptance that the Fed will adopt a more aggressive policy response to combat high inflation triggered a fresh bout of the global risk aversion trade. This was evident from a sea of red across the equity markets, which, in turn, forced investors to take refuge in traditional safe-haven assets and benefitted the JPY.

On the other hand, the British pound was weighed down by a broad-based US dollar strength and failed to gain any respite from mixed UK macro releases. The UK Office of National Statistics reported that the economy contracted less than anticipated, by 0.2% in December, and expanded by 1% during Q4 2021 as against expectations for the 1.1% increase.

Separately, the UK Industrial/Manufacturing Production figures and a larger than estimated traded deficit did little to impress traders or provide any impetus to the GBP/JPY cross. The downside, however, remains cushioned, at least for now, amid the divergence between the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan monetary policy outlooks.

It is worth recalling that the BoE raised its benchmark interest rate by 25 bps last week – marking the first back-to-back hike since 2004. Adding to this, four out of nine MPC members voted for a more aggressive 50 bps hike in borrowing costs. Conversely, the BoJ has repeatedly said that it would retain its ultra-loose monetary policy.

The fundamental backdrop still seems tilted in favour of bullish traders. This, in turn, warrants some caution before confirming that the recent strong move up from the 200-day SMA has run out of steam. That said, tensions over the Northern Ireland protocol of the Brexit agreement might hold back traders from placing fresh bullish bets around the GBP/JPY cross.

Thursday, 10 February 2022

USD/CAD REFRESHES THREE-DAY HIGHS BUT RETREATS UNDER 1.2700 POST-US INFLATION REPORT

10 February 2022, 16:50

  • The USD/CAD appears to fade the US inflation report, which came higher than estimated.
  • US Treasury yields rise, led by the 10-year benchmark note at 2%.
  • USD/CAD Technical Outlook: Neutral biased, confined to the 1.2650-1.2790 range.

The USD/CAD pares Wednesday’s losses as the US inflation in January grinds higher, reaching a 40-year high, while the US central bank prepares to begin its tightening cycle. At the time of writing, the USD/CAD is trading at 1.2693.

On Thursday, the Department of Labor reported that January’s inflation rose by 7.5%, higher than the 7.3% estimated annually based. Excluding volatile items like energy and food, also called Core Consume Price Index (CPI), broke the 6% threshold, higher than the 5.9% expected, the most witnessed since 1982.

Market’s reaction

The USD/CAD initial reaction was upwards, from 1.2670s region to 1.2714, though stalled around February0s 9 daily high. Meanwhile, the US 10-year Treasury yield reached the 2% mark in the bond market, rallying more than five basis points after the US inflation report.

An absent Canadian economic docket left USD/CAD traders adrift to US macroeconomic data. On the US front, alongside the inflation figures, Initial Jobless Claims for the week ending on February 5, increased 223K, lower than the 230K estimated by economists, while Continuing Jobless Claims stayed unchanged at 1621K compared to the revision of the previous week.

USD/CAD Price Forecast: Technical outlook

The USD/CAD is confined to the 1.2650-1.2790 area. The 50-day moving average (DMA) at 1.2703 above the spot price is resistance, capping moves since Monday, while the 100 and the 200-DMA at 1,2616 and 1.2519 are almost “horizontal” well below the exchange rate.

That said, the USD/cad first resistance would be the aforementioned 50-DMA. Breach of the latter would expose the January 28 cycle high at 1.2796. Once that is broken, the USD/CAD will have a clear path towards December’s 2021 swing high at 1.2963.

GBP/USD REFRESHES DAILY LOW, AROUND 1.3525 AREA ON STRONGER US CPI

10 February 2022, 15:41

  • GBP/USD dived over 50 pips in the last hour amid a strong pickup in the USD demand.
  • Hotter-than-expected US CPI print boosted Fed rate hike bets and lifted the greenback.
  • Bears might wait for sustained break below the 1.3500 mark before placing fresh bets.

the GBP/USD pair witnessed a dramatic turnaround in reaction to stronger US CPI prints and dived to a fresh daily low, around the 1.3525 region in the last hour.

Following a brief consolidation, the US dollar caught fresh bids during the early North American session following the release of the latest US consumer inflation figures. This, in turn, was seen as a key factor that attracted some selling around the GBP/USD pair and led to a sharp pullback of over 50 pips from the daily high, near the 1.3580 region.

According to the data released this Thursday, the headline US CPI edged higher to 0.6% in January as against expectations for a reading of 0.5%. Moreover, the yearly rate reached a fresh multi-decade high and accelerate to 7.5% during the reported month, up from 7% recorded at the end of 2021, against surpassing consensus estimates.

Adding to this, the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, rose 6.0% from a year ago as against 5.5% in December and 5.9% anticipated. The data boosted bets for a 50 bps Fed rate hike in March, which was evident from an uptick in the US Treasury bond yields. This, in turn, benefitted the USD and exerted pressure around the GBP/USD pair.

It will now be interesting to find if the pair is able to find some buying at lower levels or weakens further below the key 1.3500 mark, confirming a near-term bearish breakdown. Hence, it will be prudent to wait for a strong follow-through selling before traders start positioning for any further near-term depreciating move for the GBP/USD pair.

Technical levels to watch

USD/INR TO ADVANCE NICELY TOWARDS 77.50 BY YEAR-END AMID MORE DOVISH RBI – STANDARD CHARTERED

10 February 2022, 15:49

India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) kept both the repo and the reverse repo rate unchanged and maintained its accommodative policy stance. In the view of analysts at Standard Chartered, RBI’s dovish rhetoric poses yet another headwind – they remain bearish on the INR.

Dovish RBI supports bearish INR view

“MPC maintains status quo on repo and reverse repo rates. We continue to expect the repo rate to be hiked from August; corridor normalisation likely by June vs our previous expectation of April.”

“We think the RBI’s dovish rhetoric relative to market expectations will act as another headwind for the INR, particularly at a time when major central banks are adopting a much more hawkish stance.”

“We maintain our targets for USD/INR at 75.50 by end-March and 77.50 by year-end.”

 

EUR/USD SINKS TO WEEKLY LOWS NEAR 1.1380 ON US CPI

10 February 2022, 16:00

  • EUR/USD reverses the initial optimism and breaches 1.1400.
  • US CPI rose 7.5% YoY in January. Core CPI gained 6.0% YoY.
  • US Initial Claims rose by 223K in the week to February 5.

The sudden bout of strength in the greenback forced EUR/USD to give away earlier gains and break below the 1.1400 support on Thursday.

EUR/USD weaker post-US CPI

EUR/USD drops to new multi-session lows after US inflation figures tracked by the CPI surprised to the upside in January, showing consumer prices rose 7.5% from a year earlier while prices excluding food and energy costs rose 6.0% also on a yearly basis.

The higher-than-expected US CPI gave extra wings to the buck and US yields and reinforce further the speculation of a more aggressive lift-off by the Fed at the March meeting.

Extra results from the US docket also saw weekly Claims bettering estimates after rising 223K in the week to February 5.

EUR/USD levels to watch

So far, spot is losing 0.12% at 1.1407 and faces the next up barrier at 1.1483 (2022 high Feb.4) followed by 1.1496 (200-week SMA) and finally 1.1664 (200-day SMA). On the other hand, a break below 1.1381 (weekly low Feb.10) would target 1.1323 (55-day SMA) en route to 1.1121 (2022 low Jan.28).

 

USD/JPY RALLIES FURTHER BEYOND 116.00 MARK, EYEING 2021 HIGH POST-US CPI

10 February 2022, 16:04

  • USD/JPY rallied hard and shot to over one-month high during the early North American session.
  • Stronger US CPI prints pushed the US bond yields higher and provided a strong lift to the USD.
  • Technical buying above the 115.70 region and the 116.00 mark contributed to the momentum.

The USD/JPY pair caught fresh bids during the early North American session and surged past the 116.00 mark, hitting over a one-month high in reaction to stronger US CPI.

Data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this Thursday showed that the headline CPI in the US edged higher to 0.6% in January as against 0.5% expected and the previous. Moreover, the yearly rate jumped to a fresh multi-decade high and accelerate to 7.5% during the reported month. This was above consensus estimates pointing to a rise to 7.3% from the 7% recorded at the end of 2021.

Additional details revealed that the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, climbed 6.0% from a year ago as against 5.5% in December and 5.9% anticipated. The data lifted market bets for a 50 bps Fed rate hike in March. This, in turn, pushed the yield on the 2-year US government bond, which is more sensitive to rate hike expectations, to the highest level since February 2020, around 1.434%.

Adding to this, the yield on the benchmark 10-year US note shot back closer to the 2.0% threshold, or the highest level since August 2019 touched earlier this week. This prompted aggressive short-covering around the US dollar and provided a strong boost to the USD/JPY pair. The momentum confirmed a bullish breakout through the 115.70 area and took along some trading stops near the 116.00 round figure.

Sustained break through the mentioned hurdle might have already set the stage for additional gains and supports prospects for a move towards testing 2021 high, around the 116.35 region. Some follow-through buying will be seen as a fresh trigger for bullish traders and pave the way for an extension of the recent appreciating move witnessed since the beginning of this month.

EUROPEAN COMMISSION RAISES 2022 INFLATION FORECAST TO 3.5% FROM 2.2%

10 February 2022, 12:14

The European Commission announced on Thursday that it raised the eurozone 2022 inflation forecast to 3.5% from 2.2% in November's forecast, as reported by Reuters. For 2023, the Commission sees inflation at 2.2%, compared to 1.7% in November. 

The publication further showed that the 2022 growth forecast got revised lower to 4% from 4.3%. 

"Multiple headwinds have chilled Europe's economy this winter: the swift spread of Omicron, a further rise in inflation driven by soaring energy prices and persistent supply-chain disruptions," European Economic Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said, per Reuters. "With these headwinds expected to fade progressively, we project growth to pick up speed again already this spring."

Market reaction

This report doesn't seem to be having a significant impact on the shared currency's performance against its rivals. EUR/USD was last seen trading in the positive territory near mid-1.1400s.

SILVER PRICE ANALYSIS: XAG/USD BULLS HAVE THE UPPER HAND ABOVE 100-DAY SMA

10 February 2022, 12:35

  • Silver edged higher for the fifth straight day and climbed to a two-week high on Thursday.
  • The overnight sustained move above the 100-day SMA supports prospects for further gains.
  • Bulls might now aim to reclaim the $24.00 mark and test the YTD high touched in January.

Silver traded with a mild positive bias through the first half of the European session and was last seen hovering near a two-week high, around the $23.35 region. The uptick, however, lacked bullish conviction as traders now seemed to wait for the release of the US CPI report, due later during the early North American session.

From a technical perspective, the overnight sustained strength above the 100-day SMA could be seen as a fresh trigger for the XAG/USD bulls. Some follow-through buying beyond the $23.40-$23.45 resistance would reaffirm the positive bias and set the stage for an extension of the appreciating move witnessed over the past one week or so.

The positive outlook is reinforced by the fact that technical indicators on the daily chart have just started moving into bullish territory. Hence, a subsequent strength towards reclaiming the $24.00 round-figure mark, en-route the YTD high around the $24.70 area touched on January 20, remains a distinct possibility.

On the flip side, the 100-day SMA resistance breakpoint, around the $23.20-$23.15 region, now seems to protect the immediate downside ahead of the $23.00 mark. A convincing break below would expose the $22.75 support area before the XAG/USD drops to mid-$22.00, which if broken decisively will negate any near-term positive bias.

The XAG/USD would then turn vulnerable and accelerate the slide towards the next relevant support is near the $22.00 mark. Some follow-through selling will shift the bias in favour of bearish traders and pave the way for a slide towards challenging the double-bottom support, around the $21.40 region.

EUR/USD HOLDS ONTO DAILY GAINS, LOOKING AT 1.1450

9 February 2022, 18:43

  • EUR/USD manages to remain above 1.1400, with a modest bullish bias.
  • US dollar weaker amid a retreat in yields and risk appetite.

The EUR/USD is moving sideways between 1.1425 and 1.1445 on Wednesday with a bullish bias, on the back of a weaker greenback across the board and amid tightening expectations from the European Central Bank.  

DXY and yields down, stock up

The US Dollar Index (DXY) is falling 0.20% on Wednesday affected by the decline in US yields that moved away of multi-month highs. The US 10-year stands at 1.92% and the 30-year at 2.22%. Also higher equity prices weigh on the dollar. In Wall Street the Dow Jones again 0.82% and the Nasdaq 1.53%.

Market participants await Thursday US CPI reading. The index is expected to have climbed in January to 7.3% (annual rate).  The numbers will likely influence on market expectations about the Federal Reserve’s policy.

The EUR/USD is up more than 150 pips from the level it had a week ago on the back of a change in tightening expectation from the ECB. The rally found resistance at the January top at 1.1480/85. The mentioned area continues to be a key level that if broken would clear the way for 1.1500 and more.

In the very short-term while above 1.1425, the intraday bullish bias is likely to remain in place. A slide below would expose again 1.1400. The next support below stands at 1.1370/80, the last defense to the current positive short-term outlook for the euro.

USD/JPY PRICE ANALYSIS: RETREATS FROM WEEKLY-TOPS TO 115.40S AMID A LIGHT CALENDAR

9 February 2022, 19:05

  • Broad US dollar weakness across the board weighed on the USD/JPY pair.
  • Falling US Treasury yields and demand for riskier assets keep the USD/JPY subdued.
  • USD/JPY Technical Outlook: Remains upward biased ahead of the US CPI for January.

On Wednesday, the USD/JPY retreats from weekly highs ahead of the release of US inflation figures, alongside the slip of US Treasury yields. At the time of writing, the USD/JPY is trading at 115.44, down 0.08%.

Financial markets mood is positive, as shown by European and US equity indices printing gains. The US 10-year Treasury yield is dipping three basis points, to sit at 1.925%, while the US Dollar Index drops 0.20%, currently at 95.44.

USD/JPY Price Forecast: Technical outlook

In the overnight session for North American traders, the pair reached a daily high at 115.68, followed by a drop to the downslope one-month-old resistance/support trendline that passes around the 115.25-35 area. Even though the USD/JPY retreated to the abovementioned trendline, the pair remained above it, confirming the upward bias. 

That said, the USD/JPY first resistance would be 116.00. Breach of the latter could pave the way for further gains and expose a 24-year-old downslope trendline drawn from August 1998, swing highs that pass around 117.00. An upward break would expose the January 2017 swing high at 118.61.