Thursday, September 3, 2009

Gold and silver surge as safe−haven demand returns

London, 03 September 2009 - Gold rallied to its best in almost 3-months Wednesday, testing briefly above $980/oz as concerns about the US financial sector and of possible regulatory restrictions in energy trading triggered a surge of safe-haven demand. Silver was also upbeat, rising 2.25% while platinum and palladium reversed earlier weakness to close unchanged. The rest of the commodity sector was less buoyant with the CRB Index rising just 0.25% while NYMEX crude was unchanged closing at $68.05. The rally in gold also triggered a rallying in EUR/USD while the USD Index declined 0.5%. US equities finished with small declines with both the Dow and S&P off 0.3% while markets are mixed overnight with the Nikkei currently down 0.6% and the HSI up 1%. The focus today will be the ECB rate announcement and accompany statement while economic data will show Eurozone, UK and US Services PMI and US Jobless Claims.

Gold saw a relatively flat start to the day trading between $951.75-56.25 across Asia and Europe. The metal rallied initially on the US opening, pushing to $967 as some 5000-lots - rumoured to be Central Bank related - were bought on COMEX, before gold surged again around 2-hours later as short covering was triggered. The metal closed at $976.80 and hit a 3-month high of $980.70 in after-market trade. Some light profit taking has been seen this morning but gold remains supported and could look to extend its gains to challenge the June high of $990.20 as concerns of a possible equity correction prompts fresh diversification into safe-haven assets.

Gold

Silver closed Wednesday at $15.35 shortly after posting a high of $15.48 and has rallied to $15.56 this morning. The metal may now get a further boost after the AU/AG ratio broke 63.02 this morning with momentum indicators suggesting a re-test of June $16.25 high.

Silver

Both platinum and palladium succumbed to long liquidation during European trade before recovering on the back of rallies in gold and silver. Platinum recovered from a low of $1205 to close up $1 at $1230 while palladium settled unchanged at $287 after posting a low of $281. For the moment platinum should hold the current $1218-75 range while increased investment demand for palladium still has the potential to test the $296-305 area. ETF Securities flows were mixed yesterday - platinum holdings declined 1.9Kozs, palladium increased 4.6Kozs to a record 408.8Kozs.

Platinum


Palladium

US T−Note breaks above first key resistance level

Markets: Fixed Income

On Wednesday, government bonds extended recent gains and moved (further) above first key resistance levels. Indeed, following the Bund, the US T-Note future trades now also above the neckline of a double bottom formation, which if sustained would improve the technical outlook. Overall, government bonds still benefited from the deterioration in risk appetite after Tuesday’s correction on the equity and commodity markets added to the feeling that the recent rally in more risky assets has gone far enough. However, looking cross markets, yesterday price action wasn’t as clear cut as Tuesday’s from the risk appetite/aversion spectre. Indeed, bonds gained as did gold and intra-EMU government spreads widened, but equities moved fairly sideways as did commodities and the euro gained (slightly) on the dollar. The Minutes of the August Fed meeting confirmed the market consensus that the current ultra- accommodative stance will be maintained for an extended period.

In a daily perspective, the US yield curve flattened, as 10- and 30-year yields fell by respectively 5.7 and 7.2 basis points compared to a decline by respectively 0.8 and 5 basis points in 2- and 5-year yields. Consequently, US 30-year yields fell slightly below the neckline of a double top formation at 4.15%, while 10-year yields are approaching a similar neckline at 3.25%. A sustained break below would materially improve the technical outlook for bonds. In the euro zone, the German yield curve steepened slightly ahead of today’s ECB meeting, where no change to the ECB’s monetary policy stance is expected. German 2-year yields declined by 2.1 basis points to their lowest levels since March last year, while 5- and 10-year yields fell by respectively 1.6 and 1.0 basis points and 30-year yields even rose by 2 basis points. The deterioration in risk appetite was also reflected in the intra-EMU sovereign spreads, which widened further to their highest level in a month.


US T-Note breaks above first key resistance level

Today, all eyes are focused on the ECB policy meeting. Despite the recent improvement of the economic outlook, we do expect the ECB governing council to maintain their ultra-accommodative monetary policy stance at today’s policy meeting. As such, no change in interest rates or non-standard monetary policy should be expected. Therefore, the economic recovery looks still too fragile, while the inflation outlook is not expected to threaten price stability. This is likely to be reflected in the new ECB staff projections for growth and inflation, which will show inflation to remain clearly below 2%, despite an upward revision of the growth outlook. Such a continuation of their ultra-accommodative policy stance will put the ECB in line with the other major central banks, which have recently also decided to maintain (Fed) or even to extend (Bank of England) their policy accommodation. During the Q&A, a lot of attention is likely to be focussed on the liquidity operations, as markets will be eager to know whether the next one-year tender at the end of September will also offer unlimited liquidity at a fixed rate of 1% or whether any surcharge will be imposed. Given the marked decline in money market rates in response to the first operation, we don’t expect any surcharge to be imposed. Another issue remains the hoarding of cash by banks, as banks are still parking huge amounts at the ECB deposit facility instead of lending it to customers. Therefore, it will be interesting to see whether Trichet is also considering any further steps to discourage banks from depositing money at the central bank. For example, in Sweden, the Riksbank has already taken an important step by cutting its deposit rate into negative territory at - 0.25%, while Bank of England’s governor King recently indicated the Bank will also consider a further cut in the interest rate they pay on bank reserves. Although we don’t expect a decision on the issue yet, comments with regard to the use of the deposit facility should be closely monitored.

Besides, the ECB meeting, the eco calendar is also attractive today with the euro zone retail sales (July), services PMI (final figure), US claims and non-manufacturing ISM (August). In June, euro zone retail sales dropped by 0.2% M/M, while a slight increase was expected. For this month, the consensus is looking for a slight increase (by 0.1% M/M). We believe that the risks might be on the upside of expectations due to the summer discounts. The final figure of euro zone services PMI is expected to confirm the first estimate which showed an increase from 45.7 to 49.5. After the upward revision in the manufacturing PMI, a higher outcome is not excluded. Last month, the US non-manufacturing ISM unexpectedly deteriorated. For August however, the consensus is looking for an increase from 46.4 to 48 and after the manufacturing ISM, we believe that the risks are still on the upside of expectations. In the week ended August 29, initial claims are expected to have dropped by 5 000 to 565 000. Continuing claims, which are reported with an extra week lag, are forecasted to have dropped by 8 000 to a total number of 6 125 000.

On the supply front, France and Spain will tap the market today. While Spain will tap two shorter-term Bono’s in the 3- and 5-year segment for an amount of €3.5-4.5B, France will tap three longer-term OAT’s in the 6-, 10- and 14-year segment for an amount of €6.5-7.5B. In the US, the Treasury will announce the amounts of next week’s longer-term auctions.

Regarding trading. Over the past two months, government bond markets have performed strongly despite the general improvement in the economic outlook. Indeed, despite the rally on the equity, commodity and credit markets, yields are still well below this year highs set at the beginning of June. The improvement in risk appetite has also led to a significant tightening in the sovereign credit spreads, which has even pushed yields of several EMU member countries to new cycle lows. This suggests that the outlook for central bank policy rates to remain low for extended period of time has succeeded in bringing also longer-term yields lower. This week’s trading however signals rising doubts about whether the recent rally on the equity, commodity and credit markets has gone far enough. A further substantial correction on these markets should continue to support the US and German government bond markets, but may at the same time also lead to a widening of the intra- EMU sovereign spreads.

Yesterday, the technical outlook for bonds further improved, after the US T-Note future moved above the neckline of a double bottom formation at 117-19. A sustained break above would materially improve the technical outlook for bonds, certainly if the break would also be confirmed in yields, where important support is seen at around 3.25% both in German and US 10-year yields.

In the UK, the calendar contains the services PMI. Services PMI is forecasted to extend its rebound in August. The consensus is looking for a figure of 54.0, but the risks might be on the downside of expectations after the deterioration in the manufacturing PMI. On the supply front, the DMO will tap its 30-year Gilt 4.25% 2039 for an amount of £2.25B.

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Asian equities move off of their worst levels

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Asian Market Update: Asian equities move off of their worst levels, as official comments propel Chinese equities to more than 3% gains in early trading

- In Asian economic data, South Korea's Q2 GDP was revised higher and to the fastest pace since Q4 of 2003, due to strength in business investment and consumer spending (SOUTH KOREA Q2 FINAL GDP Q/Q: 2.6% V 0.1% PRIOR; Y/Y: -2.2% V -4.3% PRIOR). In Australia, the trade deficit widened in July to a higher than expected A$1.56B [(AU) AUSTRALIA JULY TRADE BALANCE (A$): -1.56B V -880ME (prior revised to -538M from -441M)]. Among the highlights of the trade data, exports declined by 1% m/m and imports rose by 4% m/m. Exports to China in dollar terms rose to A$3.7B from A$3.5B m/m, while iron ore export sales revenues rose to A$2.5B from A$2.3B m/m. In other Australian data, the Aug AIG performance of services index rose to 48.0 from 44.1 prior, driven by increases in inventories, deliveries and employment.

- In forex, the USD and JPY opened the session firmer against the European major and commodity currencies, but have since pared their gains, following the morning equity rally in Shanghai. Earlier during the session, USD/JPY moved below 92.00 for the first time since mid July, while GBP/JPY traded below 150.00 before rebounding. Currently, the yen is weaker across the board, and the best gainers among the yen crosses include NZD/JPY, AUD/JPY and CAD/JPY. The USD is declining against the EUR and CHF, but gaining marginally against the pound. Additionally, the USD is weaker against the commodity currencies.

- Most Asian equities are either higher or off of their worst levels. The Nikkei 225 is lower by more than 0.10%, led by financials and consumer goods companies. At the break, the Shanghai Composite ended up by just under 3.5% in a broad based rally, led by advances in gold miners and financials. Earlier during the session, the People's Bank of China's Shanghai branch was quoted as saying that the central bank would execute "appropriately loose monetary policy" and increase support for the economy. Australia's S&P ASX 200 has reversed most of the opening losses, led by health care and telecom companies. Taiwan's Taiex is gaining on shares of consumer companies and technology firms. South Korea's Kospi has moved off of the session's lows, supported by gains in shares of financials. The Hang Seng is higher by more than 0.50%, tracking the gains in China.

- Crude oil prices are higher and trading above $68/bbl, after ending marginally weaker in NY floor trading. Crude oil is tracking the advance being seen in Asian equities, particularly in Shanghai. Spot Gold is marginally lower after rallying sharply during the NY COMEX session. Of note, it was reported during the NY session that China plans to buy $50B in IMF Special Drawing Rights, as markets continue to look for signs that China is diversifying its forex reserves. (Note: All quotes are as of 01:01 EST)

Daily Forex Overview

Previous session overview

The dollar rebounded against the yen after hitting another seven-week low in Asia Thursday as strong Shanghai share markets prompted speculators to buy back the U.S. currency in exchange for the safe-haven yen.

During early Asian hours, the greenback slipped to JPY91.94, its lowest level since July 13, as grim Japanese stocks and weaker-than-expected U.S. private-sector jobs data overnight spawned views that global economic recovery may be slower than previously thought, dealers said.

Weak Japanese share markets also dented demand for risk-sensitive currencies like the euro and dollar. Tokyo's benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average index was down 0.4% in the early Asian session.

But later, the dollar recovered to as high as JPY92.38 - higher than JPY92.13 in New York late Wednesday - as solid Shanghai share markets boosted speculators' risk appetite, dealers said.

The single currency traded sideways in Asian session and fell to around USD1.4190 in U.S. morning due to active cross selling versus sterling and yen, however, buying interest lifted euro from there on short-covering and greenback's weakness and price rebounded to session high at USD1.4295 later in the day.

The British pound fell to a near 6-week low yesterday against the dollar, and hit it's lowest since mid-July for the third straight day against the yen. The pound came under pressure vs. most major currencies as falling equity markets raised risk aversion, and on lingering concerns over the health of UK's economy.

The Australian dollar was stronger late in the Asian session Thursday, buoyed by a run higher in the price of gold and strong economic growth data but capped ahead of the release of U.S. employment data.


Market expectation

The euro's movements are narrow so far Thursday, ahead of the European Central Bank's meeting, although RBS sees scope for a bit more weakness against the yen. The UK pound is also barely changed against major rivals.

Economists are expecting the European Central Bank to keep interest rates, as well as its additional policy measures, unchanged yet again at its meeting in the week ahead, staying in wait-and-see mode amid growing signs that the euro-zone economy is emerging from recession.

A positive open in Asian equities, led by the Shanghai Index, reversed this early tone, the snap back in yen crosses lifting euro-dollar to an overnight high of USD1.4283. Traders noted decent Asian sell interest above USD1.4280 overnight, but not linking interest to the most active Asian sovereign. Positive tone remained into early Europe, which has taken rate on to USD1.4288, but upside progress seen sticky with sell interest said to extend toward USD1.4320, with talk of stops building above USD1.4330. Demand remains in place to USD1.4250, a break here to allow for a deeper pullback toward USD1.4210, with bids said to be building here, interest extending to USD1.4190 (Wednesday low USD1.4193).

European stocks are expected to open lower Thursday, weighed down by a negative close on Wall Street overnight, as investors adopt a cautious stance ahead of the European Central Bank's monthly news conference and Friday's key U.S. employment report.

The U.S. Department of Labor issues its non-farm payrolls data for August Friday with economists expecting the unemployment rate to rise to 9.5% from 9.4% in July and 233,000 jobs lost in the month.


Most important events of the day


3-SepCount. Event For Unit Imp. Act. Cons. Prev.
0:00WLD Meeting of Trade Ministers of the Major Economies Forum to discuss the Doha round of trade talks

Low


1:00US Dallas Fed President Fisher speaks on "A Look at Current Economic Issues" at University of California event

Low


1:30AU Trade Balance Jul A$ bn High
-0.88-0.441
3:00NZ ANZ Commodity Prices Aug % m/m High

1
6:45FR ILO Unemployment Q2 % Low

9.1
7:30SE Riksbank interest rate announcement

Low


7:30NL CPI Aug % m/m Low
0.3-1.1
7:30NL CPI Aug % y/y Low
0.40.2
7:45IT Services PMI Aug index Low
4644.5
7:50FR Services PMI Aug index Low
48.948.9
7:55DEServices PMI Aug Index Low
54.154.1
8:00GB Halifax House Price Index (3rd-4th) Aug % 3m y/y Low
-10.1-12.1
8:00GB Halifax House Price Index (3rd-4th) Aug % m/m Low
11.1
8:00EU Composite PMI Aug index Low
5050
8:00EU Services PMI Aug index Low
49.549.5
8:00NO Investment Stats Oil Activity 2009-2010 Q3 NOK bn Low

145.2
8:30GB CIPS Services PMI Aug index Low
5453.2
9:00EU Retail Trade Jul % m/m High
0.1-0.2
9:00IS Trade Balance (P) Aug ISKbn Low

6.814
9:00EU Retail Trade Jul % y/y High
-2.2-2.4
9:00IS Trade blance (P) Aug EUR bn Low


9:00WLD OECD press conference on the Interim Economic Outlook for Europe, US and Japan

Low


11:45EU ECB interest rate announcement

Low


12:30US Initial Claims 29-Augk Med
565570
12:30EU ECB press conference following interest rate announcement

Low


14:00US ISM Services Aug index Low


14:00US ISM Non-Man Aug index Low
4846.4
14:00EU ECB Governing Council member Stark to deliver keynote speech at "New Finance Architecture" conference#

Low


16:00IS Current Account Q2 ISKbn Low

-49
23:50JP MoF Capital Spending Q2 % y/y Low
-23-25.3
Published on Thu, Sep 3 2009, 07:26 G

A nervous Asia at the open responds with a rebound in risk appetite − thanks to China

Sweden and EU central bank meetings may not ignite activity; US jobless claims to come


MAJOR HEADLINES – PREVIOUS SESSION

  • US Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications out at -2.2% vs. +7.5% prior

  • US Aug. Challenger Job Cuts out at -13.8% y/y vs. -5.7% prior

  • US Aug. ADP Employment Change out at -298k vs. -250k expected and revised -360k prior

  • US Q2 Final Non-farm Productivity out at +6.6% vs. +6.4% previously

  • US Q2 Final Unit Labour costs out at -5.9% vs. -5.8% previously

  • US Jul. Factory Orders out at +1.3% vs. +2.2% expected and revised +0.9% prior

  • AU Aug. AiG Performance of Service Index out at 48.0 vs. 44.1 prior

  • AU Jul. Trade Balance out at –A$1556 mln vs. –A$880 mln expected and revised –A$538 mln prior

  • NZ ANZ Aug. Commodity Prices out at +4.3% vs. +1.0% prior


THEMES TO WATCH – UPCOMING SESSION

(All times GMT)

  • Sweden Riksbank Rate Announcement (0730)

  • GE Services PMI (0755)

  • EU Services/Composite PMI (0800)

  • UK Services PMI (0830)

  • EU Euro-zone Retail Sales (0900)

  • EU ECB Rate announcement (1145)

  • US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims (1230)

  • EU ECB Press conference (1230)

  • US Vice-President Biden to speak (1230)

  • US Non-manufacturing ISM (1400)

  • EU ECB’s Stark to speak (1400)

Market Comments:

Currency traders were again frustrated yesterday as market direction for the USD appeared to swing with abandon and failed to break out of established ranges. Data releases generally were disappointing with Challenger job cuts out at -13.8%, the ADP employment change coming in at -298k (versus -250k expected) and factory orders only +1.3% versus 2.2% expected. Equity markets reacted with the customary pessimistic air (note the S&P drifted further below the 1,000 mark) but the reaction in currency markets was less obvious.
Markets were undecided whether to chase the weak asset=reduced risk appetite = firmer dollar or the weak data=firmer bond markets=weaker dollar correlations.

There was no such indecisiveness in gold markets as the yellow metal soared a massive 25 big figures after we broke out of the recent consolidation range. Debate still rages as to the reasons behind the move, varying from central bank divestments into gold, macro fund buying in cash and options markets to simply a complacent market used to ranges and too heavily positioned one way. Market talk suggests that volumes were still small relative to the magnitude of the move.

The minutes of the last Fed meeting did not contain anything new – low rates for some time amid a subdued inflation environment, reduced downside should see a slow return to growth but still vulnerable to shocks while the labour market remains a concern. Late in the session Fed’s Plosser appeared with some slightly hawkish comments – there is a need to ensure programs don’t spur inflation and “we have to begin” pulling back market aid and expects growth in H2. While there is clearly optimism and some stability in housing, he is still cautious about unemployment stating it was “clearly an issue”.

As Asia opened, markets picked up a story in the China Securities Journal which highlighted that China’s banking regulator has suspended approving new business for banks that have capital adequacy ratios below 9%. Officially, China banks are required to have a minimum ratio of 8% but the banking regulator has been urging them since late last year to raise the ratio to 10%. Latest data, as at June 30, showed that 3 of China’s 14 public banks had ratios below 9%. So, markets were braced for a weaker open, and got it in the Nikkei which fell 0.5%, and this helped pull USDJPY and JPY crosses lower – initially. The open of China stock markets was the reverse - opening flat and pushing higher during the morning - as local players preferred to focus on reports in mainstream State newspapers that the vice-chairman of the China Securities regulatory Commission, Liu Xinhua, said late Wednesday said the commission would promote the steady development of the country’s equity market (official support?). By lunch the Shanghai Composite was up over 3%.

For today’s session we have the rate announcements from two central banks – Sweden’s Riksbank and the ECB we no change expected from either. At the post-meeting press conference ECB chief Trichet is likely to maintain the more dovish speak of late, though there may be some mention of exit strategies given this topic may be on the agenda of the upcoming G-20 meeting. Elsewhere in Europe we hear PMI services indices from Germany, EU and UK followed by Euro-zone retail sales. Into the US session we see the weekly jobless claims data, though this is likely over-shadowed by tomorrow’s non-farm payroll and unemployment release. Non-manufacturing ISM data rounds off the session.


A nervous Asia at the open responds with a rebound in risk appetite − thanks to China

Sweden and EU central bank meetings may not ignite activity; US jobless claims to come


MAJOR HEADLINES – PREVIOUS SESSION

  • US Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications out at -2.2% vs. +7.5% prior

  • US Aug. Challenger Job Cuts out at -13.8% y/y vs. -5.7% prior

  • US Aug. ADP Employment Change out at -298k vs. -250k expected and revised -360k prior

  • US Q2 Final Non-farm Productivity out at +6.6% vs. +6.4% previously

  • US Q2 Final Unit Labour costs out at -5.9% vs. -5.8% previously

  • US Jul. Factory Orders out at +1.3% vs. +2.2% expected and revised +0.9% prior

  • AU Aug. AiG Performance of Service Index out at 48.0 vs. 44.1 prior

  • AU Jul. Trade Balance out at –A$1556 mln vs. –A$880 mln expected and revised –A$538 mln prior

  • NZ ANZ Aug. Commodity Prices out at +4.3% vs. +1.0% prior


THEMES TO WATCH – UPCOMING SESSION

(All times GMT)

  • Sweden Riksbank Rate Announcement (0730)

  • GE Services PMI (0755)

  • EU Services/Composite PMI (0800)

  • UK Services PMI (0830)

  • EU Euro-zone Retail Sales (0900)

  • EU ECB Rate announcement (1145)

  • US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims (1230)

  • EU ECB Press conference (1230)

  • US Vice-President Biden to speak (1230)

  • US Non-manufacturing ISM (1400)

  • EU ECB’s Stark to speak (1400)

Market Comments:

Currency traders were again frustrated yesterday as market direction for the USD appeared to swing with abandon and failed to break out of established ranges. Data releases generally were disappointing with Challenger job cuts out at -13.8%, the ADP employment change coming in at -298k (versus -250k expected) and factory orders only +1.3% versus 2.2% expected. Equity markets reacted with the customary pessimistic air (note the S&P drifted further below the 1,000 mark) but the reaction in currency markets was less obvious.
Markets were undecided whether to chase the weak asset=reduced risk appetite = firmer dollar or the weak data=firmer bond markets=weaker dollar correlations.

There was no such indecisiveness in gold markets as the yellow metal soared a massive 25 big figures after we broke out of the recent consolidation range. Debate still rages as to the reasons behind the move, varying from central bank divestments into gold, macro fund buying in cash and options markets to simply a complacent market used to ranges and too heavily positioned one way. Market talk suggests that volumes were still small relative to the magnitude of the move.

The minutes of the last Fed meeting did not contain anything new – low rates for some time amid a subdued inflation environment, reduced downside should see a slow return to growth but still vulnerable to shocks while the labour market remains a concern. Late in the session Fed’s Plosser appeared with some slightly hawkish comments – there is a need to ensure programs don’t spur inflation and “we have to begin” pulling back market aid and expects growth in H2. While there is clearly optimism and some stability in housing, he is still cautious about unemployment stating it was “clearly an issue”.

As Asia opened, markets picked up a story in the China Securities Journal which highlighted that China’s banking regulator has suspended approving new business for banks that have capital adequacy ratios below 9%. Officially, China banks are required to have a minimum ratio of 8% but the banking regulator has been urging them since late last year to raise the ratio to 10%. Latest data, as at June 30, showed that 3 of China’s 14 public banks had ratios below 9%. So, markets were braced for a weaker open, and got it in the Nikkei which fell 0.5%, and this helped pull USDJPY and JPY crosses lower – initially. The open of China stock markets was the reverse - opening flat and pushing higher during the morning - as local players preferred to focus on reports in mainstream State newspapers that the vice-chairman of the China Securities regulatory Commission, Liu Xinhua, said late Wednesday said the commission would promote the steady development of the country’s equity market (official support?). By lunch the Shanghai Composite was up over 3%.

For today’s session we have the rate announcements from two central banks – Sweden’s Riksbank and the ECB we no change expected from either. At the post-meeting press conference ECB chief Trichet is likely to maintain the more dovish speak of late, though there may be some mention of exit strategies given this topic may be on the agenda of the upcoming G-20 meeting. Elsewhere in Europe we hear PMI services indices from Germany, EU and UK followed by Euro-zone retail sales. Into the US session we see the weekly jobless claims data, though this is likely over-shadowed by tomorrow’s non-farm payroll and unemployment release. Non-manufacturing ISM data rounds off the session.


Bullish Attempt to Return Euro Positions

EUR
The estimated test of key resistance range levels was confirmed but relative bullish activity rise, marked by OsMA trend indicator did not incline to the immediate implementation of pre-planned short positions. At the moment, considering the sign of bullish development incompleteness as well as preservation of bearish priority we can assume probability of rate achievement of Ichimoku cloud at 1,4290/1,4310 levels where it is recommended to evaluate the development of both parties activity according to the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term sales positions on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,4240/60, 1,4160/80 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,4100/20, 1,4040/60, 1,3980/1,4000. The alternative variant for sales will be below 1,4340 with the targets of 1,4380/1,4400, 1,4440/60.

www.ForexLtd.co.uk

CHF
The pre-planned break out variant for sales was implemented and the preservation of opened short positions is supported by relative bearish activity rise, marked by OsMA trend indicator at the break of key supports. At the moment, evaluating the current outlook as close activity parity of both parties but with the sign of bearish development incompleteness we can assume probability of further rate decline to Low levels of the end of August at 1,0540/60 where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term buying positions (with sales closed) the targets will be 1,0600/20, 1,0660/80, 1,0700/20 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,0760/80, 1,0820/40, 1,0880/1,0900. The alternative for sales renovation will be below 1,0500 with the targets of 1,0460/80, 1,0380/1,0400.

www.ForexLtd.co.uk
GBP
The pre-planned test of key resistance range levels was confirmed but relative bullish activity rise marked by OsMA trend indicator did not incline to the implementation of pre-planned short positions. At the moment considering sign of bullish development with the general outlook of planning priorities uncertainty as well as current descending direction of indicator chart we can assume probability of rate return to close 1,6220/40 supports where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term buying positions the targets will be 1,6280/1,6300, 1,6360/80, 1,6400/20 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,6460/80, 1,6540/60, 1,6600/20. The alternative for sales will be below 1,6180 with the targets of 1,6120/40, 1,6080/1,6100.

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JPY

The pre-planed short positions from key resistance range levels were implemented with the achievement of main estimated targets. OsMA trend indicator, having marked close activity parity of both parties in the current situation as it was before does not clarify the choice of planning priorities for today. Therefore, keeping to the principle of preservation of current tendency without having priority of any party we can suppose probability of rate return to channel line «3» at 92,40/60 levels, where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term sales on condition of formation of topping signals the targets will be 91,80/92,00 and (or) further break-out variant below 91,60 with the targets of 91,00/20, 90,40/60, 89,80/90,00. The alternative for buyers will be above 93,00 with the targets of 93,40/60,94,00/20, 94,60/80.

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Buy Dollar Pullbacks

Yesterday's dollar advance should be respected. Look to buy pullbacks.

Wave Stucture



Euro / US Dollar

Euro US Dollar

Putting to test trendline support, the EURUSD is consolidating following yesterday’s sell-off. I’ve been bearish for some time (admittedly too long probably) but the next multi-month move should be down hard (as per the wave count above). Resistance extends to 1.4280 - sell any rally above 1.4250.


British Pound / US Dollar

British Pound

If a 4th wave triangle ended at the end of July, then the subsequent rally to 1.7050 was a terminal thrust and a significant top is in place. A drop below 1.5800 is required in order to confirm that a top is in place however. Near term structure is not especially clear but a rally above 1.6390 could complete a flat correction from 1.6150. In such an event, fade the move against 1.6629.


Australian Dollar / US Dollar

Australian

As the AUDUSD nears its 2009 high, the bearish short term pattern has been called into question yet remained valid. A drop below .8151 would negate any bullish potential and open up a move to .7700. Short term resistance extends to .8380.


New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar

New Zealand

Coming under .6640 would negate the blow-off top scenario that I have discussed in recent days and also mean that channel support (since March) has been broken. In fact, that multi-month channel support is being put to test right now. Near term resistance is .6790-.6810.


US Dollar / Japanese Yen

Japanese Yen

I showed a weekly chart yesterday and the longer term analysis bears repeating - “A 4th triangle ended in 2007 above 124.00 therefore the decline from that level is viewed as a 5th wave that will not be considered complete until price drops to an all-time low (below the 1995 low near 80). The rally earlier this year met former support and rolled over - which increases confidence in the bearish bias. At this point, the short term picture is quite bearish below 95.10.”
Without a clear short term count, there is little to add. Divergence with momentum on shorter time frames warn of a corrective move higher. Resistance is 93.50.


US Dollar / Canadian Dollar

Canadian

The USDCAD is similar to the EURUSD in that until the pair breaks its range, there is no directional bias. However, a 5 wave decline is visible from 1.3068. The decline could be wave A of an A-B-C corrective decline or wave C of a larger flat from the December 2008 high. Either way, bulls are favored until at least 1.1730.


US Dollar / Swiss Franc

Swiss Franc

The USDCHF is in the exact same position as the EURUSD. A C wave is either complete or will complete upon slipping beneath the December 2008 low at 1.0367. A rally above channel resistance would strongly suggest a low.


British Pound / Japanese Yen

British Japanese

Turning to a longer term view of the GBPJPY - the entire rally from 118.79 is viewed as corrective. A double top near the 50% retracement of the decline from 215.98 may mark the end of a 4th wave advance. Expectations are for the GBPJPY to eventually drop below 118.79 in a 5th wave. Divergence with RSI at recent lows warn of a rally - which could be sharp.


Europe Ahead: Important Data in the Euro Zone Ahead of the ECB's Interest Rate Decision



The Euro Zone showed a successful path towards recovery, with the release of upbeat data one after another, reflecting the fast paces the economy is undertaking with the wise interventions by the European Central Bank (ECB). Now, there are more hopes that the economy may recover faster than the ECB expected in its latest announcements, referring to that the economy may recover by the second half of next year.

The 16-nation economy is continuing its ongoing improvement in the third quarter, after the release of optimistic data in the second quarter. GDP for the second quarter showed an ease in contraction to 0.1% from 2.5% contraction; the lowest since 1995, during the first quarter. If the economy continues at this pace, we could expect to see growth starting to spur from the third quarter, especially with the ongoing efforts by the ECB and national governments to shore up the economy.

Today, the euro area is releasing significant data, ahead of the interest rate decision and Trichet's speech. Retail Sales for July are expected to be released with expectations of progress. On the month, the rate is predicted to come in at 0.1% from -0.2%; while on the year, the reading is estimated to incline to -2.2% from -2.4%. PMI Services' final reading will also be released today, with expectations remaining unchanged at 49.0; whereas the PMI Composite is anticipated to remain steady at 50.0 as well.

Retail Sales in the euro zone are expected to show improvement this month, after the advance that was signaled in the previous period. However, retail sales are undertaking slow paces, since consumer income is still being impacted by the economic recession, which drove many firms to shed employees and cut income. The softening labor market conditions are still weighing on the economy and threatening recovery.

Euro Zone's unemployment rate for July surged to 9.5%, the highest since September 1999; from 9.4% in June, which means that many companies are still terminating employees to cut expenses to regain profits.

On the other hand, PMI services for the same month rose to its highest in a year and a half, while PMI composites reached the 50.0 barrier, the best record since more than a year. The incline was led by Germany, where PMI Services showed an expansion to 54.1. The index in Germany is also expected to linger at the same figure, when it is released later on today. In France, PMI Services climbed to the highest level since September 2008.

The ECB slashed the benchmark interest rate to a record low of 1% to boost the economy, amid the undergoing economic downturn. In addition, the bank started purchasing bonds worth 60 billion euros with new printed money since July 6, to support markets with liquidity, thereby reviving lending and spending. The strong monetary weapons used by the bank, along with the influential government assistance, gave an impetus to the economy and succeeded in moderating the pace of contraction across all sectors of the economy.

Policy Makers at the ECB will meet today, to announce the interest rate for September. The European central bank (ECB) is expected to keep key interest rates unchanged at its historical low of 1%; for the fourth consecutive month. The rate was lowered by 3.25% since October 2008, to give reinvigorate the economy after the massive degradation that hit all sectors on the back of the economic recession, which adversely impacted global economies last year.

The ECB previously mentioned that the recovery may face impediments; perhaps the most challenging is the rising unemployment curtailing spending, and therefore putting a downside pressure on prices. The general price level slipped the most, after energy costs slumped and unemployment spiked to its highest since 10 years. In July, prices in the euro area fell to -0.7%, recording the worst drop since records began in 1996. The inflation rate witnessed a massive decline in crude oil prices in 2008; when prices fell to their lowest of $33 a barrel, from its highest record above $147 a barrel.

The ECB expects the inflation rate to be negative on the short term; whereas on the medium and long term, they expect the rate to stabilize and remain close to the target. They also anticipate economic activities to remain weak in the coming period, despite the progress witnessed in the second quarter, after the efforts done by the ECB to jolt the economy out of recession.

Trichet and his economic team expect the inflation to remain between 0.1% and 0.5% in 2009. On the other hand, the European Commission predicts a reading under 0.5% for the euro region by the end of the current year, as a result of the ongoing contraction in the economies of 16-nation economy, where firms cut their production to respond to the dwindling domestic and global demand.


Czech politics are once again in the spotlight as the risk of more political turmoil increased significantly



Review

  • In a speech to the South African Parliament yesterday afternoon, the Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said that the economic recovery will be slow and this year’s budget deficit would certainly exceed the 3.8% of GDP that the Treasury had previously forecast. Given the much lower tax revenues due to the sharp economic downturn, along with no spending cuts to reduce government expenditure, it is very likely that the budget deficit may greatly exceed the previous forecast.
  • Czech politics are once again in the spotlight as the risk of more political turmoil increased significantly. Following the collapse of the centre-right minority government at the end of March during the Czech EU Presidency, the date for the early elections, initially set for 9-10 October, was thrown into doubt after the constitutional court received a complaint from one of the independent deputies over the early elections.

Preview

  • Today will be busy in terms of economic data in EMEA regions. A lot of focus will be on the South African current account deficit data for Q2. It is expected that lower imports due to lower domestic demand should narrow the current account deficit in Q2 compared to Q1. We expect Turkish inflation for August, due for release in the afternoon, to inch up slightly. Figures for Latvian industrial production in July are due today: we forecast -18.5%, unchanged from June.

Trading update

  • Most EMEA currencies remained soft on Wednesday as risk aversion took control of financial markets, triggered by the slide in US and Asian stock markets overnight. Although today will be eventful in EMEA regions, and, for instance, the ZAR could gain ground on current account figures, it is likely that EMEA currencies will to a large extent be driven by risk sentiment.
  • Demand for the Czech 10-year bonds in the bond auction held yesterday was three times stronger than the offer. This indicates that the political turmoil has so far been ignored by the markets, though the political crisis and budget worries could put the Czech bond market under pressure going forward.


Greek prime minister Karamanlis calls a snap election, probably for October 4th

Quote:

‘I don’t think it’s very helpful to try to define the right size for the financial sector any more than trying to define the right size of the cosmetics industry.’ Sir John Gieve (1950-)


The News:

Greek prime minister Karamanlis calls a snap election, probably for October 4th.


The Numbers:

British Summer Time, with expectations and previous figures in brackets.

08:30 SE Swedish Riksbank interest rate decision (expected unchanged at 0.25%).

09:30 GB August Services PMI (52.7 to 54.9 versus 53.2 July).

10:00 EZ16 July Retail Sales (-0.7% to +0.7% M/M, -2.5% to –1.7% Y/Y, versus -0.2% and –2.4% June).

12:45 EZ16 ECB interest rate decision (unanimously expected unchanged at 1.00%); 13:30 News Conference.

13:30 US Weekly Jobless Claims (550K to 580K, Continuing Claims 6099K to 6200K, vs 570K and 6133K prior week).

15:00 US August Non-Manufacturing ISM (45.0 to 50.4 versus 46.4 July).

16:00 US Treasury announces next TNote auctions.

00:50 JP Q2 Capital Spending (-27.5% to –16.3%, Ex-Software –27.9% to –16.9%, versus –25.3% and –25.4% Q1).


The Psychology:

Move into Treasuries continues, with or without quantative easing.


The Risk:

Credit spreads widen this month.


Today’s most interesting chart: Spot Gold

Suddenly bursting higher and set test trendline resistance.

Start



Late Rollover Puts Indices in Negative Column

The indices ended the day with losses to follow up yesterday's decisive decline, but the going was volatile. The indices opened sharply lower to new pullback lows, and then rallied just as sharply to test yesterday afternoon's rally highs but couldn't get through. They then came down to retest, made new lows on the SPX but failed to do so on the NDX, and that resulted in a snapback rally that went right back up to resistance again and failed.

At that point they went in to multi-hour narrow trading ranges, as the patterns narrowed from the apex of two-day coils. They did nominally break out, then pulled back, and then tried a real decisive move with intraday gap-ups that failed right at resistance again. That resulted in the last 30-minute steep pullback that put the indices in the negative column.

Net on the day the Dow was down 29.93 at 9280.67, the S&P 500 down 3.39 at 994.75, and the Nasdaq 100 off just 1.56 at 1594.28.

The technicals were negative by 3 to 2 on advance-declines on New York but only by 124 issues on Nasdaq. Up/down volume was about a little less than 3 to 2 negative on New York on total volume of more than 1 1/3 billion. Nasdaq traded a little over 1.9 billion and had an 11 to 8 negative volume ratio.

TheTechTrader.com board was extremely narrowly mixed today, with just a few outstanding gainers and losers.
American International Group (AIG), which plunged to 32.66 early on, came roaring back by $7 to get up near 40 at 39.92, but pulled back to 37.95, still up 1.95 today on 99 million shares.

That was the only point-plus gainer our board.

Among other gainers, the Direxion Financial Bear 3x Shares (FAZ) gained 88 cents at 27.27, UltraShort Real Estate ProShares (SRS) up 46 cents to 13.10, the Direxion Small Cap 3x Bear (TZA) up 19 cents to 15.95, and the Direxion Large Cap Bear 3X Shares (BGZ) up 34 cents at 26.33. All of those are new model portfolio positions.

On the downside, Sinovac (SVA) took it on the chin today, down 1.93 to 8.53 on 22 ½ million shares. The Direxion Financial Bull 3x Shares (FAS) tumbled further after yesterday's sharp decline, losing another 2.28 to 65.82 on more than 35 million traded.

Stepping back and reviewing the hourly chart patterns, the indices were more volatile and choppy early on, and then settled into trading ranges before a late rollover brought them down to the lower end of the ranges for the day and down on the session. It certainly now looks like a new downtrend has begun, and today may have been confirmation of that.

EUR: Attempt small longs at 1.4275; stop below 1.4085

EUR

Comment: Messy, random small moves at the upper edge of a ‘triangle’ consolidation pattern, though note that one-month at-the-money implied volatility has picked up a little. The Euro is no longer overbought though momentum is nil. We feel that the long term trend to US dollar weakness will resume, if not this month then in October.

Strategy: Attempt small longs at 1.4275; stop below 1.4085. Short term target 1.4350.


EUR/JPY

Comment: Dropping again, trading below a thin Ichimoku ‘cloud’, and Yen crosses are looking increasingly top-heavy. A drop below 131.00 should add to downside pressure, a move which might accelerate causing another sudden slide to the 127.00 area, increasing at-the-money implied volatility.

Strategy: Sell at 132.00, adding to 132.50; stop well above 133.55. Short term target 131.00, re-selling below 131.00 for 127.00 (and probably a lot more further out).


GBP

Comment: Trading within a thinning Ichimoku ‘cloud’ and there is a small chance that Cable may try and hold above the top of the formation.

Strategy: Attempt small longs at 1.6315; stop well below 1.6100. First target 1.6380, then 1.6600.


JPY

Comment: Dropping towards July’s low at 91.73, the nine-day moving average limiting highs and putting the US dollar into oversold territory. A break below 91.50 should see implied at-the-money volatility increase significantly and increasing bearish momentum.

Strategy: Sell at 92.40, adding to 93.00; stop above 93.55. Short term target 92.00/91.75 with moves below here likely to becoming increasingly erratic.



US ADP private payrolls falls 298k in Aug

News and views

Risk markets settled back to a more neutral mood from the previous day’s sombre tone. The S&P500 closed down 0.3% in a lacklustre session, although the banks’ index lost another 1.9%. Oil and copper were largely unchanged, but gold took centre stage (probably lagging the previous day’s bout of risk aversion), gaining 2.8% from the Sydney close. US 10yr treasuries rallied by 10bp, paying more attention to the consensus-disappointing ADP payrolls report and the FOMC minutes. Fed members increased their confidence the US economy is bottoming, but added the recovery would be slow and beset by uncertainty, and the Fed Funds rate would stay low for an extended period. Signs are the G20 meeting tomorrow will be conducted in a similar spirit and reinforce the globe’s expansionary policies.

The US dollar lost ground after midday London, partially clawing back the previous day’s gains. EUR gained a cent to 1.4294. GBP outperformed from 1.6115 to 1.6300. JPY rallied from 93 to 92.11, talk of a strong option barrier at 92.00 halting the move.

AUD gained 1% to 0.8374, unsurprising following the positive GDP surprise yesterday. Influential columnist Terry McCrann last night wrote the figures support any RBA intention to hike, but won’t accelerate the timing of the first move.

NZD remained aloof from the soft US dollar theme, bouncing only modestly from its 0.6686 low to 0.6756, and consolidating around 0.6740. AUD/NZD recorded an impressive bounce off the bottom of the four month-long channel to the middle, to 1.2417.

US ADP private payrolls falls 298k in Aug. That is the fifth straight month of improvement. ADP has a recent tendency to understate the monthly change in (i.e. has not improved as much as) the official estimate of private payrolls, by as much as 169k back in May, so we see no need to change our forecast that total payrolls falls by 150k in August (–160k private, +10k govt), due out this Friday night. Still on the labour market, corporate layoff announcements were fewer last month, and indeed less than in August last year – more evidence that job market conditions are improving.

US factory goods orders were constrained to a 1.3% rise in July, reflecting upwardly revised durables (previously reported as up 4.9%) but a near 2% fall in non-durables, mostly due to lower energy prices pulling down the value of orders. Factory inventories fell by 0.7% at the start of Q3, down from Q2’s monthly average pace of decline of just over 1.0%.

US productivity growth was revised up slightly from 6.4% to 6.6% annualised in Q2, and so unit labour costs were revised to a slightly steeper fall of –5.9% annualised compared to –5.8% previously. All very minor stuff, following the very slight tweaks to the data in the second estimate of Q2 GDP growth.

The FOMC minutes for the 11-12 August meeting revealed growing confidence among committee members that the downturn is ending, although the recovery is expected to be gradual and vulnerable to any further shocks. The committee discussed slowing down the pace of their $1.45tn RMBS and agency debt purchase program, which is currently scheduled to run until year-end, but ultimately agreed that it wasn’t necessary to make a decision yet.

Euroland GDP growth was unrevised at –0.1% in Q2. The breakdown showed that household spending, supported by car scrappage schemes, turned modestly positive for the first quarter since early 2008.

UK construction PMI rises from 47.0 to 47.7 in Aug. The pace of contraction of the construction sector continues to diminish in the UK. With the factory PMI dipping back below 50 in yesterday’s August reading, all eyes are now on the services PMI for August, out tomorrow.


Outlook

AUD and NZD outlook today: These currencies have not technically confirmed either a readiness to move higher or the beginning of a post-March correction. The technicals (pointing lower) and fundamentals (pointing higher) are at odds, and leave us in a neutral stance until price action adds directional clues. Major support and resistance levels to watch are 0.8150 and 0.8500 for AUD, and 0.6630 and 0.6900 for NZD. Today’s data is second-tier – trade balance and services PMI in Australia, and ANZ’s commodity index update in NZ.



Daily FX Forecast



EURUSD


USDJPY

Technical Major Currencies Morning Report

EUR/USD
EUR/USD
The Euro versus Dollar pair was able to maintain trading above 1.4250 yesterday, where it is currently attempting to gather enough bullish momentum to incline towards breaching 1.4375. This breakout will open the way for the pair to target 1.4650 initially. This incline requires 1.4145 to remain intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.3975 and the key resistance at 1.4650

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.4720 remains intact with targets at 1.2120

Support : 1.4250 1.4170 1.4145 1.4100 1.4070
Resistance : 1.4300 1.4375 1.4430 1.4475 1.4550


Recommendation : Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair from 1.4250 to 1.4375 and stop loss below 1.4145 might be appropriate.

GBP/USD
GBP/USD
The Cable continues to fluctuate near the previously breached support currently at 1.6395, where our bullish scenario remains after slightly correcting to the downside to build a solid base at 1.6180 and then rebound to the upside on the intraday basis, in an attempt to breach the 1.6330 resistance level to target 1.6560. This scenario remains as far as 1.6180 remains intact; whereas the stochastic indicator supports the slight downside correction.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.5870 and the key resistance at 1.6555

The general trend is to the upside as far as 1.4840 remains intact with targets at 1.7100


Support : 1.6240 1.6180 1.6155 1.6095 1.6050
Resistance : 1.6295 1.6330 2.6380 1.6455 1.6505


Recommendation : Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair with the breach of 1.6330 to 1.6560 and stop loss below 1.6240 might be appropriate.



USD/JPY
USD/JPY
The USD/JPY pair was able to reach our first downside target at 91.90, yet momentum indicators have reached an oversold area, which may result in a slight upside correction to 92.80 before reversing to the downside on the intraday basis targeting 91.00. The decline for today remains as far as trading is below 93.15 on the four hour charts.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 90.00 and the key resistance at 95.10

The general trend is to the downside as far as 102.60 remains intact with targets at 84.95 and 82.60

Support : 91.90 91.40 90.95 90.40 90.00
Resistance : 92.80 93.15 93.80 94.05 94.45


Recommendation : Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair from 92.80 to 91.45 and stop loss above 93.55 might be appropriate.

USD/CHF
USD/CHF
The Dollar versus Swissy pair declined yesterday, as expected, yet fluctuated between the 38.2% and 50% corrections as it neared the pivot support at 1.0550, where we wait to witness a breach to the downside. From here we expect the pair to decline on the intraday basis confirmed by the breach of the above mentioned support, with a four hour close below it to target 1.0400 initially before heading towards 1.0000. The stochastic indicator may affect trading today, as it may result in mixed trading until the pair is able to gather the momentum it needs to decline. Trading below 1.0700 is needed to decline today.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0300 and the key resistance at 1.0915

The general trend so far is to the upside as far as 1.0550 remains intact with targets at 1.2245

Support : 1.0550 1.0480 1.0450 1.0400 1.0375
Resistance : 1.0635 1.0700 1.0765 1.0800 1.0890


Recommendation : Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair with the breach of 1.0550 to 1.0400 and stop loss above 1.0635 might be appropriate.


USD/CAD
USD/CAD
The Dollar versus Loonie pair touched the key resistance for the upside channel that it is currently trading within, and reversed to the downside towards the pivot support at 1.0945. The resistance level, colored in red in the above image, should reverse the pair to the downside to enter the key downside channel, yet a weekly close below 1.0945 is needed. We expect the pair to decline on the intraday basis to reach 1.0880 as far as 1.1130 is intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0625 and the key resistance at 1.1320

The general trend is o the downside as far as 1.1870 remains intact with targets at 1.0300

Support : 1.1020 1.0945 1.0900 1.0880 1.0825
Resistance : 1.1060 1.1130 1.1160 1.1200 1.1255


Recommendation : Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair with the breach of 1.1020 to 1.0880 and stop loss above 1.1130 might be appropriate.



EURUSD

EURUSD bulls did manage to push back prices above 1.4220 level which was a significant level for both sides. At current situation, this pair is neutral without any trend. A gap between support at 1.4204 and resistance at 1.4366 is deep, however this pair still has a chance to move down while resistance line holds.

eurusd



EURUSDTrendSupportResistance
Long TermNeutral1.42041.4366


GBPNZD

GBPNZD

Market Insight

The Hourly Trend is Sideways Up while 23900 level holds. NZD is the Strongest Cross and is GBP is one of the Weakest Cross now during Asian Session .The Hourly Oscillators are bullish but Overbought ADX falling with the price and the price is approaching the MA. GBPUSD is trading at Res Zone 1 but we believe the upside may be limited and NZDUSD is trading above Res Zone 1. GBPNZD is breached the Sup Zone 1. We believe it is due for some correction and should have some pullback downside.

Patterns

We believe the Hourly Price has topped for some pullback and to support our statement the price should not trade above 24225-60 levels. As we are trading on the assumption of the pullback for correction Cautious approach is needed.

Today’s Strategies

We prefer to SHORT near 24140-24200 with a STOP @ 24265 with a profit target of 24030-23990 levels. This has to be a fast trade as we are trading on pullback.



Daily technical outlook

EURUSD

The euro recovered half of the recent losses on yesterday, being supported by 1.4200. The European fx trading session will probably be quiet ahead of ECB Interest Rate decision and Trichet’s speech later today. As stated on my yesterday’s report, while 1.4200 holds – short term sentiment remains positive therefore expecting rallies towards (or maybe above) the top side into the 1.4400-1.4450 region. First intra-day resistance is formed by 1.4300 followed by 1.4360 then 1.4400 higher. Intra-day sentiment is also bullish. Upside is favored for now. Current quote is 1.4275 @06:00 GMT

Support: 1.4200, 1.4150 and 1.4050
Resistance: 1.4300, 1.4360 and 1.4400

EURUSD 4 hrs chart

GBPUSD

1.6300 is on focus as the Pound recovered from 1.6115, trading around 1.6270 at the time of writing this. Short term bearish sentiment is contracting and a potential break above 1.6380 would signal at least the beginning of a corrective cycle if not a full trend reversal. Gains above 1.6300 are possible as the odds seem to favor the upside while above the 1.6200 handle. Keep an eye on 1.6380 as it is an important short term barrier. Current quote is 1.6284 @06:00 GMT

Support: 1.6200, 1.6100/15 and 1.6000
Resistance: 1.6300, 1.6375/80 and 1.6450

GBPUSD 4 hrs chart

USDCAD

The rising trend line coming around 1.1120 has provided a minor reversal point on yesterday as it survived yet another test. However, short term sentiment remains positive as price action suggests further gains on the US dollar side. Intra-day sentiment is slightly negative, though, and a potential break below 1.1000 may open 1.0880/00 where the first important support level is seen. Current quote is 1.1028 @06:00 GMT

Support: 1.1000, 1.0950 and 1.0850/60
Resistance: 1.1100/20, 1.1150 and 1.1200

USDCAD 4 hrs chart


Asia Session

Today's Asia session got off to a bumpy start. As the risk aversion mentality continued around the global, JPY crosses once again felt the brunt. After initially maintaining short term support several times around 92.10, USDJPY eventually gave way briefly dipping below the figure. The move appeared to be a false break, as the pair traded back near opening levels. Other crosses were victims of fear as well.
EURJPY saw a 60+ pip move to the downside off session highs and despite of rate hike speculation AUDJPY fared no better, giving up 50+ pips at one point.
Most crosses witnessed a bit of a bounce later in the Tokyo morning.

On the economic front, Aussie Trade Balance was the only game in town in terms of market moving economic data. The numbers were worse than had been anticipated and after a quick move to the upside pre data, AUDUSD quickly fell back to earth.

Ahead in the upcoming London session, a slew of data is expected. UK Services PMI will be the first out of the gate, however the European Central Bank's rate decision, and even more importantly the rate statement, will be the main focus for most Forex traders.

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (London Session)


9/3/20097:50FR PMI Services AUG F 48.948.9
9/3/20097:55GE PMI Services AUG F 54.154.1
9/3/20098:00EC PMI Services AUG F 49.549.5
9/3/20098:00EC PMI Composite AUG F 5050
9/3/20098:30UK PMI Services AUG 53.254
9/3/20099:00EC Euro-Zone Retail Sales (MoM) JUL -0.20%0.10%
9/3/20099:00EC Euro-Zone Retail Sales (YoY) JUL -2.40%-2.20%
9/3/200911:45EC ECB Announces Interest Rates 3-Sep1.00%1.00%