Collinson FX: April 6: Expecting a +ve trade outcome
by Collinson FX 6 Apr 2018 20:48 NZST
5 April 2018
Day 2, Bay of Islands Sailing Week, January 25, 2018 © Richard Gladwell
Collinson FX: April 6: Expecting a +ve trade outcome
Equities continued to recover lost ground. Fears of a trade war continue to subside, as a realisation that negotiations are the goal of the Trump administration and the outcome should be positive. Tech regained some lost mojo, with Facebook recovering some confidence after the data crises, with Cambridge Analytical. The problem lies in reality. Facebook's commercial value is the exploitation of its database! Amazon has become a target and Jeff Bezos may regret picking this fight.
The Challenger Jobs report exposed a 39% increase job cuts, which is contrary to recent jobs data, leading in to the all important Non Farm Payrolls. The Dollar regained some lost ground, despite the average employment news, with the EUR slipping back towards 1.2200.
Commodity currencies suffered a similar fate, with the AUD falling to 0.7670, while the NZD trades around 0.7250. Focus will be on the Non-Farm Payrolls, tonight, with relatively positive expectations.
Collinson FX: April 5: Trump says it's over
The Global trade war threat escalated overnight. China announced tariffs on 106 products, which could add up to US$ 50 Billion, in response to the US tariffs. US equities plunged, once again, but this was in early trade, and the share market roared back in to positive territory. Trump announced that there was no trade war with China....it was over! China has a US$500 Billion trade surplus already, while Trump estimated the cost of intellectual property theft, was an additional US$300 B p.a.. The ADP Private sector jobs reported additional 241,000 jobs, beating expectations, while Durable Goods and Factory Orders both posted gains.
Japanese and Chinese Services and Composite PMI data was soft, while the US PMI was flat. EU Employment remains astoundingly high (8.5%), while CPI (1%) weak, all pointing to an under performing economic zone. The EUR traded 1.2280, while the GBP approaches 1.4100, reflecting a different space in the monetary cycle.
Australian Building Approval contracted 6.2%, confirming the softening property market, enunciated by the RBA. Commodity currencies managed to eke out small gains, with the AUD regaining 0.7700, while the NZD approaches 0.7300. Look out for local Job Ads and House Price data released in NZ today.
Trade and tariffs remain the macro event dominating world markets.
Collinson FX: April 4: Global Trade War fizzes out
The threat of a global trade war subsided, after China announced a response to Trump's tariffs, imposing 128 tariffs on selected US products. This hit nervous equity markets hard, in the previous session, but rebounded in overnight trade. Trump has extended his media war with Amazon, who have suffered big losses in their share price, following tech stock shocks surrounding Facebook security issues.
German Retail Sales contracted, while Manufacturing PMI in the Eurozone, was soft. The Dollar continued to post gains, with the EUR slipping to 1.2270, reflecting the respective position of Central Bank monetary policy.
The RBA left rates unchanged, at 1.5%, and signalled that this will continue through to next year. The RBA observed strengthening in the Global economy, but the wage growth remained soft and the housing markets was cooling, within Australia. The RBA holds monetary policy steady, in clear contrast to the Fed, who have raised rates six times in the current cycle. Interest rate differentials have turned around and reflect risk and drive the AUD lower. The AUD drifted to 0.7670, while the NZD traded around 0.7250, also in an easing monetary cycle.
Global trade speculation and economic data release will continue to drive the narrative in this holiday effected week.
Collinson FX: April 3: Tech shares rally
Western Markets closed for the long Easter break on a high after a challenging month and quarter. Tech shares rallied strongly to close out the quarter on a positive after Facebook announced further measures to address members data security issues. Amazon is a behemoth and has made CEO, Jeff Bezos, the wealthiest man in the US. His war against Trump, via the conduit of the Washington Post, is now facing return fire. Bezos is playing with fire.
European economic data was steady, but insipid and the threat of a trade war has temporarily subsided. EU inflation was 1.6%, while Unemployment was high, but steady. The EUR retreated back to 1.2300, while the GBP held above 1.4000. UK GDP was steady, while the current account reflected huge trade deficits, although Brexit is now less than a year away! The positives of release from the Socialist Bureaucracy, that is the European experiment, will be salvation.
Commodity prices remain bid, but the rising reserve, continues to adversely impact the associated currencies. The AUD fell back below 0.7700, while the NZD retreated to just above 0.7200. The RBA will announce inaction after the Easter break, but markets will keenly await the associated rhetoric, giving insight to the Australian economy and their interaction with the global economy.
Another short week, due to the Easter Holidays, is the beginning of a new quarter and will be greeted with an avalanche of new data. Equities have been vulnerable with many pressures from the Tech sector and US Trade policy. This coming week will see the US earnings season, post Tax cuts, which should encourage equity markets.
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