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Abstract:US Dollar, Bank of England, Treasuries, OPEC+, Crude Oil, Japan - Talking Points
USD moved up as bond markets reeled from Bank of England inaction
OPEC+ stuck to plan and disregarded political pressure to up production
Asian markets digested overnight moves.Will USD uptrend continue?
The US Dollar rallied in the aftermath of the Bank of England keeping rates on hold. The market had priced in a 15-basis point hike. That makes 3 from 3 central banks keeping the markets at bay on tightening expectations after the RBA and the Fed earlier in the week.
After the decision, Bloomberg did an interview with Bank of England Governor, Andrew Bailey. In that interview he said that in regard to the MPC members, they, “dont speak to guide markets.” Moments later in the same interview, he cited the monetary policy report and the meeting minutes, as, “giving messaging.”
For future reference, if you hear someone from the Bank of England say, ‘we will have to act’, it could mean theyre making their thespian debut.
In any case, bond yields went lower and that underpinned equities. With Treasuries surging, US Dollar buying emerged against all G-10 currencies, except the yield sensitive yen. APAC equities were mixed with Japan slightly down on the day.
OPEC+ ignored requests from US President, Joe Biden, to up the rate of production by than 400,000 barrels a day. They pointed to higher gas prices for the cause of the energy crisis.
There is speculation that the US may tap strategic reserves to alleviate supply constraints. WTI crude oil is steady in Asia near US$ 79.70 a barrel.
Second tier China property group, Kaisa, missed onshore payments for coupon and principal worth CNY 12.8 billion (US$ 2 billion). They have US$ 11 billion of outstanding offshore dollar debt.
Looking ahead, US jobs data will be released with forecasts of a 450k gain in non-farm payrolls for October and the unemployment rate is expected to fall to 4.7%.
US Dollar Technical Analysis
The US Dollar, represented by the DXY index, remains in an ascending channel. Last week it bounced off the lower band of the channel and the 55-day simple moving average (SMA).
Further up, previous highs at 94.561and 94.742 could offer resistance.
On the downside, support might be at the ascending trend line, currently at 93.59. Possible support may lie at the previous lows of 93.818, 93.278 and 91.947.
Source: DailyFX
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The Japanese Yen rose 0.7% against the US Dollar after BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda hinted at potential rate hikes. This coincided with a recovery in Asian markets, aided by stronger Chinese stocks. With the July FOMC minutes already pointing to a September rate cut, the US Dollar might edge higher into the weekend.
The Australian Dollar (AUD) traded sideways against the US Dollar (USD) on Tuesday, staying just below the seven-month high of 0.6798 reached on Monday. The downside for the AUD/USD pair is expected to be limited due to differing policy outlooks between the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the US Federal Reserve. The RBA Minutes indicated that a rate cut is unlikely soon, and Governor Michele Bullock affirmed the central bank's readiness to raise rates again if necessary to combat inflation.
JPY strengthened against the USD, pushing USD/JPY near 145.00, driven by strong inflation data and BoJ rate hike expectations. Japan's strong Q2 GDP growth added support. However, USD gains may be limited by expectations of a Fed rate cut in September.
Gold prices remain above $2,500, near record highs, as investors await the Federal Open Market Committee minutes for confirmation of a potential Fed rate cut in September. The Fed's dovish shift, prioritizing employment over inflation, has weakened the US Dollar, boosting gold. A recent revision showing the US created 818,000 fewer jobs than initially reported also strengthens the case for a rate cut.