Dollar remains broadly weak as the week starts as markets sentiments
are boosted by solid Asian economic data. The preliminary HSBC China
Manufacturing PMI rebounded from 49.9 to 51.1 in October, back in
expansionary territory for the first time since July. HSBC noted that
the data confirmed their view there is no risk of hard landing in China.
Japan trade deficit narrowed to JPY -0.02T in September. Impressively,
exports rose 2.4% yoy, marking the second month of growth following five
month decline after the March natural disaster. Asian stock indices are
broadly up today, partly following the QE3 triggered rally in US last
week. Nikkei is up 1.9%, HSI up over 4%, Aussie All Ordinaries up 2.62%,
crude oil is back above 88 level while dollar index is pressing 76.
After the EU summit on Sunday, no agreement was made on major issues
including bank recapitalization, private sector involvements in Greece
second bailout and the way to boost the EFSF. Though, one thing seemed
to be sure is that using ECB to leverage the bailout fund is ruled out.
The latest news flow said that policymakers are threatening to trigger a
formal default on Greek debt unless banks accept losses of as much as
140B euro on their holdings or a haircut of around 50%. Both Reuters
and Bloomberg also quoted the need of around 100B euro for bank
recapitalization. The Reuters report also mentioned a haircut of 50% but
emphasized that 'several major areas of disagreement remain',
especially in the EFSF plan and 'it will require vast amounts of hard
negotiation between Sunday and Wednesday to strike a deal that convinces
financial markets and Europe's major trading partners that the crisis
is in hand' while according to the Bloomberg report policymakers are
heading toward using the EFSF to 'guarantee bond sales as a way to
extend its reach. A second option is to set up an EFSF-insured fund that
would seek outside investment in troubled bonds'.
Data from Australia saw PPI rose less than expected by 0.6% qoq, 2.7%
yoy in Q3. The year over year rate was much lower than Q2's 3.4%. The
data is arguing inflationary pressures have eased further in Australia.
RBA would be on hold for longer than expected and is raising the
prospect of a rate cut if global economic conditions deteriorate
further. Though, the CPI data to be released later this week will be
more crucial in near term rate outlook.
Looking ahead, Eurozone PMI data will be the main focus. German PMI
manufacturing is expected to drop slightly to 50 in October PMI services
is expected to recovery to 49.8. Eurozone PMI manufacturing and
services are expected to drop to 48.1 and 48.5 respectively. Eurozone
industrial orders are expected to rise 0.1% mom in August.
EUR/AUD Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3350; (P) 1.3424; (R1) 1.3463;
EUR/AUD's fall from 1.4086 resumed by taking out 1.3368 and reaches
as low as 1.3327 so far today. Intraday bias is back on the downside and
further decline should be seen to retest 1.3022 support next. On the
upside, note that break of 1.3497 resistance, though, will indicate
short term bottoming, possibly on bullish convergence condition in 4
hours MACD, and will bring stronger rebound.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.2926 are treated as a
medium term consolidation pattern, which is still in progress. Such
pattern might extend further in range of 1.2926 and 1.4341.
Nevertheless, we'll stay bearish as long as 1.4341 resistance holds and
favor an eventual downside breakout. Sustained trading below 1.2926
should pave the way to 1.2 psychological level next.
Economic Indicators Update
MT | Ccy | Events | Actual | Consensus | Previous | Revised |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
23:50 | JPY | Trade Balance (JPY) Sep | -0.02T | -0.11T | -0.29T | -0.27T |
0:30 | AUD | PPI Q/Q Q3 | 0.60% | 0.80% | 0.80% | |
0:30 | AUD | PPI Y/Y Q3 | 2.70% | 2.90% | 3.40% | |
4:00 | CNY | HSBC Flash China Manufacturing PMI Oct | 51.1 | 49.9 | ||
7:30 | EUR | German PMI Manufacturing Oct A | 50 | 50.3 | ||
7:30 | EUR | German PMI Services Oct A | 49.8 | 49.7 | ||
8:00 | EUR | Eurozone PMI Manufacturing Oct A | 48.1 | 48.5 | ||
8:00 | EUR | Eurozone PMI Services Oct A | 48.5 | 48.8 | ||
9:00 | EUR | Eurozone Industrial New Orders M/M Aug | 0.10% | -2.10% |
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