The Japanese Yen appears poised to extend a recovery started at the open of the trading week as risk aversion grips financial markets anew.
Talking Points
Japanese Yen Outperforms in Asia, More of the Same Likely This Week
Australian, Canadian Dollars Vulnerable on Returning Risk Aversion
Soft Eurozone PPI May Weigh on Euro Ahead of ECB Policy Decision
The Japanese Yen outperformed in overnight trade as Asian stocks declined, driving demand for safety-linked currencies. The MSCI Asia Pacific equity index fell 0.3 percent. The newswires attributed the move to profit-taking after the benchmark regional gauge hit a 17-month high last week.
Broadly speaking, a short lull in headline-driving event risk will give financial markets an opportunity for some reflection in the week ahead.The most significant lingering uncertainty over the coming months remains the outlook for US economic growth and there is much to consider in the aftermath of last week’s volatility
On one hand, risk appetite reacted favorably to a last-minute agreement averting the so-called “fiscal cliff”, but the reaction seemed overdone. While the smaller-scale tax hike baked into the accord is preferable to a far larger and broader increase that would have been triggered without a deal, it is nonetheless a headwind from an economic growth perspective.
Meanwhile, fears of an early end to the Fed’s stimulus efforts after the release of minutes from December’s FOMC sit-down seem likewise overblown. The adoption of the “Evans rule” linking rates to explicit inflation and unemployment targets was already mildly hawkish in that it set a firm exit strategy. However, even if the Fed halts asset purchases by mid-year, it will expand its balance sheet by close to $0.5 trillion.
On balance, the fiscal side of the equation seems to carry a greater degree of near-term uncertainty than the monetary one. That suggests the path of least resistance likely favors risk aversion. Near-term correlation studies suggest such a scenario is likely to prove most damaging for the Australian and Canadian Dollars while producing outsize gains for the Yen.
The economic calendar is relatively quiet in European hours. November’s Eurozone PPI figures are expected to put the year-on-year wholesale inflation rate at 2.4 percent, the lowest in four months. A particularly soft reading may weigh on the Euro ahead of this week’s ECB monetary policy announcement.
Asia Session: What Happened
GMT
CCY
EVENT
ACT
EXP
PREV
23:50
JPY
Monetary Base (YoY) (NOV)
11.8%
–
5.0%
23:50
JPY
Loans & Discounts Corp (YoY) (DEC)
0.44%
–
0.26%
0:01
GBP
Lloyds Employment Confidence (DEC)
-42
–
-42
5:00
JPY
Vehicle Sales (YoY) (DEC)
-3.4%
–
-3.3%
Euro Session: What to Expect
GMT
CCY
EVENT
EXP
PREV
IMPACT
8:00
GBP
Halifax House Prices sa (MoM) (DEC)
0.0%
1.0%
Low
8:00
GBP
Halifax House Prices 3Mths/Year (DEC)
-0.6%
-1.3%
Low
8:00
CHF
Foreign Currency Reserves (DEC)
423.0B
427.4B
Low
9:30
EUR
Euro Zone Sentix Investor Confidence (JAN)
-14.2
-16.8
Low
10:00
EUR
Euro Zone PPI (YoY) (NOV)
2.4%
2.6%
Medium
10:00
EUR
Euro Zone PPI (MoM) (NOV)
-0.2%
0.1%
Medium
Critical Levels
CCY
SUPPORT
RESISTANCE
EURUSD
1.2960
1.3106
GBPUSD
1.5964
1.6115
— Written by Ilya Spivak, Currency Strategist for Dailyfx.com
To contact Ilya, e-mail ispivak@dailyfx.com. Follow Ilya on Twitter at @IlyaSpivak
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Source: Daily fx