FX markets were stable in Asia trading, with the exception of AUD. As was universally expected the RBA held OCR at 2.0% and continue to see the current accommodative policy as appropriate. Yet, the accompanying statement took a hawkish turn when members stated that AUD was adjusting to declines in commodity prices, sheading the language for more depreciation. In reference to the currency, the statement said it was “adjusting to the significant declines in key commodity prices.” Local AUD yields jumped 3bps on the statement. Heavily sold AUD/USD quickly ran to 0.7395 from 0.7264 as shorts were squeezed. On the data, front Australian retail sales hastened 0.7% m/m in June, above estimates of 0.4% m/m and revised higher 0.4% m/m read in May. Finally, Australia’s trade deficit came in at A$2933mn in June slightly below expectations of deficit of A$3000mn. We will be watching developments in China carefully but favor carry-based trades in AUD/JPY and AUD/CHF. The positive AU economic data, specifically strong housing data, combined with today’s slightly neutral statement (shift from dovish) indicates that it’s unlikely that the RBA will cut rates further. However, the SNB and BoJ are not tightening anytime soon, while FX vol remains low.
Asian equity markets were mixed with the China seeing some well needed gains. Yet the gains were made on the back that new rules to restrict daily trading via short selling regulations. The Shanghai Composite rose 3.015%, the Hang Seng increase 0.30% while the Nikkei fell -0.13%. EUR/USD drifted between 1.0932 and 1.0967 picking up demand closer to European open. USD/JPY continues to consolidate, stuck in a 20 pip range around the 124 handle. Currencies in EM were subdued as the USD/CNY fixed 8 pips higher at 6.1177. Gold was unchanged around the $1087 level, as US rates were firm. European stocks are primed for a lower open.
In Japan, monetary base rose 32.8% y/y in July following a surge of 34.2% in June. Elsewhere, labor cash earnings fell 2.4%y/y in June below expected read of growth of 0.9% against revised increase of 0.7% in May. Despite recent comments indicating that no additional BoJ action is coming we suspect that in order to fuel the “Abe miracle” policy will remain at least ultra-accommodating. This should equate to a weaker JPY within the G10.
On the fridge, Puerto Rico has suspended depositing into the fund that is directed to pay bonds. This would be the first time Puerto Rico has defaulted on its debt obligations. Years for borrowing to convers budget short falls has pushed the island nations financial health over the edge. Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla is seeking to restructure Puerto Rico’s $72bn of debt, halting monthly transfers of capital into the fund that repays $13bn of general obligations debt. We don’t see a high probability for risk contagion.
In the European session, traders are scheduled to see EU PPI, UK Housing Prices and construction PMI, Norway PMI and Russian CPI. The market anticipate that UK house prices to increase from -0.2% m/m to 0.4% m/m which should support GBP ahead of a busy Thursday.
Currency Tech
R 2: 1.1436
R 1: 1.1278
CURRENT: 1.0980
S 1: 1.0819
S 2: 1.0660
GBP/USD
R 2: 1.5930
R 1: 1.5803
CURRENT: 1.5511
S 1: 1.5330
S 2: 1.5171
USD/JPY
R 2: 135.15
R 1: 125.86
CURRENT: 123.89
S 1: 120.41
S 2: 118.89
USD/CHF
R 2: 1.0129
R 1: 0.9719
CURRENT: 0.9599
S 1: 0.9151
S 2: 0.9072