The consolidation phase in the foreign exchange market continues. Narrow ranges prevail among the euro, sterling, and yen. The market seems to be in need of fresh incentives. The ECB meeting is expected to yield fresh action, and the light US economic calendar facilities continued consolidation.
The Australian and Canadian dollars are the heaviest of the majors today. The US dollar continues to move higher against the Canadian dollar after yesterday's upside reversal after testing CAD1.30, spurred by Bank of Canada Governor acknowledging that the central bank did discuss more stimulus.
Although it did not act, the admission cast a dovish spin to the central bank's statement. The rough balance risk assessment was an improvement to the downside bias previously, which had initially driven the US dollar lower. Nearby resistance is seen in the CAD1.3200-CAD1.3220 band.
The $0.7700 is proving to be quite a formidable cap in the Australian dollar. It finished the North American session above there, spurring talk of a breakout. However, a disappointing jobs report has seen the Aussie reverse lower. This is potentially important price action. Initially, it had risen through yesterday's high and had subsequently been sold through yesterday's lows. A close below yesterday's low (~$0.7660) could be regarded technically as a key reversal. A break of $0.7650 could spur an initially move toward $0.7600, and perhaps $0.7500.
For the record, Australia lost 53.0k full-time positions and grew 43.2k part-time jobs. The unemployment rate, slipped to 5.6% from a revised 5.7%, while the participation rate unexpectedly fell to 64.5% from 64.7%. The net job loss of 9.8k contrasts with median expectations of a 15.0k gain. Adding insult to injury, the August job loss was revised to 8.6k from a 3.9k drop.
UK retail sales disappointed, stagnating for a second month in September. The median had expected a 0.3% increase. The negativity may have been dampened somewhat by the upward revision to the August number from -0.2% to 0. A combination of factors seems to be at work, including unseasonably warm weather and rising prices. For example, clothes and footwear sales were off 2.8%, which may have a seasonal component, while prices were up over 5%.
Sterling has been unable to poke above $1.23 thus far today, for the first time since Monday. A $1.2220-$1.2320 range may be the most in sterling's tank today. There is a risk of negative headlines coming from the EU heads of state summit that begins today. It is the UK Prime Minister's first summit. While Brexit may not be formally on the agenda, it will be among the 800-pound gorillas in the room (alongside national politics, which could produce new governments France, Germany, Netherlands, and possibly Italy). For many EU leaders, there can be no soft Brexit, if that means the UK retains access to the single market and limits EU migration.
The ECB meeting is the main highlight, but with any firm decision about its asset purchase programs two months off, this may be nearly a non-event. At his press conference, Draghi may do little more than dangle a carrot in front of investors. He will likely reaffirm that the inflation outlook is the key consideration, and the central bank has the tools, will and mandate to do more if necessary. The March 2017 end date of the purchases has always been rather soft, and this ECB's flexibility likely will also be stressed.
The euro continues to trade quietly, but with a heavier bias. It made a marginal new three-month low just above $1.0950 to match the July 25 low. Below there, the referendum low was closer to $1.0915. The euro is the largest component of the Dollar Index. As we noted in the weekly technical note, the 50- and 200-day moving, averages were poised to cross, and indeed today they have. Some technicians see what is dubbed the Golden Cross as a bullish signal.
Ahead of the DBRS review of Portugal's credit rating tomorrow, Portuguese bonds continue to rally and outperform other European bonds. The 10-year yield has fallen by more than 40 bp since peaking on October 10. It is now at its lowest yield since mid-September. The Finance Minister recently played down the risk of a change from the rating agency, and the minority left-of-center government delivered a 2017 budget proposal that maintained the fiscal consolidation which it had seemed to object.
The coming clash, perhaps as early as next week, may be between the EC and Italy. The EC has given Italy a week to revise its budget proposal or face the start of a formal process to reject it. Renzi, who is fighting possibly for his political future over the constitutional referendum, may have little to lose by fighting the EC. However, the issue seems minor. Renzi's budget proposal projects a deficit of 2.3% next year from 2.4% this year, though it is higher than previously anticipated.
The earthquake and the migrant crisis may also be mitigating factors. Moreover, it may not be unreasonable to argue that rather than the bad loans holding back the economy, it could very well be that the weak economy is exacerbating the bad loan problem. The implication is that the emphasis may need to shift to a more pro-growth stance.
Lastly, we note that Brazil cut rates yesterday for the first time in four years. The Selic rate now stands at 14.0%. While this may be the start of an easing cycle, the central bank was clear on what it needs to see: easing price pressures and a government that makes real progress in its fiscal reform. Political developments in Brazil can challenge this, however. Around the same time as the central bank was cutting rates, the former speaker of the House, who reportedly masterminded the impeachment, was himself arrested. If Cunha implicates ministers in Temer's government, it could undermine support for fiscal reform.