Euro Accelerates Downtrend, BoJ Defends Its Ultra-Loose Policy
2022.04.28 11:42
The US dollar continued to strengthen against all the other major currencies yesterday and today in Asia, with the Japanese yen and the euro being the main losers. The euro accelerated its downtrend after Russia decided to halt its gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland, a move that increased concerns about the performance of the European economy.
The yen came under selling interest after the BoJ defended its yield curve control policy, putting at rest speculation over hawkish tweaks.
Stocks Rebound, but Outlook Stays Gloomy; EUR Tumbles to 2017 Levels
The US dollar traded higher against all the other major currencies on Wednesday and during the Asian session Thursday, gaining the most versus JPY, EUR, and NZD in that order. The greenback gained the least versus CAD.
USD performance major currencies.
The strengthening of the US dollar suggests that markets may have continued trading in a risk-off fashion yesterday and today in Asia. Still, the weakening of the yen points otherwise. Turning our gaze to the equity world, we see that major EU and US indices rebounded somewhat – only NASDAQ stayed virtually unchanged – with risk appetite improving notably during the Asian session.
Our first impression was that the BoJ decision might have had to do with it. After all, Japan’s Nikkei 225 gained the most.
Major global stock indices performances.
Nonetheless, before we go to today’s BoJ decision, let’s start with yesterday’s European activity. The rebound in Europe was mainly owed to gains in commodity stocks, but we suspect that the reasons may not have been that healthy.
Yesterday, Russia decided to halt gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland after the two European nations rejected a call to pay in rubles. This resulted in a spike in natural gas prices due to concerns of supply shortages, and that’s why commodity stocks in Europe may have marched higher.
After all, the euro accelerated its downtrend, especially against the US dollar. Although several ECB officials have been calling for a rate hike in July, yesterday’s developments have increased concerns over the performance of the Euro-area economy. They may have raised some speculation that the ECB may eventually be reluctant to tight so early.
In any case, the further slide in EUR/USD confirms our bearish view, which we will continue to hold. Even if the ECB decides to hike in July, the Fed is expected to take a much more aggressive path, and thus, we still see ample divergence between the policies of those two central banks.
Now, back to the stocks and Wall Street, our view is that the support in US equities came from upbeat earnings results from Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Visa (NYSE:V). With the Fed expected to hike by 50 bps next week and a strong chance for a triple hike in June, we will stick to our guns that the path of least resistance for equity markets is to the downside. We will treat yesterday’s recovery as a corrective bounce.
EUR/USD – Technical Outlook
EUR/USD traded sharply lower yesterday, hitting support at 1.0515, but today in Asia, it turned south again and moved passed that level. Overall, the pair remains well below the short-term downside resistance line drawn from the high of Mar. 31, and thus we will consider the short-term outlook to be still very bearish.
The dip below 1.0515 has confirmed a forthcoming lower low, and it also took the rate into territories last tested in March 2017. The next support is seen at 1.0450, marked by the low of Jan. 11, 2017, the break of which could carry larger bearish implications, perhaps paving the way towards the 1.0350 zone, which acted as a floor between Dec. 15, 2016, and Jan. 3, 2017.
On the upside, we would like to see a strong and long recovery above 1.0845 before examining whether the bulls have gained complete control, at least in the short term. This could confirm the break above the aforementioned downside line and may initially target the 1.0935 area, which provided strong support between Apr. 6 and 21.
If that barrier doesn’t hold this time, we may see the advance extending towards the 1.1025 zone, marked by the inside swing low of Apr. 1.
EUR/USD 4-hour chart technical analysis.
BoJ Stays Willing to Support its YCC Policy, Yen Falls
Flying in Asia, the catalyst for the improvement in risk appetite this morning, may have been the BoJ decision. The bank kept all its policy settings untouched, noting that it will offer to buy unlimited amounts of Japan 10-Year government bonds to defend an implicit 0.25% cap around its zero target every market day.
This put at rest rumors that the bank may need to tweak its yield curve control policy soon due to the continued tests near that cap and the yen’s weakness and reaffirmed the strong willingness of policymakers to stay ultra-loose at a time when other major central banks have flagged aggressive tightening.
That’s why Nikkei 225 gained the most in Asia today, and that’s maybe why Asia as a whole gained more than Europe and the US. We expect the yen to extend its downtrend with all that in mind, even when stock markets turn south again.
USD/JPY – Technical Outlook
USD/JPY spiked sharply higher during the Asian session today, breaking above 129.00 and coming close to the round psychological number of 130.00. The pair last tested that zone back in 2002. Overall, USD/JPY has been in an uptrend mode, as the market by the upside support line drawn from the low of Mar. 6.
Although it traded temporarily below that line recently, yesterday’s advance brought it back above that line. So, with all that in mind, we will consider the near-term outlook to be overly positive. We believe that a potential break above the psychological round figure of 130.00 could encourage the bulls to push the action up to the 134.00 zone, marked by the high of April 2002. If they don’t stop there, we will consider as a next resistance the 135.00 psychological barrier, which is also near the highs of January and February 2002.
To start examining a short-term bearish reversal, we would like to see a clear close below 126.20. This will confirm a break back below the aforementioned upside line and a forthcoming lower low on the 4-hour chart.
The bears could initially target the low of Apr. 14, at 125.00, the break of which could extend the fall towards the 123.45 or 122.95 levels. Another dip, below 122.95, could extend the fall towards the lows of Mar. 30 and 31, at around 121.20.
USD/JPY 4-hour chart technical analysis.
As for the Rest of Today’s Events
During the European session, Germany releases its preliminary CPIs for April. The headline rate is forecast to have ticked down to +7.2% YoY from +7.3%, while the HICP one is anticipated to have held steady at +7.6% YoY. This could raise some speculation that Eurozone’s headline inflation rate, due out on Friday, could also stay unchanged or slide fractionally.
In the US, we have the preliminary GDP for Q1, with expectations pointing to a sizable slowdown to +1.1% QoQ SAAR from 7.1%. Such a slowdown is likely to hurt the US dollar, but we don’t expect it to result in a trend reversal.
After all, the Fed has made it clear that its priority is to battle high inflation, and will do that even if it needs to hike rates by 50 or 75 bps. Remember that last week, Fed Chair Powell said that a 50 bps hike will be on the table at the upcoming gathering and added that it would be appropriate to “be moving a little more quickly,” reinforcing expectations over a triple hike in June.
According to the CME FedWatch tool, participants are fully pricing in a 50 bps increase in May, while they assign a 78% chance for a triple hike in June. They also see a 73% probability for interest rates to be lifted by another 50 bps in July.
So, with all that in mind, we will treat any potential USD slide due to a GDP slowdown as a corrective retreat and an opportunity to enter new long positions. The US dollar could even strengthen instantly in case of the GDP slows by less than anticipated, as this may be interpreted as a positive surprise.