Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Australian Dollar Unchanged Despite Disappointing China PMI



Australian_Dollar_Unchanged_Despite_Disappointing_China_PMI_body_may_china_PMI.png, Australian Dollar Unchanged Despite Disappointing China PMI


THE TAKEAWAY: The Australian Dollar was volatile, but remained largely unchanged as the China Manufacturing PMI disappointed analysts expecting 50.7, with a 50.6 print.



The Australian Dollar fell last week as the release of the China HSBC Flash Manufacturing PMI came in at 50.5 versus expectations of 51.5 and a previous print of 51.6. The two releases are often quite correlated, and so it was of little surprise to most that the China Manufacturing PMI came in slightly lower than previously and less than expected.



Growth in China has slowed, with GDP growing by 7.7 per cent in the first quarter; however the Australian Dollar has stayed stubbornly above parity against the U.S. Dollar as investors seek safe sources of yield. China’s growth has become less of a focus when observing the so called ‘Aussie’ as investors seem to be more concerned with the yield of the currency as Central Banks around the globe carry out stimulus efforts to encourage growth resulting in currency weakness. The sensitivity of the Australian Dollar to Chinese data has become somewhat muted as investors await direction from the RBA who despite seeing the Aussie as too strong, have been reluctant to cut rates just yet. As a result, the commodity based currency has been trading between 1.016 and 1.061 since July of 2012 supported by interest rates in Australia.



On the news, the Australian Dollar fell slightly, but returned to 1.0375 which was where it was prior to the data release.





Australian Dollar Unchanged Despite Disappointing China PMI

Dollar Drops as Fed Starts Policy Meeting



Packs of US 100-dollar billsThe US dollar dipped today on speculations that the Federal Reserve will not reduce stimulus as the recent fundamental data was not good enough to warrant tighter policy.


The Fed started its two-day meeting today. Analysts do not expect the US central bank to change its monetary policy, but wording of the decision may influence the Forex market strongly.


US economic reports were not good enough to believe that policy makers will be able to reduce monetary easing. The Chicago Purchasing Managers’ Index dropped from 52.4 in March to 49.0 in April. Experts have predicted to remain stable.


EUR/USD went up from 1.3096 to 1.3168 and GBP/USD rose from 1.5498 to 1.5531 as of 23:26 GMT today. USD/JPY slipped from 97.72 to 97.39.


If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the US Dollar,


feel free to post them using the commentary form below.





Dollar Drops as Fed Starts Policy Meeting

USD/CAD Breaks Parallel Channel Support




Daily Candles


eliottWaves_usd-cad_body_usdcad.png, USD/CAD Breaks Parallel Channel Support


Chart Prepared by Jamie Saettele, CMT using Marketscope 2.0



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FOREXAnalysis: The USDCAD broke below parallel channel support and to its lowest level in over 2 months. Currently holding downward sloping channel support, a few days of consolidation is probably needed in order to correct a sharp 4 day decline. The underside of the broken channel line is potential resistance. Something that should worry bulls however is the extreme COT positioning.



FOREXTrading Strategy: Flat



LEVELS: .9932 1.0001 1.0056 1.0122 1.0170 1.0206





USD/CAD Breaks Parallel Channel Support

GBP/USD Channel Resistance is Textbook




Daily Bars


eliottWaves_gbp-usd_body_gbpusd.png, GBP/USD Channel Resistance is Textbook


Chart Prepared by Jamie Saettele, CMT using Marketscope 2.0



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FOREXAnalysis: “Bigger picture, a 4 year triangle was resolved in February to the downside and I still think we should be looking to align with the downtrend. That said, we’ll probably get the chance to do so at better levels. The 50% retracement of the decline from the January high at 1.5605 intersects channel resistance on Friday.” Today’s outside bar at channel resistance is characteristic of a top.



FOREX Trading Strategy: Short, stop 1.5570. target 1.5420



LEVELS: 1.5333 1.5418 1.5467 1.5605 1.5688 1.5788





GBP/USD Channel Resistance is Textbook

Dollar Tanks, No Way Fed will Vary QE after Chicago PMI



The EUR/USD is on a tear this morning on the back of shockingly weak Chicago PMI numbers.  The currency pair soared above 1.31, taking out stops above 1.3120 and then 1.3150. For the Federal Reserve, who meets later this week, the continual disappointment in U.S. data weakens the case for tapering asset purchases.  We don’t expect the discussion about varying QE to make its way into this month’s FOMC statement but when the minutes are released, we should see less support and more skepticism about changing the country’s asset purchase program.  As a result, the U.S. dollar has traded lower against all of the major currencies this morning with USD/JPY dropping to its lowest level in nearly 2 weeks.


 


According to the latest report, manufacturing conditions in the Chicago region contracted for the first time in 3.5 years.  The index dropped to 49.0 from 52.4 in the month of April hitting its lowest level since September 2009.  A reading as weak as the one we have seen today reminds us of recessionary conditions and while one monthly release doesn’t make a trend the data confirms that the pace of the U.S. recovery has slowed.  The activity reading was so weak that investors completely ignored the jump in consumer confidence reported 15 minutes later. According to the conference board, consumer sentiment hit its highest level in 7 months, which should have been good news for the greenback but this is a sentiment indicator whereas the Chicago PMI index is an activity indicator and therefore a more reliable reflection of how the U.S. economy is doing.  Between the drop in the Chicago PMI, Philly Fed and Empire State manufacturing surveys, we are also looking at a potential miss in tomorrow’s ISM manufacturing report.


 


Up North, the Canadian economy expanded by 0.3% in the month of February, matching the upwardly revised pace of growth enjoyed in January. On an annualized basis, this brought GDP up to 1.7% from 1.1%, which helped to drive the Canadian dollar sharply higher against all of the major currencies.  The outperformance of the Canadian economy and the recent rebound in oil prices should help the loonie sustain its gains with USD/CAD aiming for a test of parity (1.0).





Dollar Tanks, No Way Fed will Vary QE after Chicago PMI

EUR/USD: ready for a roller coaster ride?



EUR/USD Current price: 1.3168


View Live Chart for the EUR/USD


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Pretty interesting Tuesday, as EUR/USD broke higher, reaching 1.3185 before stalling. Month end fixing and some short covering gave the pair the first push higher, before disappointing US PMI data and headlines stating an ECB rate cut is not a done deal, fuel the rally. US stocks running and closing at fresh record highs by the end of the day, helped the pair maintain its gains, with buyers now around 1.3150, 100 DMA. With not much data expected for current Asian session, and Europe closed on holidays, majors will likely hold in ranges, waiting for FED’s economic policy decision tomorrow US afternoon. FOMC is expected to repeat the usual dovish stance and refrain from comment on a possible end of QE, which will only add selling pressure to the greenback. 




As for the short term, the EUR/USD hourly chart shows a strongly bullish 20 SMA converging with the Fibonacci retracement around 1.3115/20, offering short term support, while indicators hold in positive territory. In the 4 hours chart technical readings present a strong upward momentum, reflecting latest run higher and the fact that price stands near the daily high. New gains beyond 1.3200 is what it takes to confirm an upward continuation in the pair, with 1.3250/60 area then at sight. 



Support levels: 1.3150 13115 1.3170



Resistance levels: 1.3200 1.3255 1.3300



EUR/JPY Current price: 128.30


View Live Chart for the EUR/JPY (select the currency)


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The EUR/JPY trades back above 128.00, although finding resistance in the hourly 100 SMA around 128.50 that heads south below 200 one, while indicators remain flat in neutral territory, all of which maintains the pressure to the downside in the pair, despite latest EUR recovery. In the 4 hours chart technical readings remain below their midlines, supporting the shorter term view. So far the pair has found buyers around 127.00 yet if the level gives up, it can shed another 100 pips, as there’s not much in the middle up to 126.00 area. Steady gains above 128.80 on the other hand, will deny the bearish bias and favor a recovery back towards the 130.00 price zone.



Support levels: 128.00 127.60 127.10 



Resistance levels: 128.40 128.80 129.50



GBP/USD Current price: 1.5531


View Live Chart for the GBP/USD (select the currency)


g


Pound surged to 1.5568 against the greenback on dollar selloff, and despite the positive tone, the pair was unable to extend higher. Consolidating for most of the past session, the hourly chart presents a bullish tone, with price above 20 SMA and momentum heading higher above 100, while the 4 hours chart shows price finding support in a bullish 20 SMA currently around 1.5500, but indicators again diverging to the downside. Renewed buying interest should send the pair test 1.56 area, 50% retracement of its latest daily fall, while a break below 1.5490 with increase risk of a downward correction up to 1.5420 price zone.



Support levels:  1.5490 1.5450 1.5420 



Resistance levels: 1.5540 1.5585 1.5610



USD/JPY Current price: 97.43


View Live Chart for the USD/JPY (select the currency)


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The USD/JPY extended its slide up to 97.00 this Tuesday, leading to further unwind on longs. Risk for the pair remains to the downside, as the hourly chart shows 100 SMA gaining bearish momentum above current price while indicators head south in negative territory. Bigger time frames also favor the downside, with next key support around 96.70, strong static support level. A break below this last should expose the pair to a deeper correction, with 94.0 then at sight for the upcoming weeks.



Support levels: 97.10 96.70 96.35



Resistance levels: 97.80 98.20 98.60 



AUD/USD: Current price: 1.0368


View Live Chart for the AUD/USD (select the currency)


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The AUD/USD continues its slow but steady advance, having been as high as 1.0383 this Tuesday. Although further technical confirmation with a break above 1.0410 is required, the upside is now favored, as buyers had now aligned in the 1.0300/30 price zone. The hourly chart shows price above 20 SMA while indicators bounce from their midlines supporting the positive bias, while the 4 hours chart shows also a positive tone. 



Support levels: 1.0335 1.0310 1.0260 



Resistance levels: 1.0380 1.0410 1.0440































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EUR/USD: ready for a roller coaster ride?

Dollar Flat Despite Chicago MNI Falls in April




THE TAKEAWAY: [US Chicago Purchasing Managers fell in April unexpectedly] > [Business activity shrinks due to Federal budget cuts] > [USD/CAD Mixed]



Business conditions in service and manufacturing companies in the Chicago region unexpected weakened during the month of April, to the lowest level since September 2009, indicating some slowdown in the manufacturing sector due to budget cuts. A report released today said that Chicago business barometer dropped to 49.0 in April from 52.4 last month. The composite Barometer fell short of the consensus estimate of 52.5 according to a survey polled by Bloomberg News. A reading above 50 indicates that the manufacturing economy is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates that it is generally contracting.



The underlying details reveal that much of the weakness was concentrated in order backlogs and inventories, both falling to three-year low. Prices Paid Index was the only index above 50 in April but still the lowest since October 2009. As the Federal budget cuts that began on March 1 has lagged effect on the real economy, we may see continue cooling in the manufacturing sector.



USDJPY 1-minute Chart: April 30, 2013


Dollar_Flat_Despite_Chicago_MNI_Falls_in_April__body_Picture_1.png, Dollar Flat Despite Chicago MNI Falls in April


Chart created using Marketscope 2.0– Prepared by Renee Mu



The U.S. dollar showed a fairly muted reaction to the release, with USDCAD little changed. At the time of this report was written, the USDCAD was trading at $1.0092.



Want to see economic data releases directly on your charts? Try this App.



— Written by Renee Mu DailyFX Research





Dollar Flat Despite Chicago MNI Falls in April

EURUSD trading lower after weak German employment data




EURUSD trading lower after weak German employment data

EURUSD rose yesterday and closed at 1.3098. The economic confidence in the Euro area dropped to a reading of 88.6 in April. The industrial confidence dropped to a reading of -13.6 in April. The Consumer Confidence remained steady at -22.3 in April. On the other side of the ocean in the US the Personal Spending and the Personal income came out at 0.2 percent in March. The Pending Home Sales month over month in the United States rose 1.5 percent in March. Support for the EURUSD is seen at 1.3038 and resistance is seen at 1.3110. The HotForex Traders Board shows that 62 percent of the traders are short on the EURUSD.



GBPUSD


The Cable rose yesterday and closed at 1.5499. The Gfk Consumer Confidence Index in the United Kingdom dropped to a reading of -27 in April. Investors are now awaiting the Manufacturing PMI data due from the United Kingdom tomorrow. Support for the GBPUSD is seen at 1.5426 and resistance is seen at 1.5536. The HotForex Traders Board shows that 58 percent of the traders are short on the GBPUSD.








EURUSD trading lower after weak German employment data

Japanese Yen Gains Ground



1,000 and 10,000 Japanese yen notesJapanese yen is gaining ground today, heading higher against the dollar and making some inroads against the euro. Economic data out of Japan is having an effect as well.



The recent Bank of Japan decision not to adjust the current asset purchase program has provided a little respite for a weakening yen. However, the latest economic data, indicating lackluster performance, could prompt the BOJ to take the aggressive easing action it’s been threatening.


Household spending in Japan surged in March, but industrial production rose at a slower pace than expected. There are hopes that overseas demand for Japanese goods will rise as the yen remains somewhat weak, and the weaker currency makes goods denominated in the yen attractive.


For now, the yen is gaining against the US dollar, and making progress against the euro. There are concerns about the euro, and some Forex traders are interested in finding a stable alternative to the euro. That might provide some strength for the yen, even as Japanese officials work to keep the yen somewhat weak.


At 15:24 GMT USD/JPY is lower, heading down to 97.4995 from the open at 97.7530. EUR/JPY is still higher at 128.4550, up from the open at 128.0630, but off the high of 128.5050. GBP/JPY is up to 151.7200 from the open at 151.5250.


If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Japanese Yen,


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Japanese Yen Gains Ground

Employment Cost Pressures Slow in Q1



Total compensation costs for civilian workers increased less than expected in the first quarter. Excess slack in the labor market continues to contain wage inflation. Benefit costs slowed substantially on the quarter.


Wage Inflation Remains Tame 


Led by a 0.5 percent gain in wages and salaries, total compensation costs increased 0.3 percent in Q1, the slowest gain since Q3 2011. Year-over-year, wages and salaries are up just 1.6 percent, a pace that has been maintained for the past four years. Private wages and salary growth came in at 1.7 percent year-over-year, while government workers saw a more modest 1.0 percent increase.




Increase in Benefit Costs Slow


Following a gain of 0.6 percent in the prior three quarters, private industry benefit costs contracted 0.3 percent in Q1. An error in benefits data for private sales & office occupations was identified and removed for the Q1 calculation. ? Given our outlook of modest GDP growth and a gradually improving labor market, upward pressure on employee compensation is expected to remain rather modest in 2013






    Employment Cost Pressures Slow in Q1

    EUR/USD: holding near the top of the range



    EUR/USD Current price: 1.3085


    View Live Chart for the EUR/USD


    e



    Market expectations on upcoming Central Banks decisions, are keeping majors in tight ranges, with the EUR/USD trading today in between 1.3040 and 1.3120. The hourly chart shows a slightly bearish tone prevailing, as indicators hold below their midlines and price below its 20 SMA, although only below 1.3040 the pair may gather some bearish momentum. In the 4 hours chart technical readings are also flat, and will probably remain so until tomorrow’s FOMC decision. 



    Support levels: 1.3070 1.3040 1.3000 



    Resistance levels: 1.3115 1.3150 13200



    GBP/USD Current price: 1.5498


    View Live Chart for the GBP/USD (select the currency)


    g


    Intraday unchanged, GBP/USD also moved to waiting mode, with the pair hovering around 1.5500 and short term technical readings flat. However, the dominant trend continues to be bullish, as the pair holds well above 1.5420, 38.2% retracement of its latest daily fall. A break above 1.5550 however, is now required to confirm an advance towards 1.5610 price zone, next Fibonacci resistance.



    Support levels:  1.5490 1.5450 1.5420 



    Resistance levels: 1.5540 1.5585 1.5610



    USD/JPY Current price: 97.73


    View Live Chart for the USD/JPY (select the currency)


    y


    USD/JPY bounces again from 97.35, although maintains the overall bearish tone according to the hourly chart, as price develops below 100 and 200 SMA’s, while indicators hold in negative territory. Gains above 98.00 had remained limited so far, suggesting more downward pressure ahead, with 96.70 as key support to follow, and probable bearish target for the upcoming sessions.



    Support levels: 97.50 97.20 96.80



    Resistance levels: 98.20 98.60 99.10  



    AUD/USD: Current price: 1.0342


    View Live Chart for the AUD/USD (select the currency)


    a


    The AUD/USD managed to extend its gains up to 1.0371 during past Asian session, having eased back to find some buyers around 1.0330. The hourly chart shows indicators heading south below their midlines with price below a flat 20 SMA, yet unless below mentioned support area, the downside will remain limited. In the 4 hours chart technical readings hold in positive territory, but losing upward momentum, which suggest not much buying interest around. 1.0410 should cap the upside on any attempt to run higher today.



    Support levels: 1.0335 1.0310 1.0260 



    Resistance levels: 1.0380 1.0410 1.0440






























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    EUR/USD: holding near the top of the range

    AUD/USD technical analysis for April 30, 2013



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    AUD/USD technical analysis for April 30, 2013

    NZD/USD: Technical analysis for April 30, 2013



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    NZD/USD: Technical analysis for April 30, 2013

    USD/JPY Technical Analysis 04.30.2013




    USD/JPY Technical Analysis- Prices recoiled from resistance below the 100.00 figure to test support at 97.79, the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement. A break below this barrier initially exposes the 38.2% level at 96.46. The 100.00 level remains as the key resistance boundary in focus.


    Forex_USDJPY_Technical_Analysis_04.30.2013_body_Picture_5.png, USD/JPY Technical Analysis 04.30.2013


    Daily Chart – Created Using FXCM Marketscope 2.0



    Written by Ilya Spivak, Currency Strategist for Dailyfx.com



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    USD/JPY Technical Analysis 04.30.2013

    Saturday, April 27, 2013

    Forex - GBP/USD slips lower in cautious trade


    Forex - GBP/USD slips lower in cautious trade

    Euro zone Sentix investor confidence hits 18-month high in January


    Euro zone Sentix investor confidence hits 18-month high in January

    Norwegian unemployment rate rises unexpectedly


    Norwegian unemployment rate rises unexpectedly

    Crude oil futures lower with U.S. economy in focus


    Crude oil futures lower with U.S. economy in focus

    European stocks mixed to lower amid U.S. worries; Dax down 0.21%


    European stocks mixed to lower amid U.S. worries; Dax down 0.21%

    Dollar Soft vs. Majors, Remains Strong vs. Euro



    Packs of US 100-dollar billsThe US dollar was mostly soft against other major currencies this week as macroeconomic data supported the positive mood of Forex traders. The euro was an exception, falling against the greenback on weak fundamentals.


    US fundamentals were mixed, but USD was weakened by the end of the week by slower-than-expected GDP growth (which was not bad by itself though). Britain’s growth was much slower, but was viewed on more positive light by market participants as the country was in recession previously, boosting GBP. JPY and NZD were supported by absence of additional stimulus from Japan’s and New Zealand’s central banks. As for EUR, economic data and worries about the coming European Central Bank meeting drove the currency down.


    The major events next week are the meeting of the Federal Reserve and the ECB. No changes to policies are expected, but surprises can happen and statements by the central banks’ heads may strongly impact the FX market.


    EUR/USD declined from 1.3076 to 1.3032 this week and its weekly low was at 1.2954. GBP/USD went up from 1.5230 to 1.5484, the highest weekly close since February, and NZD/USD climbed from 0.8398 to 0.8472, while the weekly high was at 0.8561. USD/JPY dropped from 99.80 to 98.08.


    If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the US Dollar,


    feel free to post them using the commentary form below.





    Dollar Soft vs. Majors, Remains Strong vs. Euro

    Forex Weekly Outlook Apr 29-May 3




    The US dollar and the Japanese yen gained some ground in a week which saw weaker than expected data from most regions. As a new month enters, we have key events: the highly anticipated rate decision in the euro-zone, the Fed decision and Non-Farm Payrolls. All these and more are on our weekly outlook. Here are the major market movers awaiting us this week.


    Last week US GDP disappointed with a rise of only 2.5% while analysts expected an annual growth of 3.1%. The GDP rise in the first quarter was enabled by a strong rebound in consumer spending. However, in the UK, growth exceeded expectations and allowed sterling to shine. After announcing a QE blitz, the BOJ didn’t provide news, and USD/JPY retreated from 100, and not for the first time. Speculation about a rate cut dominated the euro’s trading. We will get the answers this week. Let’s Start


    1. US Pending Home Sales: Monday, 15:00. The number of contracts to buy previously owned homes fell by 0.4% in February, indicating a slowdown in the strong housing sector. The reading was worse than the 0.3% decline predicted and followed a 3.8% rise in the previous month. Tighter mortgage lending criteria was the main cause for this decline. A rise of 1.2% is expected this time.

    2. Canadian GDP: Tuesday, 13:30. Canada’s economy expanded by 0.2% in January, rebounding from a decline of the same amount in December. The main rises occurred in manufacturing, mining and the oil and gas industry. The reading was higher than the 0.1% increase anticipated by analysts. The recent rise suggests Canada’s economy could be expanding at roughly a 1.5% in the first quarter. The same rise of 0.2% is expected now.

    3. US CB Consumer Confidence: Tuesday, 15:00.  Consumer confidence plunged in March to 59.7 from a downwardly revised 68 in February amid bleaker short term economic outlook. Pessimism was also apparent in the labor outlook, due to missed employment data creating uncertainty regarding the economic outlook. An improvement to 60.3 is forecasted.

    4. US ADP Non-Farm Employment Change: Wednesday, 13:15. Private sector employment in the US increased by 158,000 jobs in March from the 237,000 addition registered in February, much lower than 203,000 expected by economists. The majority of the new jobs were created by service providers. The first quarter of 2013, the ADP National Employment Report has reported an average gain of 191,000 new private sector jobs per month. A smaller gain of 155,000 is expected now.

    5.  US ISM Manufacturing PMI: Wednesday, 15:00 The U.S. manufacturing sector slowed more than expected in March, down to 51.3 from 54.2 in February, still indicating expansion. According to previous ISM reports, the U.S. factory sector was sluggish in the second half of 2012. However manufacturing has shown signs of recovery in 2013, helped by a pickup in demand, including from foreign customers. A further decline to 51.1 is anticipated now.

    6. US FOMC Statement: Wednesday, 19:00. After a period of excellent US figures, recent data badly disappointed. On this background, the Fed is likely to make no changes to policy and hardly any changes in the wording regarding the economy. In addition, the lack of a press conference accompanying this FOMC meeting also implies that the Fed will not rock the boat. A change in policy can be expected only in the second half of the year, if and only if, the recovery genuinely accelerates from the current frustrating speed. The Fed is expected to keep the current policy of bond buys worth $85 billion unchanged and re-iterate the qualitative guidelines for raising the interest rate.

    7. Eurozone: Rate decision: Thursday, 11:45,  press conference at 12:30. Weak German growth, another record in Spanish unemployment and inflation below target all support easier monetary policy. However, a rate cut will not really decrease borrowing costs, which are already very low. The biggest motivation for cutting the rates would be lowering the value of the euro, thus joining the currency wars in which the ECB has lost so far. A lower value for the single currency would certainly help. At the moment, it seems that there is low chance of a rate cut. No cut would strengthen the euro, while a cut would weaken it. If the ECB wants to get serious with weakening the currency, the ultimate weapon is to cut the deposit rate below the current 0%. A negative rate would send the euro free-falling. 

    8. US Trade Balance: Thursday, 13:30. The U.S. trade gap between imports and exports narrowed unexpectedly in February to $43.0 billion, from an unrevised $44.5 billion in January, amid a sharp drop in crude oil imports and a modest increase in exports. The lower-than-expected deficit could raise estimates of first-quarter U.S. economic growth. Another improvement to  $42.1 billion is expected this time.

    9. US Unemployment Claims: Thursday, 13:30. Jobless claims decreased sharply last week, surprising analysts with a 339,000 claims, down 16,000 from the preceding week. The reading suggests less firing due to increase demand and an ongoing recovery in the US economy. A rise of 345,000 is predicted this time.

    10. US Non-Farm Employment Change: Friday, 13:30. NFP disappointed with a 9 month low of 88,000 job addition in March compared to revised reading of 268,000 registered in February. Washington’s austerity measures had a negative impact on the US job market. Jobless rate ticked a tenth of a point lower to 7.6% due to a worrisome decline in the labor participation rate. An addition of 146,000 jobs is forecast now.

    11. US Unemployment Rate: Friday, 13:30. Unemployment rate dropped a tenth of a point lower to 7.6%, seemingly a good thing. However the decline occurred for the wrong reasons since half a million people were excluded from the labor force and an additional 290,000 fewer people were counted as unemployed because they were not actively looking for work. Thus, participation rate declined to the lowest rate since 1979. No change is expected.

    12. US ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI: Friday, 15:00. The US services sector stood on 54.4 in March, 1.6% lower than February reading and below market forecasts. The New Orders Index declined by 3.6% points to 54.6 %, and the Employment Index dropped 3.9% points to 53.3%, indicating expansion in employment for the eighth consecutive month. The majority of respondents’ comments continue to be positive about business conditions; however, there was a growing concern regarding the uncertainty of the future economy.  A decline to 54.1 is expected.

    *All times are GMT.
























    Forex Weekly Outlook Apr 29-May 3

    Forex Weekly Outlook Apr 29-May 3




    The US dollar and the Japanese yen gained some ground in a week which saw weaker than expected data from most regions. As a new month enters, we have key events: the highly anticipated rate decision in the euro-zone, the Fed decision and Non-Farm Payrolls. All these and more are on our weekly outlook. Here are the major market movers awaiting us this week.


    Last week US GDP disappointed with a rise of only 2.5% while analysts expected an annual growth of 3.1%. The GDP rise in the first quarter was enabled by a strong rebound in consumer spending. However, in the UK, growth exceeded expectations and allowed sterling to shine. After announcing a QE blitz, the BOJ didn’t provide news, and USD/JPY retreated from 100, and not for the first time. Speculation about a rate cut dominated the euro’s trading. We will get the answers this week. Let’s Start


    1. US Pending Home Sales: Monday, 15:00. The number of contracts to buy previously owned homes fell by 0.4% in February, indicating a slowdown in the strong housing sector. The reading was worse than the 0.3% decline predicted and followed a 3.8% rise in the previous month. Tighter mortgage lending criteria was the main cause for this decline. A rise of 1.2% is expected this time.

    2. Canadian GDP: Tuesday, 13:30. Canada’s economy expanded by 0.2% in January, rebounding from a decline of the same amount in December. The main rises occurred in manufacturing, mining and the oil and gas industry. The reading was higher than the 0.1% increase anticipated by analysts. The recent rise suggests Canada’s economy could be expanding at roughly a 1.5% in the first quarter. The same rise of 0.2% is expected now.

    3. US CB Consumer Confidence: Tuesday, 15:00.  Consumer confidence plunged in March to 59.7 from a downwardly revised 68 in February amid bleaker short term economic outlook. Pessimism was also apparent in the labor outlook, due to missed employment data creating uncertainty regarding the economic outlook. An improvement to 60.3 is forecasted.

    4. US ADP Non-Farm Employment Change: Wednesday, 13:15. Private sector employment in the US increased by 158,000 jobs in March from the 237,000 addition registered in February, much lower than 203,000 expected by economists. The majority of the new jobs were created by service providers. The first quarter of 2013, the ADP National Employment Report has reported an average gain of 191,000 new private sector jobs per month. A smaller gain of 155,000 is expected now.

    5.  US ISM Manufacturing PMI: Wednesday, 15:00 The U.S. manufacturing sector slowed more than expected in March, down to 51.3 from 54.2 in February, still indicating expansion. According to previous ISM reports, the U.S. factory sector was sluggish in the second half of 2012. However manufacturing has shown signs of recovery in 2013, helped by a pickup in demand, including from foreign customers. A further decline to 51.1 is anticipated now.

    6. US FOMC Statement: Wednesday, 19:00. After a period of excellent US figures, recent data badly disappointed. On this background, the Fed is likely to make no changes to policy and hardly any changes in the wording regarding the economy. In addition, the lack of a press conference accompanying this FOMC meeting also implies that the Fed will not rock the boat. A change in policy can be expected only in the second half of the year, if and only if, the recovery genuinely accelerates from the current frustrating speed. The Fed is expected to keep the current policy of bond buys worth $85 billion unchanged and re-iterate the qualitative guidelines for raising the interest rate.

    7. Eurozone: Rate decision: Thursday, 11:45,  press conference at 12:30. Weak German growth, another record in Spanish unemployment and inflation below target all support easier monetary policy. However, a rate cut will not really decrease borrowing costs, which are already very low. The biggest motivation for cutting the rates would be lowering the value of the euro, thus joining the currency wars in which the ECB has lost so far. A lower value for the single currency would certainly help. At the moment, it seems that there is low chance of a rate cut. No cut would strengthen the euro, while a cut would weaken it. If the ECB wants to get serious with weakening the currency, the ultimate weapon is to cut the deposit rate below the current 0%. A negative rate would send the euro free-falling. 

    8. US Trade Balance: Thursday, 13:30. The U.S. trade gap between imports and exports narrowed unexpectedly in February to $43.0 billion, from an unrevised $44.5 billion in January, amid a sharp drop in crude oil imports and a modest increase in exports. The lower-than-expected deficit could raise estimates of first-quarter U.S. economic growth. Another improvement to  $42.1 billion is expected this time.

    9. US Unemployment Claims: Thursday, 13:30. Jobless claims decreased sharply last week, surprising analysts with a 339,000 claims, down 16,000 from the preceding week. The reading suggests less firing due to increase demand and an ongoing recovery in the US economy. A rise of 345,000 is predicted this time.

    10. US Non-Farm Employment Change: Friday, 13:30. NFP disappointed with a 9 month low of 88,000 job addition in March compared to revised reading of 268,000 registered in February. Washington’s austerity measures had a negative impact on the US job market. Jobless rate ticked a tenth of a point lower to 7.6% due to a worrisome decline in the labor participation rate. An addition of 146,000 jobs is forecast now.

    11. US Unemployment Rate: Friday, 13:30. Unemployment rate dropped a tenth of a point lower to 7.6%, seemingly a good thing. However the decline occurred for the wrong reasons since half a million people were excluded from the labor force and an additional 290,000 fewer people were counted as unemployed because they were not actively looking for work. Thus, participation rate declined to the lowest rate since 1979. No change is expected.

    12. US ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI: Friday, 15:00. The US services sector stood on 54.4 in March, 1.6% lower than February reading and below market forecasts. The New Orders Index declined by 3.6% points to 54.6 %, and the Employment Index dropped 3.9% points to 53.3%, indicating expansion in employment for the eighth consecutive month. The majority of respondents’ comments continue to be positive about business conditions; however, there was a growing concern regarding the uncertainty of the future economy.  A decline to 54.1 is expected.

    *All times are GMT.
























    Forex Weekly Outlook Apr 29-May 3

    Friday, April 26, 2013

    Japanese Yen Room to Rally as BoJ Witholds Stimulus Details



    Japanese_Yen_Room_to_Rally_as_BoJ_Witholds_Stimulus_Details_body_Picture_1.png, Japanese Yen Room to Rally as BoJ Witholds Stimulus Details


    Japanese Yen Room to Rally as BoJ Withholds Stimulus Details



    Japanese Yen Fundamental Forecast: Bullish



    The Japanese Yen was a top performer this past week, losing only -0.08% to the top British Pound, while adding at least +0.52% against six of the major currencies, even posting gains greater than or equal to +1.48% against four of the major currencies DailyFX Research covers. The USDJPY dropped by -1.48% to close at ¥98.05, but not before seeing 99.90 to the upside and 97.56 to the downside. The Yen’s strength was most pronounced on Thursday and Friday, when speculation arose that the Bank of Japan wouldn’t embark on any new easing policies, after having significantly expanded the scope of its easing measures at the prior meeting.



    The speculation was confirmed on Friday, when the BoJ painted broad strokes with its dovish policy intentions, really only going as far as indicating that it would continue to expand its monetary base until it achieved its desired inflation target of +2.0% y/y by 2015 or 2016. The reaffirmation without policy action is a bit surprising, as is the roundly upbeat attitude, given the National Consumer Price Index (MAR) report released on Friday: deflation accelerated to -0.9% y/y from -0.7% y/y, below the consensus forecast of -0.8%, according to a Bloomberg News survey. Nevertheless, BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda insisted at his post-meeting press conference that “various indicators are showing signs that inflation expectations are heightening as a trend,” though he did clarify that a rebound in inflation would need to be “self-fulfilling,” to an extent.



    In the near-term, for now at least, it seems that Governor Kuroda is satisfied with the measures set for thus far, and accordingly, won’t bring about any new policies that would inevitably introduce another hurdle for the Yen. With these sentiment in place as the backdrop, the Japanese Yen rightfully rejected an exchange rate of 100.00 versus the US Dollar, in what was the second of two failed attempts to crack the elusive figure in April.



    Exogenously, there are several factors that make the Yen an appealing near-term candidate for gains in the week ahead. In Europe, leaders are backpedaling away from austerity, and now there are rumors afoot that the European Central Bank will either cut rates by 25-basis points this week or introduce non-standard easing measures. Needless to say, the EURJPY is poised for major pullback should new dovish policies arise; it would also be a blow to the ECB, which has stubbornly kept rates high the past several months despite increasingly negative economic data from countries closer and closer to the core.



    The Yen also could be poised to gain further versus the US Dollar, now that the US 1Q’13 GDP report disappointed investors. The severity of the decline in USDJPY this coming week largely depends on the Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting on Wednesday: a continuation of the recent shift towards hawkish commentary could stunt Yen gains; while a cautious step backwards towards the dovish side could help the USDJPY make a run back into the mid-90.00s (we favor the former).



    Lastly, it is worth noting the strong relationship that the Yen has had with US equity markets – the Yen is essentially the leverage by which investors are stockpiling risky assets again. It’s very popular to be short the Yen, which means that positioning is heavily biased in one direction which could ultimately lead to a short covering rally. With US earnings not proving to match the enthusiasm of stock market bulls in the 1Q’13 and NYSE margin debt is approaching its all-time high set in July 2007, a pullback could be in order that would prove to be a positive catalyst for the Yen. In sum, despite the BoJ’s continued beratement, recent commentary and exogenous events make the Japanese Yen an appealing candidate for the coming week, and we thus hold a bullish bias. –CV



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    Japanese Yen Room to Rally as BoJ Witholds Stimulus Details

    Losses of Aussie Ahead of Weekend



    Various Australian dollar notesThe Australian dollar ended Friday with losses as US economic growth disappointed Forex market participants, spoiling their mood and reducing their willingness to buy higher-yielding currencies.


    The US economy grew slower that was expected by analysts. The growth was by no mean bad, especially compared to that of most developed nations, but it was still disappointing to traders. The Aussie lost even to the US dollar, which itself was weakened by the report.


    The Australian currency was initially supported by hopes for monetary stimulus from central bank of major economies. The Bank of Japan proved such expectations wrong, but the vast majority of central banks will announce their decisions next week.


    AUD/USD fell from 1.0290 to close at 1.0280 after rallying to 1.0335. EUR/AUD went up from 1.2639 to 1.2675. AUD/JPY declined from 102.11 to 100.82.


    If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Australian Dollar,


    feel free to post them using the commentary form below.





    Losses of Aussie Ahead of Weekend

    Trade Changing Trends with MACD




    Article Summary: Identifying and trading reversal can be a difficult skill for traders to master. Today we will review trading changes in the trend using MACD.



    Identifying and trading changes in the trend can be one of the hardest skills for a trader to master. However, by having knowledge of technical analysis and indicators, traders can successfully navigate a market turn. Today we will focus on analyzing the MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) indicator and using it to our benefit in a changing market environment.



    The EURGBP pictured below, is an excellent example of how MACD can be used in such environments. The EURGBP has had extended gains moving as much as 1063 pips from its March 2012 low at .7751. At the same time, it should also be noted the pair has also recently turned from its 2013 high and has declined as much as 417 pips. So how can we use MACD to navigate this changing market climate?



    Learn Forex – EURGBP Daily Trend


    Trade_Changing_Trends_with_MACD_body_Picture_2.png, Trade Changing Trends with MACD


    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)



    The first step to trading a market turn is to identify MACD Divergence. Divergence normally occurs when the indicator is moving in a different direction from price. Below we can see EURGBP forming a higher high, while MACD divergence is making a lower high. This is our first indication that price is attempting to turn from the trend. At this point, traders should consider concluding any existing long positions and begin looking for momentum to turn on the pair.



    Next, traders will use MACD to identify what is known as a zero line crossover. The zero line represents momentum for a currency displayed using the MACD indicator. When MACD moves below the zero line, as in the example below, it indicates that the 12 period EMA has moved below the longer 26 period on our graph. This movement will confirm the momentum shift pinpointed by divergence and will allow traders to begin identifying new sell positions.



    Learn Forex – EURGBP with MACD


    Trade_Changing_Trends_with_MACD_body_Picture_1.png, Trade Changing Trends with MACD


    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)



    Lastly, once divergence and momentum has been identified traders can then look for execution using a classic MACD crossover. Traders will look to sell the new downtrend when the red MACD line crosses below the blue signal line in a downtrend. Traders can then repeat this approach until markets again diverge and the process can be replicated with the new directional trend.



    —Written by Walker England, Trading Instructor



    To contact Walker, email wengland@fxcm.com. Follow me on Twitter @WEnglandFX.



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    Trade Changing Trends with MACD

    Euro at the End of Business Week



    One euro coinThe euro ended the last trading day of this week higher against the US dollar, but lower versus the Japanese yen and the Great Britain pound as market participants speculated whether the European Central Bank will cut interest rates next week.


    German import prices slipped 0.1 percent in March from February when they increased 0.3 percent. Analysts have expected no change. The ECB policy decision next week is the major theme of discussions among Forex traders. Lower borrowing costs may be helpful to indebted economies, while Germany would benefit from higher rates, putting the central bank in a tough position to decide what course it should take.


    The euro was a bit soft amid uncertainty and unfavorable macroeconomic indicators, yet managed to gain on the dollar, which was weakened by worse-than-expected GDP figure. The shared 17-nation currency lost against the yen, which was bolstered by absence of additional monetary easing from the Bank of Japan.


    EUR/USD advanced from 1.3009 to close at 1.3032. Meanwhile, EUR/JPY dropped from 129.11 and EUR/GBP ticked down from 0.8428 to 0.8415.


    If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Euro,


    feel free to post them using the commentary form below.





    Euro at the End of Business Week

    Another Spring, Another Slowdown in the Economy





    Another Spring, Another Slowdown in the Economy

    Too much unemployment





    Too much unemployment

    EUR: To cut or not to cut; next week forecast



    Easy title for a complicated scenario: the EUR heads towards the ends of April easing against most of its rivals, as over the past few weeks, market players have been listening ECB officials bluffing on the benefits of a rate cut, and pricing it in. Market players already expect the Central Bank to take rates down from current 0.75% to 0.50%, a measly 0.25% cut.



    With the economy on recession, and the OTM program accumulating dust, one should wonder how beneficial could be such rate cut. In fact, there are more chances that investors will take it as a last ditch effort, and will hardly provide support to EUR or increase the confidence in the ECB. A larger rate cut however, may provide some short term support to the common currency, but in the long run will do nothing to help solving the crisis, and will pass, leaving the fundamental picture unchanged.



    EUR/USD, range, range and more range


    e


    The EUR/USD has spent most of the last two weeks trading in a tight range, trapped in between Fibonacci levels: after a non lasting test of 1.3200, the pair retraced all the way back to the 23.6% retracement of its latest daily fall from 1.3710 to 1.2744, around 1.2970. the level has prove strong these last days, attracting buyers on dips that anyway, have been unable to reverse the heavy tone the pair has. Latest spike higher missed the 1.3100 area, leaving a daily chart fulfilled of lower lows. 



    Odds are now to the downside in the pair, with a break below the 1.2970 Fibonacci level opening doors for a quick test of key 1.2880, strong static midterm support.  Once below this last, the slide could easily extend towards 1.2740/50 area next week, but if this last gives up, then get ready for a run towards sub 1.26 level this May. 



    To revert actual bearish tone, price needs to establish above the 1.3115 resistance, 38.2% of the same Fibonacci rally, with scope then for a retest of 1.3200. However, only steady gains above 1.3230, will provide basis for a bullish midterm case, with 1.3510 then at sight.




    EUR/JPY, or the battle of the less weak


    ey


    The EUR/JPY, along with many other yen crosses, has lost its bullish shine. At this point, seems failure in USD/JPY to take over psychological 100.00 level weights on investors’ decisions when it comes to all of yen pair. Ending the week below 128.00, the pair holds to its monthly gains, trading far above the opening around 119.10. But the bearish potential increase as players take profits out of the table and EUR tumbles: the daily chart shows momentum indicator heading almost vertically south and near its 100 level, pointing for more slides next week, towards 125.80 area, immediate midterm support. 


    Further yen strength may see the pair even approaching 124.86, April 16th daily low, and breakpoint: buyers determination will be tested if price reaches this area, and either the pair presents a strong bounce and a return of the bulls, or breaks lower, leading to further unwind. In this case, 120.00 area seems a probable target before price finally stabilizes. 



    A recovery should extend minimum above 129.00 to erase the negative bias and see the pair attempting further recoveries up to 131.10, this year high. Then again, the best barometer will be USD/JPY and its ability to overcome 100.00.




    EUR/GBP, after UK GDP


    eg


    The United Kingdom seems to have avoided a triple dip recession: latest GDP figures impressed to the upside, giving back Pound some of its lost charm: the cable has soared across the board, outperforming most of its rivals, and sending EUR/GBP to a fresh 1 month low. The pair trades around 0.8400, with the daily chart pointing for a strong downward continuation as indicators gain bearish momentum below their midlines, with scope to test 0.8360 now, next strong support.



    Whether Pound will be able to continue advancing will depend mostly on upcoming fundamental readings in the UK: with further signs of recovery, the pair will likely extend current bearish trend eyeing 0.8220, December 2012 highs. 



    Current downward trend will be in trouble if the pair regains the 0.8500 level over the next few days, although buying interest won’t be strong enough to send the pair back towards 0.8800 highs, but likely limited to and advance towards 0.8635, April 17th high.







    EUR: To cut or not to cut; next week forecast

    Dollar Gains As Consumer Confidence Falls Less Than Expected




    THE TAKEAWAY: [US. April Final Michigan Confidence fell less than expected] > [Private consumption expands at a modest rate; government spending contracts] > [USDJPY Bullish]



    April Final Consumer Confidence in the U.S. dropped less than expected, to a three-month low from the nine-month low initially reported. According to a report released by University of Michigan today, the Reuters/U of Michigan Aprilfinal index of U.S. consumer sentiment fell to 76.4 this month following an increase to 78.6 in March. The U. of Michigan Confidence Index is considered as one of the best leading indicators for future consumption. Economists in a survey polled by Bloomberg News had projected a final decline to73.5 after a preliminary April reading of 72.3.



    The report indicates that consumer spending may slow down due to the Federal budget cuts that began taking effect on March 1. The reduction will trim 5 percent from domestic agencies and 8 percent for Defense Department this fiscal year. According to another report released earlier today, the US economy grew at a moderate pace of 2.5 percent in the first quarter with public consumption below forecast. Yet private consumption grew stronger than expected despite the removal of the payroll tax cut. As a result, the economy is likely to continue expand but with some drags.



    USDJPY 1-minute Chart: April 26, 2013


    Dollar_Gains_As_Consumer_Confidence_Falls_Less_Than_Expected_body_Picture_1.png, Dollar Gains As Consumer Confidence Falls Less Than Expected


    Chart created using Marketscope 2.0– Prepared by Renee Mu



    In the minutes following the data release, the U.S. dollar rallied slightly against the major currencies, with USDJPY rising to 98.20. As the market corrected, the greenback trimmed its advance after the report. At the time of this report was written, the USDJPY was trading at 97.79 yen.



    Want to see economic data releases directly on your charts? Try this App.



    — Written by Renee Mu DailyFX Research





    Dollar Gains As Consumer Confidence Falls Less Than Expected

    EURUSD trading back near the 1.30 level. Advance GDP data from the United States on tap.




    EURUSD trading back near the 1.30 level. Advance GDP data from the United States on tap.

    EURUSD dropped yesterday and closed at 1.3011. Speculations flooded the traders community yesterday that the European Central Bank may lower the interest rates next week. The Unemployment Rate in Spain rose to the record 27.2 percent in the first quarter of 2013. On the other side of the ocean the Unemployment Claims in the United States dropped to 339K during the last week. Trading trends on the pair today are expected to be determined by the Advance GDP data due from the United States. Support for the EURUSD is seen at 1.2979 and resistance is seen at 1.3069. The HotForex Traders Board shows that 55 percent of the traders are short on the EURUSD.




    GBPUSD


    The Cable rose yesterday and closed at 1.5432. The economy in the United Kingdom escaped from a triple dip recession after recording an unexpected economic growth in the first quarter of 2013. The Preliminary Gross Domestic Product release showed an economic growth of 0.3 percent. The Index of Services in the United Kingdom rose 0.8 percent in February. Due to the lack of releases from the UK the trading trends on the pair today are expected to be determined by the releases from the United States. Support for the GBPUSD is seen at 1.5362 and resistance is seen at 1.5478. The HotForex Traders Board shows that 55 percent of the traders are short on the GBPUSD.







    EURUSD trading back near the 1.30 level. Advance GDP data from the United States on tap.

    Japanese Yen Higher after Bank of Japan Announcement



    1,000 yenJapanese yen is heading higher today, performing well across the board following the latest Bank of Japan announcement.



    Yen is getting a boost from the fact that the Bank of Japan is not adding any particulars to its plan for economic stimulus. The announcement today didn’t offer anything new. The result, in this slightly risk averse environment, is that the yen is in demand as a safe haven.


    Haruhiko Kuroda, the new BOJ head, is known for his aggressive view on easing, and he showed it shortly after taking over the BOJ. However, there won’t be any additional monetary easing measures right now, and that has Forex traders clambering for the yen.


    The Forex forecast for the Japanese yen might be a different matter, though. If the BOJ feels it necessary, we’ve already seen that it isn’t afraid to intervene, and if the Japanese economy doesn’t get the stimulus it needs, more easing could be on the way. For now, though, the yen is in high demand, and the best performer of the day.


    At 13:05 GMT USD/JPY is down to 98.3110 from the open at 99.2615. EUR/JPY is down to 127.9335 from the open at 129.1450. GBP/JPY is down to 152.1300 from the open at 153.1650.


    If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Japanese Yen,


    feel free to post them using the commentary form below.





    Japanese Yen Higher after Bank of Japan Announcement

    EUR/USD: weighted by a possible rate cut



    EUR/USD Current price: 1.3017


    View Live Chart for the EUR/USD


    e



    The EUR/USD maintains the neutral stance regardless what’s going on around the world today, weighted by increasing confidence in a rate cut by ECB next week. US advanced GDP reached 2.5% a pretty good number showing growth, yet below market expectations of 3.1%. Anyway, stocks are higher, and dollar lower against most of its rivals, which suggests the downside for EUR/USD will remain limited by 1.2970/1.3000 price zone. However, only steady gains above 1.3040 should favor a short term bullish movement, with 1.3080/1.3100 being a probable top for today. 



    Support levels: 1.3000 1.2970 1.2925 



    Resistance levels: 1.3040 1.3070 1.3115



    GBP/USD Current price: 1.5483


    View Live Chart for the GBP/USD (select the currency)


    g


    GBP upward momentum against the greenback increased, with the pair trading a few pips below the daily high of 1.5497. The GBP/USD maintains a clear bullish tone, and if stocks managed to run higher and trigger some risk appetite, Pound will likely be the most favored today: the hourly chart shows price has held above 1.5420 Fibonacci support, with 20 SMA heading higher below current price and indicators regaining the upside in positive territory. In the 4 hours chart technical readings are also strongly bullish despite in overbought territory. 



    Support levels:  1.5450 1.5420 1.5370 



    Resistance levels: 1.5490 1.5540 1.5585



    USD/JPY Current price: 98.07


    View Live Chart for the USD/JPY (select the currency)


    y


    Yen strengthen on negative US data, with the pair testing 98.00 at the time being, and scope to continue falling: the hourly chart shows price broke below both 100 and 200 SMA’s, while indicators head south in negative territory. The pair however, maintains the long term bullish trend and dips will be seen as buying opportunities even on falls up to 97.20 price zone. 



    Support levels: 98.00 97.70 97.20



    Resistance levels: 98.20 98.60 99.10  



    AUD/USD: Current price: 1.0281


    View Live Chart for the AUD/USD (select the currency)


    a


    The AUD/USD maintains a steady range, holding above 1.0260 static support level, although with an overall bearish tone according to the hourly chart, that shows price below 20 SMA and indicators in negative territory. Bigger time frames show indicators around their midlines, and price right below 20 SMA in the 4 hours chart, with not enough bearish momentum at the time being: a price acceleration below 1.0260 is what it takes to trigger a selling rally in the pair towards recent lows of 1.0220. 



    Support levels: 1.0260 1.0220 1.0180 



    Resistance levels: 1.0300 1.0335 1.0370




























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    EUR/USD: weighted by a possible rate cut

    GBP/USD intraday technical and fundamental review for April 26, 2013



    Exclusive newsline by InstaForex is your reliable assistant in the Forex world.


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    GBP/USD intraday technical and fundamental review for April 26, 2013

    GBP/USD Takes Aim at Channel Resistance




    GBP/USD Technical Strategy: Flat



    Prices broke above resistance at 1.5408, the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement, exposing a rising channel top at 1.5527 and the 50% level at 1.5586. The 1.5408 mark has been recast as support, with a reversal back below that eyeing the channel bottom at 1.5228 and the 23.6% retracement at 1.5216.Current positioning doesn’t offer an actionable trade setup and we will stand aside for now.


    Forex_Analysis_GBPUSD_Takes_Aim_at_Channel_Resistance_body_Picture_5.png, GBP/USD Takes Aim at Channel Resistance


    Daily Chart – Created Using FXCM Marketscope 2.0



    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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    GBP/USD Takes Aim at Channel Resistance

    Spain: Labour force, employment and unemployment





    Spain: Labour force, employment and unemployment

    United States: Can do better





    United States: Can do better

    "Gold Shortage" Seen in Asia with "Physical Market Still Tight"




    GOLD drifted lower towards $1460 an ounce Friday morning in London, having climbed to its highest level since last week’s price drop at $1485 during Asian trading.

    “The next resistance level is $1487,” says a note from technical analysts at Scotia Mocatta published late Thursday.


    “Should we trade through that, we believe it will open up a full retracement to the $1522 lows…support is at $1322.”


    Silver meantime rose as high as $24.86 an ounce in Friday’s Asian trading before falling back, while stocks and commodities fell and US Treasuries gained ahead of the release of provisional first quarter US GDP figures.


    Heading into the weekend, gold in Dollars was up around 4% on the week by Friday lunchtime in London, set for its biggest weekly gain since early September 2012. Silver meantime was up 2.9%.


    Over in Asia, “there’s panic buying [of physical gold products],” says Ronald Leung, chief dealer at Hong Kong’s Lee Cheong Gold Dealers.


    “Everybody is buying gold…the physical market is still tight. The thing is that there are no immediate stocks.”


    Wholesale dealers have this week reported premiums over the spot gold price of around $3 an ounce in Hong Kong and Singapore, and as high as $10 in Mumbai.


    “You must be prepared to pay up,” one Singapore dealer told newswire Reuters this morning.


    “I would think premiums will remain high in the short-term because of a shortage in immediate stocks. You have to wait for three days if you want to get gold now.”


    According to a senior bullion bank executive speaking to BullionVault Thursday, Swiss capacity for producing kilo bars – the preferred form of gold bullion amongst private investors in Asia – is currently booked out until the end of May.


    The US Mint meantime has sold 306,500 ounces of American Eagle gold coins so far this month, almost three times the volume sold in March.


    “Although impressive in its scale,” says the latest commodities note from investment bank Natixis, “this retail demand will need to be sustained for a prolonged period if it is to offset not just the absence of [institutional investment] demand, but also potentially new investor sales in the coming weeks.”


    As of Thursday, the world’s biggest gold exchange traded fund SPDR Gold Trust (ticker: GLD) has seen outflows of 42.7 tonnes from a week earlier, taking total holdings to just under 1090.3 tonnes, their lowest level since September 2009.


    “Heavy disinvestment from ETF investors is being offset by strong physical demand in key markets such as India and China,” says a note from Australian bank Macquarie, “but neither of these is likely to continue indefinitely, and which runs its course first could determine whether the price moves $100 an ounce higher or lower.”


    On the currency markets, the Euro drifted lower against the Dollar but remained above $1.30. 
    The Euro gold price meantime looked set for a 4.7% weekly gain at €1126 an ounce. By comparison, gold in Sterling was up only 2.8% on the week at £947 an ounce after the Pound rallied yesterday following news that the UK avoided recession in Q1.


    In Switzerland meantime, the chairman of the country’s central bank today criticized proposals that would prevent his institution from selling any of its gold reserves, arguing it could hinder monetary policy.


    Consumer price deflation accelerated in Japan last month, with the consumer price index down -0.9% year-on-year compared to -0.8% for February, official data published Friday show.


    Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda told a press conference that “there were no calls…for further monetary easing” at today’s central bank policy meeting, where policymakers decided to leave interest rates at 0.1%.


    “For the time being,” said Kuroda, “the BOJ will be buying 50 trillion Yen of government bonds annually to expand the monetary base by 60 trillion to 70 trillion Yen each year.”


    Two BOJ board members dissented from the central bank’s projection that inflation will reach 2% over the next three years, Kuroda revealed.





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