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Daily FX Commentary: (Morning Report)
EUR/USD
Bears took control of the near-term outlook, as the pair failed to sustain gains above 1.2800, 200 day MA and fell sharply to 1.2735, Monday’s opening levels. The reversal, signaled by Doji candle, retraced over 50% of 1.2660/1.2828 recovery rally. Hourly indicators are deeply in the negative territory and 4h chart studies building bearish momentum that keeps near-term focus at the downside. Strong support zone lies at 1.2720/00, Fib 61.8% / tentative bull trendline off 1.2660 and daily Ichimoku cloud base, seen as next downside target. Immediate resistance stands at 1.2764, yesterday’s low, ahead of 20/55 day EMA’s at 1.2785 and key near-term barriers at 1.2800/28.
Res: 1.2764, 1.2785, 1.2800, 1.2821
Sup: 1.2734, 1.2724, 1.2713, 1.2705
GBP/USD
Corrective rally off 1.5826, 15 Nov low, was capped by daily Ichimoku cloud base at 1.5935, with subsequent dip to 1.5882, retracing 505 of initial 1.5826/1.5935 rally. This could be seen as corrective, as 4h studies still hold in the positive territory and hourly indicators start to point higher, after breaking below their midlines. However, regain of 1.5935 is required to confirm higher low and resume near-term recovery, towards 1.5959, Fib 38.2% and 1.6000, round figure / trendline resistance. On the downside, violation of 1.5868, Fib 61.8%, would put near-term bulls on hold.
Res: 1.5919, 1.5927, 1.5935, 1.5959
Sup: 1.5882, 1.5868, 1.5857, 1.5826
USD/JPY
Near-term bulls remain fully in play, as the pair resumes rally that was interrupted by 81.00/58 consolidation and breaks above our initial target at 82.00. Immediate upside target lies at 82.20, May highs and 83.32, weekly 150 day MA, to possibly open way towards psychological 83.00 barrier. However, overextended conditions on both, 1 and 4h chart, with appearance of 4h RSI /MACD bearish divergence, could limit gains in the near-term. Previous high at 81.58, offers initial support, ahead of 81.00, consolidative range floor that should contain any stronger reversal.
Res: 82.20, 82.32, 82.50, 83.00
Sup: 81.70, 81.58, 81.42, 81.09
USD/CHF
Bounce on failed attempt to break below important 0.9400 support, also 200 day MA, provides temporary relief, as the price jumps to 0.9456 so far. Retracement of over 61.8% of 0.9489/0.9390 fall, turns hourly structure positive, however, failure to regain previous high at 0.9489, would risk lower top and fresh weakness, as 4h indicators still hold in the negative territory. Break above 0.9489 to re-focus key near-term barriers at 0.9500/11, otherwise, near-term focus would shift back towards 0.9400.
Res: 0.9456, 0.9489, 0.9500, 0.9511
Sup: 0.9433, 0.9427, 0.9400, 0.9390
Daily Market Commentary: (Evening Report)
Footsie rallies in afternoon trade
Market Movers
techMARK 2,054.64 -0.07%
FTSE 100 5,752.03 +0.07%
FTSE 250 11,783.32 -0.32%
Market Movers
techMARK 2,054.64 -0.07%
FTSE 100 5,752.03 +0.07%
FTSE 250 11,783.32 -0.32%
The FTSE 100 opened on the back foot on
Wednesday morning after the initial disappointment regarding a delay in
funds to Greece; however comments by Eurozone officials throughout the
day lifted the mood in the afternoon, pushing the index back into
positive territory by the close.
Equity markets Stateside started the session with moderate gains ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday. Volumes on European markets are expected to be very light in the absence of US trading tomorrow.
The Eurogroup on Tuesday night was unable to thrash out an agreement on how to finance a two-year extension in Greece’s commitments. "I don’t know when [the aid disbursements] will happen," said Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Juncker after the meeting in Brussels. "Greece has delivered, now it is up to us."
Market analyst Michael Hewson from CMC Markets said: “Disappointment appears to have been tempered somewhat by expectations that EU leaders will, in the final analysis, agree something next week on November 26th, and ultimately unlock the extra money that Greece needs to keep funding itself.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said she is confident the issue will be closed at Monday's Eurogroup meeting. Meanwhile, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said that Eurozone governments and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have agreed on a Greek debt buy-back programme in order to fill a financing gap, according to Reuters.
MPC voted 8-to-1 in favour of keeping QE unchanged Equity markets Stateside started the session with moderate gains ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday. Volumes on European markets are expected to be very light in the absence of US trading tomorrow.
The Eurogroup on Tuesday night was unable to thrash out an agreement on how to finance a two-year extension in Greece’s commitments. "I don’t know when [the aid disbursements] will happen," said Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Juncker after the meeting in Brussels. "Greece has delivered, now it is up to us."
Market analyst Michael Hewson from CMC Markets said: “Disappointment appears to have been tempered somewhat by expectations that EU leaders will, in the final analysis, agree something next week on November 26th, and ultimately unlock the extra money that Greece needs to keep funding itself.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said she is confident the issue will be closed at Monday's Eurogroup meeting. Meanwhile, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said that Eurozone governments and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have agreed on a Greek debt buy-back programme in order to fill a financing gap, according to Reuters.
The minutes of the latest Monetary Policy Committee
(MPC) meeting came out this morning, showing that eight of the nine
members voted to maintain the size of its asset purchases at £375bn.
Barclays Research analyst Chris Crowe said that the minutes were supportive of the current stance: "standing back from further stimulus for the time being, but ready to do more if the economy continues to disappoint."
In other domestic news, UK public sector net borrowing came in at £8.6bn last month, up from £5.9bn in October 2011, according to the Office for National Statistics. The consensus estimate was for net borrowing to the tune of £6bn.
Barclays Research analyst Chris Crowe said that the minutes were supportive of the current stance: "standing back from further stimulus for the time being, but ready to do more if the economy continues to disappoint."
In other domestic news, UK public sector net borrowing came in at £8.6bn last month, up from £5.9bn in October 2011, according to the Office for National Statistics. The consensus estimate was for net borrowing to the tune of £6bn.
Europe Market Report
European Markets Finished Up Despite Greece Concerns
The European markets recovered from early weakness on Wednesday and ended the session with modest gains. The early losses were caused by the failure of the Eurozone finance ministers to come to an agreement on Greece at their meeting in Brussels on Tuesday. The meeting was expected to produce a final decision on the next Greek aid tranche.
Eurozone finance ministers on Tuesday failed to strike a deal on Greece, delaying further the approval of the much-awaited EUR 31.5 billion-loan installment despite fears that the country will run out of cash this month.
The Eurogroup will meet again on November 26 to complete "further technical work on some elements of this package," Eurogroup President Jean-Claude Juncker said in a statement issued after the ministers' meeting in Brussels on Tuesday.
However, Juncker said the Eurogroup has made progress in identifying "a consistent package of credible initiatives aimed at making a further substantial contribution to the sustainability of Greek government debt."
Bank of England policymakers decided to retain quantitative easing at GBP 375 billion through a split vote early November, as David Miles sought an increase of GBP 25 billion citing the slackness in the economy, while all other eight members assessed the current size as appropriate.
Though members differed over the exact impact of the asset purchases, they said that demand and output would have been significantly weaker in their absence, minutes of November 7 and 8 meeting showed Wednesday. They also discussed the likely effectiveness of additional stimulus.
Regarding interest rates, the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to maintain it at a record low 0.50 percent. Nonetheless, the Committee discussed the likely effectiveness of reducing the bank rate to below 0.5 percent. Members judged that it was unlikely to wish to reduce bank rate in the foreseeable future.
The Euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks increased by 0.43 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, added 0.23 percent.
The DAX of Germany climbed by 0.16 percent and the CAC 40 of France gained 0.44 percent. The FTSE 100 of the U.K. advanced by 0.05 percent and the SMI of Switzerland rose by 0.37 percent.
A leading indicator for Germany's economic activity increased 0.1 percent month-on-month to 102.6 in September, marking its first gain since February this year, the Conference Board said in a report on Wednesday.
The U.K.'s public sector net borrowing (PSNB), excluding the temporary effects of financial interventions, rose to GBP 8.6 billion in October from GBP 5.9 billion a year ago, reports said citing data published by the Office for National Statistics on Wednesday.
Economists had forecast the budget deficit to widen to GBP 6 billion. Public sector net cash requirement (PSNCR) showed a shortfall of GBP 14.7 billion during the month.
US Market Report
Stocks Experiencing Choppy Trading Ahead Of Holiday
With traders getting a head start on tomorrow's holiday, stocks are turning in a lackluster performance during trading on Wednesday. A mixed batch of U.S. economic data may also be contributing to the choppy trading on Wall Street.
The major averages are currently posting modest gains but are off their early highs. The Dow is up 31.13 points or 0.2 percent at 12,819.64, the Nasdaq is up 3.23 points or 0.1 percent at 2,919.91 and the S&P 500 is up 0.22 points or less than a tenth of a percent at 1,388.03.
The lack of direction being shown by stocks comes as trading activity remains light ahead of the Thanksgiving Day holiday on Thursday.
Traders are also digesting a mixed batch of economic data, including reports showing a drop in jobless claims and a substantial downward revision to consumer sentiment.
Before the start of trading, the Labor Department released a report showing a notable decrease in initial jobless claims in the week ended November 17th, although the data continued to reflect distortions due to Hurricane Sandy.
The report showed that jobless claims fell to 410,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 451,000, with claims coming in line with analyst estimates.
Meanwhile, a separate report from Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan showed that consumer sentiment improved by substantially less than initially estimated in the month of November.
The report said the consumer sentiment index for November came in at 82.7, down sharply from the preliminary reading of 84.9. With the downward revision, the index is now only just above the final October reading of 82.6.
The latest news out of Europe has also helped to keep buying interest subdued, as finance ministers failed to strike a deal on Greece, further delaying the approval of another round of financing for the debt-plagued nation.
The Eurogroup will meet again on November 26th to complete "further technical work on some elements of this package," Eurogroup President Jean-Claude Juncker said in a statement issued after the ministers' meeting in Brussels.
Traders are also keeping an eye on developments in the Middle East, with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the region to try to help broker a cease fire between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza.
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