GBPUSD TECHS: Trades Through Resistance

Dec-03 11:22
  • RES 4: 1.3452 50.0% retracement of the Sep 17 - Nov 4 bear leg   
  • RES 3: 1.3416 High Oct 21 
  • RES 2: 1.3368 50.0% retracement of the Sep 17 - Nov 4 bear leg
  • RES 1: 1.3306 Low Oct 22  
  • PRICE: 1.3289 @ 11:22 GMT Dec 3
  • SUP 1: 1.3187 20-day EMA   
  • SUP 2: 1.3125 Low Nov 26
  • SUP 3: 1.3038/10 Low Nov 20 / Low Nov 4 & 5 and the bear trigger 
  • SUP 4: 1.2971 1.382 proj of the Sep 17 - 25 - Oct 1 price swing        

The trend theme in GBPUSD remains bearish and gains are considered  corrective - for now. However, price is again trading higher, today. The pair is through the 50-day EMA at 1.3255. A clear break of the EMA would highlight a stronger bull theme and signal scope for a climb towards 1.3368, a Fibonacci retracement. Initial firm support is seen at 1.3187, the 20-day EMA. A move below this average would be a bearish development.

Historical bullets

FED: More Dovish Fedspeak Eyed After Friday’s Broad Rate Cut Pushback

Nov-03 11:22

Today’s Fedspeak sees more dovish/at most centrist FOMC members scheduled compared to Friday’s mostly more hawkish stance (before a typically dovish Waller late on). We’re set to hear from Miran, Daly and Cook, with our pick being Cook for her first monetary policy relevant remarks in nearly three months. 

  • ~0715ET – Gov. Miran (voter) on Bloomberg TV. He didn't publish a dissent statement on Friday, having also shied away from tradition after the September meeting, but his dovish stance is well-known. He has been advocating for 50bp cuts and noted after the mid-October deterioration in US-China trade relations that there was more urgency to get rates to neutral. It will be interesting to see whether this latest urgency is dialled back at the margin. Limited headlines from a NYT interview published Saturday morning noted that restrictive policy poses a risk to the labor market and is making the economy more brittle to shocks.
  • 1200ET – SF Fed’s Daly (non-voter) in moderated conversation (no text). Recently towards the more dovish end of the FOMC spectrum, she said on Sep 24 that she "fully supported" the Fed's 25bp September cut, and suggested "Moving forward, it is likely that further policy adjustments will be needed as we work to restore price stability while providing needed support to the labor market." She notes that the latest Fed Dot Plot showed that further cuts were expected, "but these are projections, not promises, and making good decisions will require us to anchor on our objectives, assess the tradeoffs, and decide, again and again."
  • 1400ET – Gov. Cook (voter) on economy and monetary policy (text + Q&A). We haven’t heard from Cook on monetary policy since the second half of August when President Trump tried to force her resignation and then fire her in what’s been a lengthy legal process. She noted back in early August that the jobs report at the time was concerning as big jobs revisions were somewhat typical of turning points and that the unemployment rate is still a good indicator of slack. We consider her to towards the center of the hawk/dove spectrum, albeit slightly on the dovish side.
  • For a review of Friday’s post-FOMC Fedspeak, see the MNI US Macro Weekly here which captured remarks from Bostic, Hammack, Logan and Schmid. It was published before Waller said all the data suggest the Fed should cut rates again in December. He would say yes if President Trump asked him to be Fed Chair.  

 

CHF: USDCHF Strength Will Hinge on US Private Data This Week

Nov-03 11:09
  • Broad USD strength combined with firmer global equities has helped USDCHF clear the October high, prompting the pair to change hands at its highest level since August 22nd. This clears resistance up to 0.8104. Sustainability of the move higher here will depend on the suite of private US data releases set for this week, specifically: today's US ISM Manufacturing and S&P Global Manufacturing PMI, ISM Services and ADP Employment data on Wednesday ahead of prelim UMich sentiment data on Friday.
  • Following the surprising division of the FOMC at last week's rate decision, a presumed December rate cut has been called into question - and absent official US government releases, these private sector numbers will take on greater importance, and should certainly play a part in policy-setting for the hawks into the final decision of the year (indeed, Powell has referenced the Michigan inflation expectations survey in press conferences previously).
  • As a result, a strong turnout from the private sector numbers this week would pose upside risks to USDCHF, and clearance of 0.8104 would extend the upside of the range toward 0.8171, the late July rally top. 

US 10YR FUTURE TECHS: (Z5) Key Support Remains Exposed

Nov-03 11:05
  • RES 4: 114-02   High Oct 17 and the bull trigger 
  • RES 3: 113-29   High Oct 22
  • RES 2: 113-18+ High Oct 28 
  • RES 1: 113-06   20-day EMA 
  • PRICE:‌‌ 112-25+ @ 10:48 GMT Nov 3 
  • SUP 1: 112-16   Low Oct 30 
  • SUP 2: 112-14   Low Oct 9
  • SUP 3: 112-06   Low Sep 25 and a reversal trigger
  • SUP 4: 111-30   Trendline support drawn from the May 22 low 

Recent weakness in Treasuries undermines a bullish theme. The contract has traded through the 50-day EMA, at 112-26+, highlighting potential for a deeper retracement near-term. A continuation lower would open 112-06, the  Sep 25 low and the next key support. On the upside, the contract needs to trade above 113-18+, the Oct 28 high to signal a possible bullish reversal. Key resistance and the bull trigger is at 114-02, the Oct 17 high.