NZD JPY - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSNZD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: BULLISH
1. Developments surrounding the global risk outlook.
As a high-beta currency, NZD has benefited from the market's improving risk outlook over recent months as participants moved out of safehavens and into riskier, higher-yielding assets. As a pro-cyclical currency, the NZD enjoyed upside alongside other cyclical assets going into what majority of market participants think was an early post-recession recovery phase. As long as expectations for the global economy remains positive the overall positive outlook for risk sentiment should be supportive for the NZD in the med-term, but the recent short-term jitters and risk off flows once again showed us why risk sentiment is also a very important short-term driver for the currency.
2. The Monetary Policy outlook for the RBNZ
New Zealand’s Zero Covid strategy caused quite the rigmarole for the NZD this week as market participants were forced to unwind some of their very aggressive expectations for rate hikes going into the meeting. The unwind was so aggressive that OIS prices dropped from a 100% chance of a hike to just above 50% at some stage. The RBNZ chose to leave rates unchanged, but despite the virus escalation they offered a much more optimistic tone compared to their prior meeting by updating their rate path projections to show 7 projected hikes between Dec 2021 and H1 2023 (bringing the OCR to 2.0%). This was even more aggressive than the already aggressive bets heading into the meeting before the covid news hit the wires. The Governor also later explained that they need to continue to move on policy and cannot wait for uncertainty as they have a lot of work to do to get back to the neutral rate of 2.0%. Also, when asked about Oct Governor Orr said the meeting is live, but also acknowledged that they’ve made it very clear their next move is likely a hike so they can afford to wait. Thus, with the upgraded rate path the med-term bullish outlook remains intact for the NZD. Last week we saw very hawkish comments from RBNZ’s Hawkesby who stated that the bank’s decision not to hike rates last week was mostly to do with optics and not due to perceived risks, and also explained that the bank contemplated hiking rates by 50 basis points, confirming the bank’s hawkish tone and placing the RBNZ once again miles ahead of any other major central banks in terms of policy normalization and tightening.
3. The country’s economic and health developments
The main focus right now will be on how quickly the New Zealand government can get the virus situation under control. We’ve already heard some good news that the government has been able to trace the source of the recent outbreak and should be able to get the situation under control. This will be a key factor to watch in the next few sessions. After solid Q2 GDP data we saw yields push higher at the front-end, which could see markets price in a possible hike in rates as early as the October meeting, so keeping track of the short end this week.
4. CFTC Analysis
Latest CFTC data (updated until 14 Sep) showed a positioning change of +2343 with a net non-commercial position of +6206. With the overall optimistic rate path from the RBNZ, the bias for the currency remains unchanged, and with a small net-long positioning the current spot levels for the NZD still looks attractive for med-term buyers, but short-term moves do still look a bit overdone at current levels.
JPY
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: BEARISH
1. Safe-haven status and overall risk outlook
As a safe-haven currency, the market's risk outlook is the primary driver of JPY. Economic data rarely proves market moving; and although monetary policy expectations can prove highly market-moving in the short-term, safe-haven flows are typically the more dominant factor. The market's overall risk tone has improved considerably following the pandemic with good news about successful vaccinations, and ongoing monetary and fiscal policy support paved the way for markets to expect a robust global economic recovery. Of course, there remains many uncertainties and many countries are continuing to fight virus waves, but as a whole the outlook has kept on improving over the past couple of months, which would expect safe-haven demand to diminish and result in a bearish outlook for the JPY.
2. Low-yielding currency with inverse correlation to US10Y
As a low yielding currency, the JPY usually shares an inverse correlation to strong moves in yield differentials, more specifically in strong moves in US10Y . However, like most correlations, the strength of the inverse correlation between the JPY and US10Y is not perfect and will ebb and flow depending on the type of market environment from a risk and cycle point of view. The rangebound price action in US10Y from July has meant our conviction in JPY shorts has reduced versus the US Dollar , and until US10Y can convincingly break higher and take out its recent range highs we will stay more patient with USDJPY longs.
3. CFTC Analysis
Latest CFTC data (updated until 14 Sep) showed a positioning change of +2030 with a net non-commercial position of -60295. With positioning still, the largest net-short among the majors we want to be careful of the risks going into September which is historically the worse performing month for equities. That alone doesn’t mean we are expecting equities to push lower but given the frothy price action over recent weeks (haven’t seen a 5% correction in the S&P500 in 11 months) as well as seasonality and the growing chorus of participants calling for a bigger correction, we don’t want to ignore the possibility of some increased volatility this month. That doesn’t mean we start buying the JPY of course, it just means that if we do see some jitters creeping in for risk assets it is expected to be positive for the JPY, and with the biggest net-short for the majors there is a lot of downside in the JPY that can be unwound in such a scenario.
Newzealanddollar
AUD-NZD Will Keep Falling! Sell!
Hello,Traders!
AUD-NZD is trading in a falling channel
And the nearest support level is far away
Thus, I remain bearish on the pair
And I think that after a potential local correction
The price will keep going down
Sell!
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NZD-USD Breakout! Will Fall! Sell!
Hello,Traders!
NZD-USD was trading below a falling resistance
And then broke below a local horizontal support
The breakout is confirmed and I think
That even though we might see a retest
Of the broken level, the pair will keep falling
At least towards the target you can see on the chart
Sell!
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✅AUD_NZD LOCAL LONG🚀
✅AUD_NZD is trading in a downtrend
And I will remain bearish mid term
However, the pair just broke out
Of local falling channel
And despite the bearish bias
I think that there is a room for correction
And thus the pair might to up
Towards the targets above
LONG🚀
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New Zealand Dollar Vulnerable as NZD/USD Eyes Falling WedgeThe New Zealand Dollar's next leg could be lower against the US Dollar after the pair seemingly rejected the ceiling of a Falling Wedge chart pattern.
While the wedge is in itself a bullish formation, prices may consolidate lower within the boundaries of the pattern until a breakout is achieved.
A push above the wedge could hint at resuming the uptrend that occurred from October 2020 through February 2021. Along the way is the 0.7268 - 0.7315 inflection zone.
A bullish crossover between the 20- and 50-day Simple Moving Averages still offers a near-term upwards technical bias. Prices are testing the 20-day line at the time of publishing.
Clearing lower exposes the 0.6943 and 0.6881 inflection points towards the August low just above 0.6798.
FX_IDC:NZDUSD
✅NZD_USD WILL GO DOWN|SHORT🔥
✅NZD_USD is trading below a falling resistance
And the pair has formed a bearish triangle
Above the local support that was broken
And I think that after the potential pullback
And retest of the supply area
Inside the "nose" of the triangle
We will see bearish continuation
And a move down towards the target
SHORT🔥
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✅NZD_CHF BREAKOUT|WILL GO UP🚀
✅NZD_CHF broke the massive falling resistance
Retested it having formed a new smaller channel
And broke out again, signaling a trend change
Which makes me bullish biased
And I think that the pair will now keep going up
With the target that you can see on the chart
LONG🚀
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NZDCAD Technical Analysis
⏳ Forex
💎 NZDCAD has got rejected a few times at very significant resistance. It has also broken below the support. It is expect to go lower. On H4 we see bearish candlestick pattern.
🏁 Short & Medium Term
💵 Invest Only 2% of your Portfolio
🎳 Entry at market or 0.90080
☕️ TP1 0.89250
🍺 TP2 0.88300
🍻 TP3 _______
🍾 TP4 _______
🍷 TP5 _______
🍸 TP6 _______
🍹 TP7 _______
🎁 TP8 _______
🚫 SL 0.90880
Good Luck 🎲
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NZD USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSNZD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: BULLISH
1. Developments surrounding the global risk outlook.
As a high-beta currency, NZD has benefited from the market's improving risk outlook over recent months as participants moved out of safehavens and into riskier, higher-yielding assets. As a pro-cyclical currency, the NZD enjoyed upside alongside other cyclical assets going into what majority of market participants think was an early post-recession recovery phase. As long as expectations for the global economy remains positive the overall positive outlook for risk sentiment should be supportive for the NZD in the med-term, but the recent short-term jitters and risk off flows once again showed us why risk sentiment is also a very important short-term driver for the currency.
2. The Monetary Policy outlook for the RBNZ
New Zealand’s Zero Covid strategy caused quite the rigmarole for the NZD this week as market participants were forced to unwind some of their very aggressive expectations for rate hikes going into the meeting. The unwind was so aggressive that OIS prices dropped from a 100% chance of a hike to just above 50% at some stage. The RBNZ chose to leave rates unchanged, but despite the virus escalation they offered a much more optimistic tone compared to their prior meeting by updating their rate path projections to show 7 projected hikes between Dec 2021 and H1 2023 (bringing the OCR to 2.0%). This was even more aggressive than the already aggressive bets heading into the meeting before the covid news hit the wires. The Governor also later explained that they need to continue to move on policy and cannot wait for uncertainty as they have a lot of work to do to get back to the neutral rate of 2.0%. Also, when asked about Oct Governor Orr said the meeting is live, but also acknowledged that they’ve made it very clear their next move is likely a hike so they can afford to wait. Thus, with the upgraded rate path the med-term bullish outlook remains intact for the NZD. Last week we saw very hawkish comments from RBNZ’s Hawkesby who stated that the bank’s decision not to hike rates last week was mostly to do with optics and not due to perceived risks, and also explained that the bank contemplated hiking rates by 50 basis points, confirming the bank’s hawkish tone and placing the RBNZ once again miles ahead of any other major central banks in terms of policy normalization and tightening.
3. The country’s economic and health developments
The main focus right now will be on how quickly the New Zealand government can get the virus situation under control. We’ve already heard some good news that the government has been able to trace the source of the recent outbreak and should be able to get the situation under control. This will be a key factor to watch for the NZD in the next few sessions. This week also sees quarterly data in the mix and after recent hawkish RBNZ comments might be enough to spark expectations for a hike in October if growth surprises meaningfully higher.
4. CFTC Analysis
Latest CFTC data for the NZD (updated until 7 Sep) showed a positioning change of +6004 with a net non-commercial position of +3863. With the overall optimistic rate path from the RBNZ, the bias for the currency remains unchanged, and with a small net-long positioning the current spot levels for the NZD still looks attractive for med-term buyers, but short-term moves do still look a bit overdone at current levels.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. The global risk outlook.
Global economic data continues to surprise lower and should continue to struggle to surprise to the upside after the pandemic rebound. As the USD usually moves inversely to global growth that should be supportive for the USD.
2. The Monetary Policy outlook for the FED
In July the FOMC noted that the economy has made progress toward their goals, and they’ll continue to assess progress in coming meetings. They also took a more sanguine view of the virus situation by removing prior comments that sectors affected by the pandemic ‘remain weak but have shown improvement’ and instead replaced it with ‘sectors most affected by the pandemic have shown improvement but have not fully recovered’. This was initially seen as less dovish, but Powell used his usual dovish tone to correct any ‘hawkish’ takes by stressing that employment still has a ‘ways to go’ and noted that there was still "some ground to cover" when it comes to the labour market. He also reiterated that any decision to announce tapering will be done well in advance. For now, markets are looking at the incoming data to decide whether tapering will be announced at the Jackson Hole Symposium or in the fall. This past week we some interesting comments from Fed’s Waller who tilted their language and stance towards Bullard and Kaplan in expecting that two more solid employment prints (800K-1M) would mean substantial further progress has been met and tapering could then start at a faster pace. This was bullish for the USD, but the more important and market moving comments came from Fed’s Clarida who has seemingly moved into the Neutral camp (previously dovish) by saying he agrees with the median Fed projections of a first hike by early 2023 and more importantly his comments about inflation has moved away from the sanguine view expressed by the doves and is more concerned about current price pressures. This shift saw Dollar upside with all eyes on the Sep NFP to see whether markets will expect Sep or Dec to be the official tapering announcement meeting.
3. Real Yields
Despite recent divergence between the USD and US real yields, we still think further downside in real yields will be a struggle so close to new cycle lows and that the probability is skewed higher given the outlook for growth, inflation and tapering and should be supportive for the USD.
4. Economic Data
This week was all about NFP…where the miss showed just how difficult it’s been for economists to forecast where post-pandemic labour prints will land. Even though the headline NFP saw a monster miss (235K vs consensus of 750K), the data under the hood wasn’t all that bad with average earnings printing at 0.6% (above max forecasts), and the Unemployment rate still falling to 5.2% from 5.4% and participation staying flat at 61.7%. Thus, with the overall outcome being more of a mixed bag, the only thing the print has done is give the Fed time to kick the can down the road for another month. Catch our Top Trading Opportunities report for colour on this week’s upcoming US CPI print on Tuesday.
5. CFTC Analysis
Latest CFTC data for the USD (updated until 7 Sep) showed a positioning change of 775 with a net non-commercial position of +21465. For now, with the fundamental outlook still neutral, and with positioning at current levels the incoming data will remain the key driver for the USD’s short-term volatility , with Fed Speak and the upcoming CPI on Sep 14th and FOMC on the 22nd the main events to keep on the radar.
WAVE ANALYSIS | Classic Trend Reversal & Continuation (NZDCHF)
NZDCHF was trading in a global bearish trend for the last 6 years.
The lower highs were perfectly respecting a major falling trend line from where strong bearish legs initiated.
This year we got a bullish violation of that major falling trend line.
That was a very important reversal clue.
In August, the price finally retested the broken trend line.
The reaction was immediate and sharp:
the price has easily violated a bullish flag pattern (representing a local 6-months bearish trend)
to the upside.
Being initiated, bullish wave will aim at 0.676 / 0.691 structure resistances.
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NZDUSD 1D : 12.Sep.2021 (Update)Well, as we see the price has reached an important resistance, the Weekly Map resistance and the downtrend resistance ... We expect the price to start to correct from this range and gather strength again to break its resistance . FX:NZDUSD
⚠️ This Analysis will be updated ...
👤 Arman Shaban
📅 12.Sep.2021
⚠️(DYOR)
GBP-NZD Bullish Bias! Buy!
Hello,Traders!
GBP-NZD broke out of the falling channel
After retesting a strong horizontal support
Thus,I am locally bullish biased
And I think that we might see a move up
To retest the horizontal resistance above
Sell!
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