O/n Asia Wrap, Orderbook & Flow, $Asia & FOMC Recap

1) Overnight Asia Wrap

Risk off and USD buying continue…

The day starts very choppy with currencies bouncing off their lows (AUD 1.0040s to 1.0079).  NZD GDP +0.1% q/q much lower then the +0.5% expectation, and kiwi gets slammed from .8060 to .8010.  That was just the beginning as Asian equities start to melt and a lower than expected China Manufacturing PMI (at 49.4) push risk lower  (ASX  -2.7%, Nikkei – 2%, Hang Seng – 4.25%) and S&P futures -.9%.  EURUSD took out stops through 1.3550 and AUD cracked parody again.  USDJPY ran higher as Japanese corporates were buying (76.97 current high) before consolidating at 76.80.  Risk bashing continued through the rest of the morning.

We then paused for the last 2 hours as we wait for Europe to come in and give us another push.  EURUSD bids at 1.3500 (with stops underneath) looks like the next level to be tested with PMI releases out of France and Germany this afternoon.

Light flow in G10 space, as mostly USD/asia buying drove the market again.

2) Orderbook & Flow

EURUSD fairly sparse with downside stops 1.3475, 1.3300 & 1.3250

EURCHF stops below collecting around the 1.2150 handle

Topside GBPUSD stops 1.5850-1.5900

Bought a large amount of USDCNY and were buyers of USDJPY overnight.

3) USD/Asia Run

USDKRW   1181.0 (Wednesday Opening level 1151.0)
USDINR   49.03  (48.15)
USDPHP   44.01  (43.54)
USDCNY1y 6.3870 (6.3325)
USDIDR   9410   (9090)
USDMYR   3.1580 (3.1210)
USDTWD   30.34  (29.85)
USDSGD   1.2860 (1.2625)

4) Opening Levels

EUR    1.3554
GBP    1.5458
JPY    76.74
CHF    0.9030

WTI       84.5
Brent     108.6
XAU       1773.5
Silver    39.49

X-Over     737
Greece     3536
Portugal   1141
Ireland    803
Spain      432
Italy      523

UK 10y    2.25
Ger 10y   1.74
US 10y    1.82
Bund      137.80

Spain over bunds    363
Italy over bunds    399
BeBanks Index       69.76

3m Eur Xccy    -95.5

5) FOMC

No ‘twist’ for FX: We maintain a defensive stance in FX amidst few surprises from the Fed

The FOMC announces much anticipated ‘twist’ operation to extend the average maturity of its balance sheet. Overall the Fed’s dovish stance reaffirms a weak growth outlook and keeps us defensive on global currencies. Our preferred trades include: CAD, NOK, CNH, THB, CZK, PEN, and gold.

To the extent that markets have had plenty of time and guidance from the Fed to prepare for today’s outcome, the immediate reaction should be rather muted. We maintain a bias against QE currencies, and in that regards, signals of further policy accommodation and support for longer-dated rates in the US to remain low over a more sustained period of time, reinforce our structural bearish view on the USD. The lack of more meaningful support to financial assets out of today’s decision is likely to keep the focus on more immediate sources of market stresses, namely Greece. While liquidity restrictions in other currencies could see the USD benefit as a temporary refuge amidst bouts of risk aversion, this unlikely to last. We expect volatility to remain high and stick to our preferred defensive trades: CAD, NOK, CNH, THB, CZK, PEN, and gold.

 

HSBC Global Research