The Next Big Move

Special report: BOE Super Thursday Preview

Next 24 hours: Why Today’s BOE Decision Could Send Stocks Lower

Today’s report: The Next Big Move

There isn't a lot of data out for the remainder of the day, but it’s Super Thursday in the UK, with the Bank of England policy decision on tap. Overall, there’s a nervous tension in the air and a lot of the focus in on that next move in US equities.

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Wake-up call

Chart talk: Major markets technical overview video

Chart talk: Technical & fundamental highlights

EURUSD – technical overview

The Euro has entered a period of correction off the recent 2018 high, though overall, the uptrend remains firmly intact and there is still plenty of room to run. The break of the 2017 high set up a bullish continuation and the next major measured move upside extension into the 1.2700 area, which coincides with monumental resistance in the form of a falling trend-line off the record high from 2008. In the interim, any setbacks should be very well supported ahead of 1.1900, ideally into the 1.2100 area 2017 high.

  • R2 1.2407 – 7Feb high – Strong
  • R1 1.2315 – 6Feb low – Medium
  • S1 1.2215 – 22Jan low – Medium
  • S2 1.2166 – 18Jan low – Strong

EURUSD – fundamental overview

A coalition agreement has been reached in Germany, with the SPD vote on the deal set for March 2nd. Overall, the Euro has come off over the past week, extending declined on the unwinding of an overcrowded speculative position and on US Dollar positive developments including a more confident inflation outlook from the Fed and subsequent rise in US hourly earnings. Looking ahead, we get some more ECB and Fed speak, German trade data and US initial jobless claims.

GBPUSD – technical overview

Daily studies are in the process of unwinding from overbought levels. There is scope for a drop back towards the 2017 high in the 1.3660 area, after the market triggered a double top formation. But any setbacks are viewed as corrective, with the overall structure showing signs of a longer term bottom.

  • R2 1.4151– 5Feb high – Strong
  • R1 1.4000 – 6Feb high – Medium
  • S1 1.3837 – 6Feb low – Strong
  • S2 1.3800 – Figure – Medium

GBPUSD – fundamental overview

It’s BOE Super Thursday and the Pound may be welcoming of the event risk, considering this latest slide that has come from Brexit bumps, added pressure on Theresa May and renewed US Dollar demand. Dealers do however report sizable demand down into the 1.3600s. The BOE risk will be the main highlight on Thursday, though we also get some Fed speak and US initial jobless claims.

USDJPY – technical overview

The major pair has been confined to a range trade for much of 2017, with rallies well capped ahead of 115.00 and dips well supported below 108.00. The market has come back down towards the range base and could be looking to turn back up, though at this point, it would be premature to rule out deeper setbacks. While the market holds below 111.50, there is still scope for a fresh downside extension to challenge the extreme range base in the form of the 2017 low around 107.30.

  • R2 110.49 – 2Feb high – Strong
  • R1 110.00 – Psychological – Medium
  • S1 108.46 – 6Feb low – Medium
  • S2 108.29– 26Jan low – Strong

USDJPY – fundamental overview

Overall, the Yen has been well bid in early 2018, mostly on the back of a soft US Dollar campaign and some hawkish leaning tweaks to BOJ policy. This latest downturn in global risk sentiment could invite additional Yen demand on the traditional correlation, with the Yen in position to outperform the Dollar, at least for a while. Looking ahead, absence of first tier data on Thursday, will leave the focus on Fed speak, US initial jobless claims and performance in US equities.

EURCHF – technical overview

Despite this latest round of setbacks, overall, the market continues to trend higher, recently extending gains to a fresh multi-month high. The bullish price action has the market thinking about a retest of that major barrier at 1.2000 further up. In the interim, look for the current round setbacks to be very well supported ahead of 1.1400, while only back below 1.1260 would delay the overall constructive tone.


  • R2 1.1834 – 15Jan/2018 high – Strong
  • R1 1.1712 – 14Jan low – Medium
  • S1 1.1500 – Psychological – Medium
  • S2 1.1609 – 19Dec low – Strong

EURCHF – fundamental overview

The SNB will need to be careful right now, as its strategy to weaken the Franc could face headwinds from the US equity market in 2018. The record run in the US stock market has been a big boost to the SNB’s strategy with elevated sentiment encouraging Franc weakness. Of course, the SNB is no stranger to this risk, given a balance sheet with massive exposure to US equities. But any signs of capitulation on that front into this new year, will likely invite a very large wave of demand for the Franc, which will put the SNB in a more challenging position to weaken the Franc.  And so, we speculate the SNB continues to be active buying EURCHF in an attempt to build some cushion ahead of what could be a period of intense Franc demand ahead. Recent outperformance in the Swiss Franc despite flows which should have otherwise been supportive of a higher EURCHF, could already be offering up a red flag.

AUDUSD – technical overview

An impressive recovery out from the December low has finally stalled out, with the market rolling over after clearing the 2017 high. This latest daily close back below 0.7957 strengthens this outlook and opens the door for a renewed wave of declines back towards 0.7500. At this point, only a daily close back above 0.8000 would delay.

  • R2 0.7955 – 5Feb High – Strong
  • R1 0.7911 – 6Feb high – Medium
  • S1 0.7808 – 9Jan low – Medium
  • S2 0.7731 – 2Nov high – Strong

AUDUSD – fundamental overview

Most of the latest setbacks in the Australian Dollar have come from a run of softer Aussie data, including the recent trade and retail sales prints, while this week’s RBA doubts relating to wage growth, inflation and household consumption have also weighed. The weakness comes at a time when the US Dollar is trying to make a comeback following a more upbeat Fed inflation tone and rise in US hourly earnings. Of course, a downturn in global equities is also not Aussie supportive and we could see additional downside pressure if this keeps up. There has been some demand into the latest slide on China related news, after reports broke the government would relax controls on investment fund outflows, and after China trade data came in strong, albeit with a quirk in the Chinese calendar accounting for some of the strength. Looking ahead, absence of first tier data on Thursday, will leave the focus on some more Fed speak, US initial jobless claims and performance in US equities.

USDCAD – technical overview

Despite the latest round of setbacks, there are signs of basing in this pair, after the recovery from plus two year lows back in September extended through an important resistance point in the form of the August peak. This sets the stage for additional upside, with the next focus on a retest of the psychological barrier at 1.3000. In the interim, any setbacks should now be well supported above 1.2250. Back above 1.2591 will strengthen the outlook.

  • R2 1.2625– 5Dec low – Strong
  • R1 1.2591 – 11Jan high – Medium
  • S1 1.2492 – 7Feb low – Medium
  • S2 1.2398 – 5Feb low – Strong

USDCAD – fundamental overview

Softer data out of Canada this week, has kept the Loonie under pressure, with a discouraging trade print and drop off in Ivey PMIs behind the flow. This follows last week’s more upbeat Fed inflation tone and rise in US hourly earnings, which had already opened renewed downside pressure on the Canadian Dollar. Overall, Canada’s recovery is already somewhat fragile, and this coupled with an unstable macro picture and plenty of uncertainty around the fate of NAFTA, should be keeping the Canadian Dollar pressured, especially after the Bank of Canada opted to go ahead with another rate hike last month, which will only add to the strain if the global sentiment picture deteriorates even further. Looking ahead, we get Canada housing starts, US initial jobless claims and some more Fed speak.

NZDUSD – technical overview

An impressive run has finally stalled out into formidable internal resistance. Overall, the risk is tilted to the downside and it will take a clear establishment back above 0.7400 to delay the bearish outlook and risk for another reversal. A daily close below 0.7200 will strengthen the bearish outlook and open deeper setbacks towards 0.7000.

  • R2 0.7352 – 6Feb high – Strong
  • R1 0.7331 – 5Feb high – Medium
  • S1 0.7220 – 12Jan low – Medium
  • S2 0.7200 – Figure – Strong

NZDUSD – fundamental overview

Although the RBNZ left policy on hold as was widely expected, the central bank caught the market off guard early Thursday, with a more dovish leaning outlook. The central bank pushed back inflation target projections by two years, to Q3 2020. This comes at a time when global sentiment is at risk of deteriorating, the US Dollar is recovering in the aftermath of a more hawkish Fed read and US hourly earnings have jumped up, all warning of additional downside pressure on the Kiwi rate. This week’s impressive GDT auction result and stronger New Zealand jobs report have however helped to slow the pace of decline. Looking ahead, absence of first tier data on Thursday, will leave the focus on some more Fed speak, US initial jobless claims and performance in US equities.

US SPX 500 – technical overview

A severely overbought market has finally at long last relented, allowing for stretched readings to unwind. There’s plenty of room for these setbacks to extend following the break back below the 2675 area January low, with the market at risk for a further intensification of declines. Any rallies should now be very well capped ahead of 2800.

  • R2 2882 – 29Jan/Record high – Strong
  • R1 2765 – 5Feb high – Strong
  • S1 2534 – 6Feb low – Medium
  • S2 2500 – Psychological – Strong

US SPX 500 – fundamental overview

Investor immunity to downside risk is not looking as strong these days and there’s a clear tension out there as the VIX starts to rise from unnervingly depressed levels. The fact that Fed policy is normalising, however slow, could start to resonate a little more, with stimulus efforts exhausted, balance sheet reduction coming into play and the Fed finally following through with forward guidance. Certainly, the more hawkish tone from last week’s otherwise uneventful Fed meeting and subsequent jump in hourly earnings, are the types of things that could weigh more heavily on sentiment in the sessions ahead.

GOLD (SPOT) – technical overview

Setbacks have been well supported over the past several months, with the market continuing to put in higher lows and higher highs. Look for the current run to break through and establish above massive resistance in the form of the 2016 high at 1375, with the push to suggest a major bottom has formed, opening the door for a much larger recovery in the months ahead. Any setbacks should now be well supported ahead of 1300.

  • R2 1375 – 2016 high – Very Strong
  • R1 1367 – 25Jan high – Medium
  • S1 1306 – 4Jan low – Strong
  • S2 1294 – 29Dec low  – Medium

GOLD (SPOT) – fundamental overview

Solid demand from medium and longer-term players persists, with these players more concerned about exhausted monetary policy, extended global equities, political uncertainty, systemic risk and geopolitical threats. All of this should continue to keep the commodity well supported, with many market participants also fleeing to the hard asset as the grand dichotomy of record high equities and record low yields comes to an unnerving climax. Certainly the US Dollar under pressure has added to the metal’s bid tone as well, but there is a growing sense that even in a scenario where the US Dollar is bid for an extended period, GOLD will hold up on risk off macro implications. The 2016 high at 1375 is a massive level that if broken and closed above, could be something that triggers a widespread panic and rush to accumulate more of the hard asset.

Feature – technical overview

Bitcoin has come under intense pressure since topping out at a record high just shy of 20,000 in December. The market has now exceeded a measured move downside objective that had targeted a drop to $7,000, with deeper setbacks now on the cards for a move to retest the September 2017 peak around $5,000. At this point, it will take a daily close back above $10,000 at a minimum, to take the pressure off the downside.

  • R2 10,000 – Psychological – Strong
  • R1 8,500 – 7Feb high – Medium
  • S1 6,000 – Round Number – Medium
  • S2 4,970 – September 2017 high – Strong

Feature – fundamental overview

The crypto asset has come under intense pressure in early 2018, with ramped up regulatory oversight and potential government crackdowns forcing many holders to exit positions. The market has also been on a euphoric ride, with the run gaining too much momentum as latecomers look to get in on the action, often a sign of a bubbling asset. Bitcoin has struggled on the transaction side as well, with transactions per second a major drawback, along with a mining community that has been less willing to process transactions due to the lower fees. The Lightning network is expected to ramp up transaction speed as it is integrated, which could be a big help to Bitcoin, though it seems the combination of a massive bubble, more regulatory oversight and a market that is still trying to convince of its proof of concept, could be at risk for even deeper setbacks. Throw in a capitulation in global equities and downturn in sentiment, and the picture looks even gloomier.

Peformance chart: Five day performance v. US dollar

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