AUD/GBP Transfer

Australian Retail Sales boosted the Australian Dollar (AUD) Monday against the British Pound (GBP), the cross reaching 0.5260 (1.9020). Early Tuesday the Aussie had pulled back to 0.5240 (1.9090) in what could only be described as weird. With momentum in hand to extend the move, possibly to retest a prior low at 0.5300 (1.8870) in our book, it’s gone the other way. With most signals pointing to a hike at the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) policy meet on 7 November and a hold by the Bank of England (BoE) later this week it’s a little strange for investors and positioning. Adding to the “risk on” tone we also have geopolitical tensions easing in Gaza. We favour a move back to 0.5280 (1.8940) this week.

Current Level: 0.5235
Support: 0.5170
Resistance: 0.5280
Last week’s range: 0.5170 – 0.5258

AUD/USD Transfer

Extending moves off last week’s yearly low at 0.6270 the Australian Dollar (AUD) continues to claw back losses against the US Dollar (USD) to 0.6380 this morning. We would need to see a break above 0.6390 before a new bull trend is confirmed. Risk flow has benefited the Aussie and other risk currencies and products with things improving in Gaza/Israel. The Israel ‘ground offensive” has got underway, Israeli forces now deep into Gaza, the fear being the involvement of USA and Iran, which hasn’t happened yet with fighting limited to Gaza. Markets are viewing this as good news. Earlier Australian Retail Sales printed much better than the 0.3% forecast for September coming in at 0.9% bringing back questions if the RBA will hike interest rates on 7 Nov. The Fed meet Thursday and should hold rates at 5.50%

Current Level: 0.6369
Support: 0.6300
Resistance: 0.6550
Last week’s range: 0.6270 – 0.6399

EURO/NZD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) opened the week pretty much at the same place it did a week earlier around 0.5510 (1.8160) albeit a little water under the bridge. We don’t expect too much upside this week for the kiwi after recent weeks of poor performance, the pair still trending lower from the October 10 high of 0.5714 (1.7500) as it targets the April 2020 low at 0.5440 (1.8380). Risk factors have improved over the last few hours as the Gaza ground offensive started, the positive is that fighting is contained within the Gaza strip and has not worsened into a US/Iran war.

Current Level: 1.8178
Resistance: 1.8380
Support: 1.8000
Last Weeks Range: 1.8050 – 1.8263

NZD/EURO Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) opened the week pretty much at the same place it did a week earlier around 0.5510 (1.8160) albeit a little water under the bridge. We don’t expect too much upside this week for the kiwi after recent weeks of poor performance, the pair still trending lower from the October 10 high of 0.5714 (1.7500) as it targets the April 2020 low at 0.5440 (1.8380). Risk factors have improved over the last few hours as the Gaza ground offensive started, the positive is that fighting is contained within the Gaza strip and has not worsened into a US/Iran war.

Current Level: 0.5501
Support: 0.5440
Resistance: 0.5555
Last week’s range: 0.5475 – 0.5540

GBP/NZD Transfer

UK mortgage approvals printed lower than expectation yesterday at 43,000 vs forecast of 44,000 dipping from August’s 45447 number. The British Pound (GBP) holding up Monday in the face of decent “risk on” moves. The kiwi underperformed with price easing back to 0.4800 (2.0840). Baffling really as the kiwi has bounced higher off recent lows against other crosses but has not reacted the same in the NZD/GBP. Equity markets were solid overnight as geopolitical fears in Gaza eased, the NZD continues to be sold. This week’s Bank of England (BoE) cash rate holds our attention with most punters fairly sure the BoE will keep rates unchanged at 5.25%.

Current Level: 2.0828
Resistance: 2.10
Support: 2.0730
Last Weeks Range: 2.0733- 2.0964

NZD/GBP Transfer

UK mortgage approvals printed lower than expectation yesterday at 43,000 vs forecast of 44,000 dipping from August’s 45447 number. The British Pound (GBP) holding up Monday in the face of decent “risk on” moves. The kiwi underperformed with price easing back to 0.4800 (2.0840). Baffling really as the kiwi has bounced higher off recent lows against other crosses but has not reacted the same in the NZD/GBP. Equity markets were solid overnight as geopolitical fears in Gaza eased, the NZD continues to be sold. This week’s Bank of England (BoE) cash rate holds our attention with most punters fairly sure the BoE will keep rates unchanged at 5.25%.

Current Level: 0.4801
Resistance: 0.4825
Support: 0.4760
Last Weeks Range: 0.4770 – 0.4823

AUD/NZD Transfer

The Australian Dollar (AUD) continues to outperform the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), the cross reaching 0.9150 (1.0930) earlier this morning as it extends downside moves from mid October’s 0.9425 (1.0610). The cross looks to be teetering around decent support at 0.9140 (1.0940). The Aussie was well supported post a bumper Retail Sales release and talk of central bank divergence with next week’s RBA eyeing a hike. The key data standout this week is NZ employment data with predictions the unemployment rate could rise to 3.9% from 3.6%. The rundown to current levels looks oversold watch for a reversal.

Current Level: 1.0904
Resistance: 1.0930
Support: 1.0830
Last Weeks Range: 1.0816 – 1.0913

NZD/AUD Transfer

The Australian Dollar (AUD) continues to outperform the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), the cross reaching 0.9150 (1.0930) earlier this morning as it extends downside moves from mid October’s 0.9425 (1.0610). The cross looks to be teetering around decent support at 0.9140 (1.0940). The Aussie was well supported post a bumper Retail Sales release and talk of central bank divergence with next week’s RBA eyeing a hike. The key data standout this week is NZ employment data with predictions the unemployment rate could rise to 3.9% from 3.6%. The rundown to current levels looks oversold watch for a reversal.

Current Level: 0.9166
Resistance: 0.9230
Support: 0.9150
Last Weeks Range: 0.9163 – 0.9245

 

NZD/USD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) was higher off the weekly open against the US Dollar (USD) pushing to 0.5845 this morning as it extends the rally from last week’s low at 0.5770. We are not sure how much this upside wave has in it with geopolitical risks heating up, but a decent enough level to buy USD at, all things considered. For now, risk appetite has improved based on the Gaza/Israel situation. Equities, commodities, and futures markets were all higher overnight while the safe haven “gold” has fallen back along with Crude Oil -3.5%. It’s a big week of economic data on the docket with NZ employment data releasing tomorrow, unemployment is expected to rise from 3.6% to 3.9%. If the figure comes in low we may see more talk around the RBNZ needing to hike again. The Federal Reserve will announce no change from the 5.50% interest rate before Non-Farm Payroll (NFP) release Friday night. Certainly, anything north of 0.5850 represents decent buying of USD.

Current Level: 0.5838
Resistance: 0.6000
Support: 0.5770
Last Weeks Range: 0.5772 – 0.5871

FX update: Risk uncertainty driving moves

Market Overview

Key Points:

• Risk currencies recovered Monday which is a small miracle if we look at how ugly the markets have been of late. The greenback is lower, and equities have started the week well.
• Australian Retail Sales +0.9% vs +0.3% releasing much higher than predicted. This will be adding to the case for an interest rate hike at the RBA’s 7th November meeting.
• Bank of Canada’s Macklem is suggesting the BoC (Bank of Canada) will need to raise policy to restore price stability. It’s reported that the Canadian economy may be headed for a sharp pullback into a recession early next year.
• Crude Oil has fallen over 3.5% in overnight trading to 82.55 as geopolitical fears in Gaza ease. We expect prices to drop in the coming days as OPEC tightens global supply/demand.
• German inflation eased in October contracting 0.3% y/y for the third quarter to 0.0% from 0.3%. This takes the y/y number to 3.8% down from 4.5%
• The Federal Reserve look to be finished with rate hikes saying they expect rates to stay high for an extended period before aggressive hikes kick in, in 2025.
• The Swiss Franc (CHF) has been the strongest currency in the month of October while the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) has largely underperformed and is by far the worst performer.