EURO/NZD Transfer

Prices in the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), Euro (EUR) cross reached 0.5530 (1.8080) resistance Monday before easing lower to 0.5510 (1.8155) early Tuesday. This week’s ECB rate decision is hanging in the balance with no clear indication the central bank will hike or not. Chances look to be around 40% for a hike from 4.25%. Certainly, if we see no hike eventuate attention will divert to rhetoric round policy agenda looking forward. We suspect a hike is still very much on the cards this year depending on how inflation rolls out. The enormous bear trend in play from December’s 0.6115 (1.6350) is still very much in play but with the pair showing prices at the bottom of the channel- these levels could represent decent buying of EUR.

Current Level: 1.8178
Resistance: 1.8470
Support: 1.7700
Last Weeks Range: 1.8097 – 1.8317

NZD/EURO Transfer

Prices in the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), Euro (EUR) cross reached 0.5530 (1.8080) resistance Monday before easing lower to 0.5510 (1.8155) early Tuesday. This week’s ECB rate decision is hanging in the balance with no clear indication the central bank will hike or not. Chances look to be around 40% for a hike from 4.25%. Certainly, if we see no hike eventuate attention will divert to rhetoric round policy agenda looking forward. We suspect a hike is still very much on the cards this year depending on how inflation rolls out. The enormous bear trend in play from December’s 0.6115 (1.6350) is still very much in play but with the pair showing prices at the bottom of the channel- these levels could represent decent buying of EUR.

Current Level: 0.5501
Support: 0.5410
Resistance: 0.5650
Last week’s range: 0.5459 – 0.5525

GBP/NZD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) extended last week’s run higher against the British Pound (GBP) reaching 0.4740 (2.1100), falling slightly into Tuesday to 0.4730 (2.1130). UK housing data is behind some of the GBP weakness with prices falling 1.9% in August, annually 4.6% with prices back to the start of the year. UK claimant data releases later tonight with figures expected to show less people filed for unemployment in August. If we see a break above 0.4750 (2.1050) we could see further support for the kiwi with a possible retest of the 5-week high at 0.4785 (2.0900).

Current Level: 2.1155
Resistance: 2.1600
Support: 2.0660
Last Weeks Range: 2.1144 – 2.1413

NZD/GBP Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) extended last week’s run higher against the British Pound (GBP) reaching 0.4740 (2.1100), falling slightly into Tuesday to 0.4730 (2.1130). UK housing data is behind some of the GBP weakness with prices falling 1.9% in August, annually 4.6% with prices back to the start of the year. UK claimant data releases later tonight with figures expected to show less people filed for unemployment in August. If we see a break above 0.4750 (2.1050) we could see further support for the kiwi with a possible retest of the 5-week high at 0.4785 (2.0900).

Current Level: 0.4727
Resistance: 0.4840
Support: 0.4630
Last Weeks Range: 0.4670 – 0.4730

AUD/NZD Transfer

After a week of recovering losses by the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) to 0.9235 (1.0830) Monday’s action has seen the kiwi give back gains to 0.9200 (1.0870) the AUD looking to regain momentum from early August’s 0.9320 (1.0730). Late this week we have the only tier one data- Australian employment data. Unemployment is predicted to remain around 3.7% with the change in the employed expected to rise in August, something the RBA will be cautious of, a direct correlation with higher inflation. A retest of 0.9160 (1.0920) looks the bet this week.

Current Level: 1.0865
Resistance: 1.0930
Support: 1.0750
Last Weeks Range: 1.0823 – 1.0883

NZD/AUD Transfer

After a week of recovering losses by the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) to 0.9235 (1.0830) Monday’s action has seen the kiwi give back gains to 0.9200 (1.0870) the AUD looking to regain momentum from early August’s 0.9320 (1.0730). Late this week we have the only tier one data- Australian employment data. Unemployment is predicted to remain around 3.7% with the change in the employed expected to rise in August, something the RBA will be cautious of, a direct correlation with higher inflation. A retest of 0.9160 (1.0920) looks the bet this week.

Current Level: 0.9193
Resistance: 0.9300
Support: 0.9150
Last Weeks Range: 0.9188 – 0.9239

 

NZD/USD Transfer

Currencies recovered Monday against the US Dollar (USD) with the greenback sold off in bulk. This is directly correlated to the sharp turnaround of the Yen. The kiwi surged to 0.5935 from 0.5880 post the open and has consolidated around the 0.5920 mark into Tuesday. The key release this week is US CPI with analysts suggesting it could go higher from 3.2% y/y to 3.6%, consensus is if this happens we could see the Fed raise rates in November. With the cross trading at the top of the bear channel this represents decent buy opportunities.

Current Level: 0.5910
Resistance: 0.6380
Support: 0.5850
Last Weeks Range: 0.5857 – 0.5959

FX update: big dollar weakness pushes up Antipodean currencies

Market Overview

  • The division between the US economy and the rest of the developed world is widening. The global growth gap sees the US expanding at a rate of 6.0% per year. In comparison- global growth has declined in the first part of the year continuing the downtrend which started last year. The world’s biggest economies are now well behind the US and India.
  • The US Govt is close to approving “longer” range missiles packed with cluster bombs for Ukraine.
  • North Korea’s Kim Jong Un will visit Russia over the coming days.
  • Chinese August inflation 0.1% y/y vs expected 0.2%
  • Canadian Unemployment dipped to 5.5% from 5.6% for August with the job’s number surprising markets coming in at 39,000 vs 19,000 expected highlighting a rebound from transitory times.
  • The US Dollar (USD) has easily been the strongest currency this month with the British Pound (GBP) the worst performing currency

AUD/GBP Transfer

Bank of England officials spoke of a drop to UK inflation and the likelihood of just one more hike to come in September during the week devaluing the Pound (GBP) from 0.5065 (1.9750) to 0.5130 (1.9490) into Friday trading. Tuesday’s RBA rate announcement came and went without fanfare, the RBA retaining their 4.10% interest rate. Australian GDP was also steady at 0.4% in the second quarter in line with estimates bringing back AUD buyers. Next week’s Aussie employment release is our focus, a handy barometer of inflation predictions.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDGBP 0.5112    GBPAUD 1.9561

The interbank range this week has been: AUDGBP 0.5064- 0.5138    GBPAUD 1.9462- 1.9746

 

AUD/USD Transfer

The RBA left their cash rate unchanged at 4.10% Tuesday, the third leave in a row. The central bank left the door open to further hikes if growth starts to rise again over the second half of the year and inflation remains stubborn. The Australian Dollar (AUD) edged lower post release against the US Dollar (USD) falling from around 0.6460 to 0.6370. The RBA acknowledged the Chinese economy, in particular mining resources which Australia buys massive quantities of, is heading into a period of decline. Australian Trade balance slipped to 8.04B compared to 10.05B expected adding to the uncertainty. Hovering around lows at 0.6370 right now- we are not sure how long the Aussie can tread water.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDUSD 0.6380