The US dollar’s moves on Friday constituted little more than a broad consolidation across the majors, and with the US economy at risk of recession, and fed fund futures are pricing in a 25bp-50bp rate cut on October 29.
· US Dollar Brushes Off Dismal Consumer Confidence, Housing Starts - Rebound In Store Next Week?
· Euro Hurt By Interest Rate Outlook, But Is It Bound to Recover?
· British Pound:
· Carry Trades: Commodity Dollars Face Heavy Event Risk Next Week, Japanese Yen Struggles To Hold Onto Gains
US Dollar Brushes Off Dismal Consumer Confidence, Housing Starts - Rebound In Store Next Week?
The US dollar’s moves on Friday constituted little more than a broad consolidation across the majors as the currency hardly shifted from Thursday’s close. While there were some signs of stabilization in the markets, such as the drop in overnight interest rates, there were also indications that high volatility and lower liquidity will leave the markets prone to wild price swings. Indeed, the CBOE’s VIX Volatility Index continues to trade dangerously close to Thursday’s record high of 81.17 while the latest forex positioning report shows that open interest in pairs like EUR/USD and GBP/USD has been declining steadily, signaling lower liquidity. Overall, this leaves the notion of risk aversion in play, which tends to benefit the US dollar and explains why the currency was able to shrug off this morning’s disappointing economic releases.
Clearly the
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Euro Hurt By Interest Rate Outlook, But Is It Bound to Recover?
The euro has remained weak due to a variety of factors, including broad US dollar strength due to safe-haven flows as well as negative interest rate expectations. In fact, Credit Suisse overnight index swaps continue to price in over 125bps worth of rate cuts by the European Central Bank over the next 12 months. While the annual rate of Euro-zone CPI growth is still well above the ECB’s 2 percent target, the measure has eased to 3.6 percent in September from a high of 4.0 percent in July, suggesting that inflation pressures in the region are cooling. Furthermore, with economic growth slowing quite a bit in the region and the credit crisis taking a toll on European financial markets, the ECB has turned their attention away from inflation and onto recession risks. However, there are indications that the euro could rebound in the near-term. According to our latest forex positioning report, the FXCM Speculative Sentiment Index (SSI) has recently flipped from net long EUR/USD to net short, and as a contrarian indicator, suggests that the pair could gain. There is no major European data scheduled to be released next week, but if we see that volatility dies down a bit and equities gain, the EUR/USD retracement higher could come sooner rather than later.
Related Articles: Forex Trading Indicator Forecasts Euro/US Dollar Rallies
British Pound:
The British pound finished the day on a slightly stronger note versus the US dollar, but the price action was really only part of a consolidation of GBP/USD between 1.7225 - 1.7385. Like the Euro-zone, prospects for the UK remain weak as the economy is likely headed for recession and as a result, the Bank of England is anticipated to cut rates by as many as 125bps over the next 12 months (according to Credit Suisse overnight index swaps). Nevertheless, with no market-moving data scheduled for release from the
Carry Trades: Commodity Dollars Face Heavy Event Risk Next Week, Japanese Yen Struggles To Hold Onto Gains
Forex carry trades have seen exceptionally volatile price action lately, and while risky assets gained early during the
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**Updated: Forex Emerging Markets Weekly. For a full list of upcoming event risk and past releases, check out the DailyFX Calendar.

