US CPI To Determine If EUR/USD Takes Out 1.3300
By DailyFX – The release of the US consumer price index on Friday will establish if the huge sell-off of Treasuries and the US dollar… … rally is over at least for the short-term.
Inflation is, by and large, the primary
determinant of Federal Reserve policy, and despite the Fed Chairman Ben
Bernankes consistently hawkish stance, weve been started to see mixed
signals. The producer price index highlighted a greater-than-expected
gain during the month of May, however, import prices softened while the
Federal Reserves Beige Book for the same period indicated that most
areas did not see a pick up in “overall price pressures” while “wage
pressures do not seem to have increased. As a result, traders will be
even more anxious to see the actual results of CPI, and this could lead
to a large spike in price action. If the economic indicators,
particularly the core measure, unexpectedly rise, bond, FX, and equity
markets alike will move ahead to price in a potential rate hike by the
Fed this year. On the other hand, a sharp slowdown in CPI towards the
central banks 1-2 percent target would bring back the notion that the
Fed will stay on hold throughout the year if not cut rates. The one
major caveat is: what if the figures hit the tape in line with
expectations with the annual rates unchanged? Such a result would likely
lead to a spike in volatility as well, but would fail to initiate a
large shift in directionality.
Bonds – US 10-Year Treasury Note Futures
Price action on Treasury futures were muted on Thursday, though they
managed to hold above the previous sessions low of 103.20. With the
sell-off in bonds a bit overextended, it appears likely that the bounce
will continue up to a region of fibonacci resistance near 104.25/30.
Such a move would only be exacerbated by the release of CPI in line with
or softer than expectations, as the data would not underpin the case for
an increasingly hawkish bias by the Federal Reserve. On the other hand,
a surprise pick up in inflation pressures would turn Treasuries on a
dime and send futures back to the recent lows of 103.20.
FX – EUR/USD
Trading of EUR/USD has grinded to a halt ahead of the all-important US
CPI release, as traders are anxious to gauge the Federal Reserves next
move. Over the past week, EUR/USD has fallen sharply amidst hawkish
commentary from FOMC members and the steep ascent of Treasury yields.
However, now that the pair has broken through the 100 day SMA, EUR/USD
has met formidable support at the 50.0% fib of 1.2866 1.3684 at
1.3277, and whether it can push down through this level or will bounce
higher may be broadly determined by the result of the CPI report. A
very strong inflation report would reignite speculation of policy
tightening by the Fed and could take EUR/USD down to break 1.3300 to
target support at 1.3220. On the other hand, a very soft release that
cools expectations for Fed hikes could propel the pair up towards
1.3380. However, CPI in line with expectations, which happens to be the
more probable scenario, could bring about a spike in volatility, but
subsequently leave EUR/USD to meander around 1.3300 until next week, as
price action will become more reliant on Euro-zone data.
Equities – S&P 500 Index
USequities gained today, as energy shares rallied to a record on a
surge in oil prices and led the S&P 500 Index up 0.5 percent to 1522.97
in New York. An index of energy shares rose 1.9 percent to a record and
contributed the most among 10 industries to the S&P 500's advance after
crude oil for July delivery rose $1.39 to $67.65 a barrel in New York,
with Chevron gaining $1.18 to close at $82.33. Meanwhile, AT&T added 58
cents to $40.56 as the biggest US phone company may gain as many as
915,000 customers in the second half of this year as the sole wireless
service provider of Apple Inc.'s new iPhone.
The fate of the S&P 500 tomorrow will depend on the release of US CPI.
The benchmark equity index is targeting the recent highs at 1,540.00,
but indications that inflation is picking up could drive the S&P down
towards Fibonacci support at 1,490, as the data would lead the market to
ramp up speculation of a rate hike by the Federal Reserve. On the other
hand, if headline and core CPI hold steady on an annual basis or
contract towards the Feds 2.0 percent ceiling, equities could actually
see a decent boost towards the highs since the central banks hawkish
bias would not be supported. Regardless, any CPI result that misses
expectations will lead to a surge in intraday volatility.
DailyFX Research Team
Forex Capital Markets LLC
32 Old Slip, 10th Floor
New York, NY 10004
Tel (212) 897-7660
Fax (212) 897-7669
E-mail: research@dailyfx.com
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