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Market Overview

Australian Dollar Lifted by Risk Appetite and Steel Tariff Exemption

Australian Dollar and New Zealand Dollar jump broadly as another week starts in full risk-on mode. Japanese Nikkei opened sharply higher and is trading up 1.4% at the time of writing. Hong Kong HSI is also up close to 1.5%. That followed the strong 1.77% rise in DOW on...

Stocks Survived Trump’s Tariffs, Boosted by Perfect NFP, Commodity Currencies Came Back

The stock markets in the US ended the week up solidly as boosted by the "perfect" job report as seen by investors. Worries over trade wars also receded as US President Donald Trump has backed down on his steel and aluminum tariff even on the day of its arrival....

Dollar Fails to Ride on Stellar 313k NFP Growth, Sluggish Wage Drags

Despite stellar report of job growth, Dollar fails to secure upside momentum so far due to sluggish wage growth. Non-farm payrolls report showed 313k growth in February, much better than expectation of 205k. Prior month's figure was also revised up from 200k to 239k. Unemployment rate was unchanged at...

Dollar Survived Event Risks, Strong as Focus Turns to Non-Farm Payrolls

The greenback emerged as a winner after most of the the event risks this week and is staying firm in Asian session. In particular, Euro's selloff after just slightly less dovish than expected ECB provides much support to the Dollar. And the greenback paid little reaction while US President...

Euro Struggles to Gain as ECB Draghi Talks Down Even Tiny Step of Exit

Euro is initially short up as ECB turned a bit less dovish in the statement after keeping monetary policy unchanged. However, the common currency cannot extend gains as there is no follow through buying. More importantly, ECB President Mario Draghi tries to tone down the significance of the change...

Euro Pares Gains ahead of ECB, Canadian Dollar Rebounds on Tariff Exclusion

The financial markets show that investors are well prepared for the steel and aluminum tariff by the US. Dow closed down just -0.33% overnight, at 24801.36. 10 year yield gained 0.006 to 2.883, staying in near term sideway consolidation. Nikkei is trading up 0.5% at the time of writing...

Dollar Attempting to Rebound as ADP Job Beat Expectation, But Momentum Weak

Dollar is trying to regain some ground in early US session after better than expected job data. But momentum of the greenback is so far very week. Dollar suffered some selling on news of White House top economic advisor Gary Cohn's resignation, due to his opposition to President Donald...

Dollar Lower on Gary Cohn Resignation, Stocks Shrugged Off

Dollar is broadly pressured on news of White House economic advisor Gary Cohn's resignation. The dollar index dipped to as low as 89.42 and staying below 90 handle. EUR/USD is staying comfortably back above 1.24 and is set to have a take on 1.2555 key resistance. Meanwhile, USD/JPY might...

Risk Appetite Returns as EU’s Retaliatory Tariff Proposal Would Force Trump to Fold His Cards

Kiwi and Aussie are leading the way higher in the currency markets as risk appetite returns. On the other hand, Yen and Dollar are trading as the weakest ones today. Markets are increasing getting convinced that US President Donald Trump will back off from his steel and aluminum tariffs....

Trump Said He Won’t Back Down on Tariffs, But Markets Bet He Will

Market sentiments improved as some considered US President Donald Trump's threat of trade war is merely a "political show". And pressures from the Republicans and business executives will eventually force him to back down. DOW closed up 336.7 pts or 1.37% at 24874.76. S&P 500 also rebounded 29.69 pts...

Canadian Dollar Dives as Trump Plays Tariff Card in NAFTA Negotiations

Canadian Dollar suffers steep selling today as US President Donald Trump singles out Canada and Mexico in his trade war rhetorics. He said in a tweet that "NAFTA, which is under renegotiation right now, has been a bad deal for U.S.A. Massive relocation of companies & jobs." And, "tariffs...

Markets Stay Defensive as Trump Steps Up His Words on Trade Wars

The forex markets are pretty steady in Asian session as an extremely busy week starts. Reactions to Italy election and Germany SPD vote on grand coalition were muted. Euro remains steady so far, staying as the second strongest major currency for the month after Yen. Canadian Dollar and Australian...

Trade Wars Overwhelmed the Markets, More Volatility ahead

The theme of trade wars overwhelmed the global financial markets last week and overshadowed any other topics. It started on news that US President Donald Trump is going to impose tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum. Trump then doubled down by tweeting "trade wars...

Global Markets Tumble Further as Trump Declares Trade Wars are Good, Dollar Pressured

Risk aversion continues to be the main theme today as US President Donald Trump declared that trade wars are good. At the time of writing, German DAX is trading down -2.2%, French CAC down -1.9% and UK FTSE down -1.1%. That follows -2.5% decline in Japanese Nikkei. US futures are pointing to triple digit decline in DOW at open. In the currency markets, Dollar is suffering steep selling against Euro, Yen and Swiss Franc. Nonetheless, commodity currencies are even weaker with Canadian Dollar leading the way down.

Trump to Impose Steel and Aluminum Tariffs, Markets Cried No!

The broader markets responded very negatively to US President Donald Trump's push for steel and aluminum import tariffs. DOW closed down -420 pts or -1.68% at 24608.98, breaking key near term support at 24792.99. S&P 500 lost -36.16 pts or -1.33% to close at 2677.67, breaking equivalent support at 2697.77. NASDAQ, the relatively stronger one recently, also dropped -92.45 pts or -1.27% to close at 7180.56, confirming failure below 7505.77 record high. Treasury yields also suffered with 10 year yield dropping -0.064 to 2.80. It looks like TNX has already topped below 3% handle. Asian markets follow with Nikkei losing over -500 pts or -2.3% at the time of writing. Hong Kong HSI is down -430 pts or -1.4%.

Dollar Trying to Extend Rally as Jobless Claims Dropped to Near Five Decade Low

Dollar is trying to ride on strong job data to extend recent rally. Initial jobless claims dropped 10k to 210k, lower than expectation of 226k. That's the lowest level in nearly five decades since December 1969. Four week moving average dropped to 220.5k, also the lowest since 1969. Continuing claims rose 57k to 1.93m in the week ended February 17. Personal income rose 0.4% in January, above expectation of 0.3%. Personal spending rose 0.2%, in line with expectation. Headline PCE was unchanged at 1.7% yoy, core PCE unchanged at 1.5% yoy. Both met expectation. Also released, Canada current account deficit narrowed to CAD -16.4b in Q4. Focus will turn to round two of Fed Chair Jerome Powell's testimony.

Dollar Showing Sign of Reversal, But Yen Even Stronger on Risk Aversion

Yen overtakes Dollar as the strongest major currency for the week so far as helped by risk aversion. DOW dropped -380.83 or -1.5% overnight to close at 25022.42. That also marked the first monthly decline after a 10 month winning streak. All markets will turn their focus to round two of Fed Chair Jerome Powell's Congressional testimony. But seen as being a straight forward person, he's not expected to alter his messages that rocked the markets two days ago.

Sterling Tumbles as EU’s Brexit Treaty Draft Shows Significant Divergences, Dollar Firm on Fed Expectations

Sterling is trading as the weakest major currency today. Fresh selling is seen on strong comments from EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier. That came as European commission published its own draft Brexit withdrawal treaty. The document highlighted, in Barnier's words "significant divergences" between UK and EU. Yen is trading as the strongest for the day, thanks to risk aversion. But Dollar is still the strongest for the week. The greenback was boosted by upbeat comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Technically, EUR/USD is now finally pressing trend defining 1.2205 key support. This level will be the major focus in US session.

Dollar Jumped, Yields Surged, Stocks Tumbled after Fed Powell’s Upbeat Q&A

The initial response to Jerome Powell's first Congressional Testimony as Fed Chair was muted as his prepared speech provided nothing new. Nonetheless, stocks tumbled while Dollar surged as Powell offered an upbeat outlook in his Q&A. There are notable increase in chance of continuous rate hikes towards the end of the year as indicated by fed fund futures. DOW ended down -299.24 pts or -1.16% at 25410.03. S&P 500 dropped -35.32 pts or -1.27% to close at 2744.28. 10 year yield regained 2.9 handle by rising 0.049 to 2.908. Dollar index jumped to as high as 90.49 and is heading back towards 91.01 key structural resistance.

Fed Powell at His First Testimony, Markets Yawn

Dollar strengthens on Fed chair Jerome Powell's prepared remarks for his first Congressional testimony. But the movements in the markets are slight. The markets are generally staying in consolidation mode. Indeed, Powell offered nothing new comparing to the Fed's Monetary Policy Report released last week. Elsewhere, the Swiss Franc is trading as the strongest today while commodity currencies and Sterling are soft. Overall, the currency markets are quiet.