CHILE: Traders See BCCh Remaining On Hold All Year

Feb-14 11:30

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EQUITIES: EU Bank outright put trades for more

Jan-15 11:30

SX7E (21st Mar) 145p, bought for 2.5 in 27k total now.

OUTLOOK: Price Signal Summary - Gains Appear Corrective

Jan-15 11:30
  • In FX, the trend condition in EURUSD remains bearish and the latest recovery is considered corrective. Last week’s move lower resulted in a print below 1.0226, the Jan 2 low. The break of this support confirms a resumption of the downtrend and sights are on 1.0138 next, a 1.764 projection of the Sep 25 - Oct 23 - Nov 5 price swing. Resistance to watch is 1.0437, the Jan 6 high. Resistance at the 20-day EMA, is at 1.0356.
  • The trend condition in GBPUSD remains bearish and the pair is trading closer to its recent lows. Recent weakness has confirmed a resumption of the downtrend and marks an extension of the price sequence of lower lows and lower highs. Sights are on 1.2087 next, a 0.764 projection of the Sep 26 - Nov 22 - Dec 6 price swing. Initial firm resistance is at 1.2433, the 20-day EMA.
  • The trend condition in USDJPY is unchanged, it remains bullish and the pair is holding on to the bulk of its recent gains. The recent breach of 156.75, the Nov 15 high, confirmed a resumption of the uptrend and opens 159.45, the Jul 12 ‘24 high. Moving average studies are in a bull-mode position highlighting a dominant uptrend. Initial firm support is 156.90, the 20-day EMA.

STIR: Next Fed Cut Seen In September Ahead Of US CPI

Jan-15 11:26
  • Fed Funds implied rates have pulled back a little further from post-NFP driven highs, aided overnight by some spillover from softer than expected UK CPI. US CPI is firmly in focus today (MNI Preview here).
  • CPI is however followed by Fedspeak (including Williams expected to reiterate a desire for rates to move lower towards neutral) before an increasingly important Beige Book as some FOMC members question data quality (e.g. Gov. Bowman last week).
  • Cumulative cuts from 4.33% effective: 0.5bp Jan, 5bp Mar, 10bp May, 18bp Jun, 21bp Jul, 26bp Sep and 31.5bp Dec.
  • All four of today’s scheduled Fed speakers come after CPI but we place most focus on NY Fed’s Williams in a keynote address at 1100ET and before that Minneapolis Fed’s Kashkari in a Q&A.
    • 0920ET – Barkin (non-voter). He again repeats a speech from Jan 3 but Q&A could be more notable for any post CPI views.
    • 1000ET – Kashkari (’26) in Q&A. There’s a chance he was one of the four dots who preferred no rate cut last month. He last spoke Nov 25, saying a December cut was a reasonable consideration whilst the neutral rate may be higher, with policy not as restrictive. Tit-for-tat tariffs could be inflationary.
    • 1100ET – Williams (voter) keynote remarks (text + Q&A). One of the most senior FOMC members, he last spoke on Dec 20 to CNBC, seeing time to assess the data with policy in a great place. He is one of the FOMC members who has started to incorporate some assumptions about a second Trump term but notes a lot of uncertainty for 2025. He sees rates as being “pretty restrictive” and doesn’t think we’re at a long-run neutral rate now, with a real run neutral estimate currently at 0.75% (lifted “a bit” by post-pandemic productivity). We expect a repeat that his baseline is for the Fed to continue moving towards neutral.
    • 1200ET – Goolsbee (’25). The most dovish member of the FOMC, he said after last week’s payrolls that he still expects rates to decline and that it’s wrong to say that the Fed isn’t making progress on inflation. He doesn’t see evidence of any overheating US economy and policy is still restrictive on rate-sensitive sectors.  
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