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Although signs of easing credit strains are manifested in multi-year lows
in interbank rates, the market turmoil has exasperated the already shaky cash
situation of US auto manufacturers, retailers and shippers, forcing fresh waves
of nation-wide layoffs, which would only feed off the negative loop from rising
employment, falling consumption, lower earnings and eroding bank credit. Consequently,
JPY retains the last word over the USD, while both low yielding currencies
dominate dealing flows against European and antipodean FX as Asian and European
markets are mired in prolonged downside, failing to break Mondays sell-off
in the US.
The aforementioned negative channels of transmission will provide little
positive backdrop to equities and overall risk appetite, and any gains
such as last Fridays session remain an example of bear-market buying. Talk
of the US unemployment rate reaching 10% by end of 2009 from its current
14-year high of 6.5% is to become a more common topic of discussion as companies
struggle to survive in the midst of dried up credit and eroding domestic
and global demand.
The US data calendar remains light as bond markets close in observance of
Veterans Day, but the calendar will gradually resurrected, culminating with
another major Friday release, namely the October retail sales report expected
to show the fourth consecutive monthly decline (a pattern not seen over the
last 15 years) and the second year-on-year decline in 6 years.
Euro Tests Triangle's Lows

German ZEW index on investors economic sentiment unexpectedly improved to
-53.5 in November from -63 in October, after reaching an all time low of 63.9
in July. The historical average stands at +27.5.The improvement was attributed
to the German governments approval in favor of rescuing select banks and insurance
companies. Nonetheless, the current situation index fell to nearly a 3-year
low at -50.4 from -35.9 in October. The improvement in the economic sentiment
index does not necessarily suggest that next weeks release of the IFO survey
on business sentiment will improve as the index targets businesses and executives.
EURUSD joined non USD-currencies on the downside, breaching below $1.28 and
onto $1.27 as the failure for global risk appetite to recover erodes the hopes
of euro bulls. The 4-hour EURUSD chart shows a clear formation of lower peaks
and lower highs, forming a symmetrical triangle whose lows are being tested
at $1.2700. Key foundation stands at $1.2650. Upside capped at $1.2830, followed
by $1.2940 high, which is the 61.8% retracement of the decline from the $1.3116
high to last weeks $1.2650 low.
Dim GBP Prospects Ahead of Inflation Report
Sterlings prolonged selling across the board is especially heightened by i)
renewed damage in global risk appetite and ii) expectations that tomorrows
release of the Bank of England quarterly inflation report will further downgrade
its inflation outlook, thereby, paving the way for further interest rate ahead.
Yesterdays bigger than expected decline in October PPI supported the possibility
for interest rates to reach 2.00% by end of H2 2009.
Having failed to regain the $1.5640 trend line resistance, cable was crushed
towards the $1.5500s, making the way ahead for $1.5370. The lower highs from
Oct 14, Oct 20, Oct 30 and Nov 05 underscore the sterlings failed recoveries,
suggesting prolonged technical weakness prevailing ahead.
Yen Retains Risk-Driven Strength
Yen comes off the highs seen in the Asian session, but maintains the pattern
of posting modest gains. With no data in the US economic calendar seen reversing
sentiment to recall the 98.40-50s, yen bulls remain confident in finding bids
below the 98.50s. Yen continues to shrug Japanese data, swinging to the pendulum
of deteriorating risk appetite. Nonetheless, 97.00 yen remains firm support,
which is above the 38% retracement of the 90.89 low to the 100.54 high.
These analysis are produced daily for CMC Markets clients.
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