The drivers; EU Nat gas falling to the lowest levels since late 2021, a major factor behind some positive economic upgrades to EU GDP. China’s more aggressive re-opening promoting strong trending conditions in CN50, HK50, copper, USDCNH, crude and gold. While much of the US hard data is holding up well and a belief the survey data may positively converge higher, and this comes amid a slight decline in nominal and real rates.
The easing of US financial conditions does pose a risk ahead of a raft of Fed speakers this week, some of whom may want to keep the option of a 50bp hike on the table, at a time when US hard data is still robust, and the labour market is in fine health.
Another big volatility driver would be if the BoJ disappoints market expectations and leaves policy unchanged for now – I’d argue after last week’s moves below 128.00 in USDJPY, and Japan 10yr swap rates into 1%, there is a skew in expectations/positioning towards either shifting the yield target band to 0.75% or even 1%, perhaps even abolishing altogether, but maintaining a commitment to buy bonds through QE. Some say this latter action is too soon after the changes that we saw on 20 Dec, but for me, the question is why wait?
There is increasing inflation in Japan, political pressure to end YCC and the markets are consistently testing the BoJ – most importantly, the JGB market remains highly dysfunctional and the BoJ is having to buy far more bonds than the JPY9t p/m they detailed they would buy in December. 1-week USDJPY implied vols are sky-high, so this highlights the risks to JPY positioning for traders – position sizing here will keep you in the game.
Where is the balance of risks? Given expectations, I see downside risks this week for the JPY and while the trend is for a stronger JPY, as a risk manager I would be looking to part cover JPY longs into the BoJ meeting.
For now, though, there are big moves and trends across markets – the preference is to take a systematic approach - over a tactical one – and look for continuation in the moves in the USD, gold, NAS100, CN50, XAU, crypto and crude. That is, at least until we see price close below/above the 5-day EMA or a 3- & 8-day EMA crossover, which could highlight a loss of momentum and promote a change in order book dynamics.
So, what are the known event risks for the week ahead?
US Q4 earnings – it’s a quiet week on the US Corp. reporting front, where we see just 5% of the S&P500 market cap hitting us with numbers, with the reporting calendar really heating up next week. Of the company's reporting, Netflix (report after market on Thursday / 8 am Friday AEDT) should get the lion's share of attention from clients. Consider that Netflix’s implied move on the day of earnings is 8.6% and with a creep higher in recent price action into $332, this is a one for the equity traders.
Central bank speakers – I will be looking closely at the 9 Fed speakers this week, as well as 7 ECB speakers, who will hit the wires through the week. On the Fed front, Lael Brainard (20 Jan at 05:15 AEDT) and John Williams (20 Jan 10:35 AEDT) get the most attention for possible loose guidance for a step down in future rate hikes to 25bp at the 2 Feb FOMC meeting. Given the bearish trend in the USD, there are risks the Fed speakers push back on these easing of financial conditions – so Fed speeches pose a risk in some of the price trends taking place across markets.
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Rates Review – we look at market pricing for the next central bank meeting and the step up in the following meetings (in basis points). For example we see 27bp (or 0.27%) of hikes priced for the 1 Feb FOMC meeting, and 45bp for the Feb BoE meeting.