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25 June_Issue 20

Report for 25 June-29June

Tariffs no longer look rhetoric

Worst place to be for an analyst is behind the curve. Before starting this 20 week’s long report, I tried hard to avoid being the anecdotal definition of Economist. The one that accurately describes today what has happened yesterday that made the past predictions fail.

Having passed a long period while my predictions were on spot, followed by a period that the market moved further while I was arguing in favor of consolidation, I am experiencing the awful feeling of being behind the curve.

The high bond yields – high tension environment, eventually followed by equities falling and volatility picking up. But this realization is worthless, while just a week ago, I was declaring that I was wrong arguing for equity sell off and volatility increasing.

Inflation seems contained. My main scenario that would trigger equities falling and safe haven assets increasing (USD,JPY) is off the table for the rest of 2018.

Trump’s agenda seems more real that was initially priced. On the positive side of the moon, tax law and fiscal expansion is a reality for the last 6 months. On the dark side of the moon, tariffs that started with too many exemptions and seemed rhetoric, now are real. And the only way to price in tariffs taking effect is by expecting a shrinking GDD. A 1.5% downwards revision of Global GDP from today’s 3.9% number is within the range of possible outcomes.

Major last week’s events:

Major next week events:

JPY

I keep my short bias on EURJPY and want to enter at 129.10 and 129.88 levels.

Snapshot unchanged:

Strengths of JPY:

Weaknesses of JPY:

Watch:

EURJPY

CAD

I keep my short USD/CAD position.

On Friday while everyone was watching for the OPEC’s decision and the realization of EU’s retaliatory response on tariffs, the pair has finally started moving south. Worth-noted that Friday’s unexpectedly low inflation reading announcement could not sent the pair higher. USD/CAD rallied for 10 minutes but eventually moved lower.

Snapshot is getting worse:

Strengths of USD/CAD, weakness of CAD:

Weaknesses of USDCAD, strengths of CAD:

Watch:

USDCAD

AUD

Australian economy is moving fast. I am still confident that my long AUDUSD bias will pay off and that 0.7680 level will be reached within summer.

Anything that quantifies household consumption (credit growth, wage growth, private capital expenditure) should be carefully watched. RBA’s governor explicitly argued in favor of growing wages (3% growth would be the magic number) rather than growing debt, as a way to increase inflation.

Rosy Snapshot unchanged:

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

Watch:

AUDUSD

USD

Last week’s view that further continuation of USD strengthening is unlikely and levels need to be retested proved correct. I keep my long USD bias but still cannot pick a level or a triggering event that would make me enter the market.

Any reasonable decreased reading of confidence, consumer sentiment, personal spending can now be interpreted as something good for a sustainable growing US economy, as they do not fuel inflation, and not as something that postpones future rate hikes.

Snapshot unchanged :

Strengths of USD:

Weaknesses of USD:

Watch:

EUR

The macroeconomic picture is mixed and described in one word, unchanged. On the one hand, one may note the healthy levels of GDP growth, PMI readings and Draghi’s conviction that inflation expectations are well anchored, but on the other hand all kind of confidence / sentiment readings are alarmingly decreasing.

Last week I was pointing to my short EURUSD bias. I keep the same view and could enter if and when 1.1750 is retested.

Worth-noted the low liquidity expected on CAC contracts on Tuesday and the DAX contracts on Wednesday as France and Germany are playing at FIFA World Cup. Range trading is what generally happens under such circumstances.

Snapshot unchanged:

Strengths of EURUSD:

Weaknesses of EURUSD:

Watch:

EURUSD

GBP

Bank of England left an optimistic flair for UK’s economy, restated that it expects an excess demand growth by 2020 that would fuel inflation and restated the bad weather narrative regarding 1Q18. Worth noted that there are now 3 members of BOE voting for rate hike instead of 2, of previous meetings.

Snapshot unchanged:

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

Watch:

GBPUSD

Disclaimer

Issued by Labis Michalopoulos, CFA

labis@email.com

https://dxml.wordpress.com

This material is for Qualified Investors and Professional Clients only and should not be relied upon by any other persons.

Past performance or past accurate forecasts is not a guide to future performance and the accuracy of future forecasts and should not be the sole factor of consideration. All financial investments involve an element of risk. Therefore, the value of your investment and the income from it will vary and your initial investment amount cannot be guaranteed. Changes in the rates of exchange between currencies may cause the value of investments to go up and down. Fluctuation may be particularly marked in the case of a higher volatility fund and the value of an investment may fall suddenly and substantially. Levels and basis of taxation may change from time to time.

This report is for information purposes only and does not constitute an offer or invitation to anyone to invest or trade and has not been prepared in connection with any such offer.

Any research in this document has acted by Labis Michalopoulos, CFA for his own purpose. The views expressed do not constitute investment or any other advice and are subject to change. The author has an interest in the currency pairs, indexes and any other security disclosed in this report as he is an active trader.

Reliance upon information in this material is at the sole discretion of the reader.

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