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Prolonged risk aversion is expected to ensue until Tuesdays presidential inauguration
brings in a temporary feel good rally. Having made their third failed attempt
to rise more than 25% since the intensification of the crisis, equities, VIX
and the yen are expected to further move in the direction of prolonged reduction
in risk appetite (equities negative, yen positive, VIX positive). I warned
in the Jan 2nd piece Risk
Appetite Pushes the Envelope that the trio of risk appetite will be constrained
near 940 for the S&P500, $850 for gold (having failed to break its 8-week
cycle gains) and 92.50 yen in USDJPY.
The charts below illustrate the relationship between the VIX and the S&P500,
both of which suggesting prolonged risk aversion (rising VIX, falling S&P)
as the VIX breaks above its 100-day MA for the first in 4 weeks and S&P500
bears the next support of 817. Weekly oscillators for both instruments
also confirm further reduction in risk appetite, which could intensify until
a possible bottom in Tuesdays US presidential inauguration. Pres elect Obamas
speech may will likely give a short-term relief rally on the feel good factor
resulting from a turning of the page in the White House. Despite the long term
concerns of the upcoming fiscal deterioration, Obamas promised $300 billion
in tax cuts will be reiterated during the inauguration, thereby, justifying
the next temporary bottom in risk appetite.

The currency implications for the aforementioned pick up in risk aversion
is likely to continue boosting the yen at the expense of the Canadian dollar
and the NZ dollar, two commodity currencies whose underperformance cannot go
unnoticed during. This weeks S&P downgrade of NZs foreign currency credit
rating and the impact of a 3-week low in oil prices is weighing on heavily
on NZD and CAD.
8000, 800, 800 Dow, Gold, S&P500 may prove as just a coincidence,
as the Dow is most likely to break below 8000, while the S&P500 is the
least likely break 800 in the short term.
The European Central Bank delivered the expected outcome of cutting
by 50-bps, reverting to what is seen as an incremental pattern of easing for
now as the central bank is cautious about driving down inflation further below
its 26-month low of 1.6%. Anything less than 1.5% annual would be deemed as
outside the definition of anchored price stability but it does not necessarily
mean aggressive easing mode (-75 bps).
We should also note that Decembers 75-bp cut from the ECB in December was
partly to avoid excessive rate differentials relative to the BoE (-150 bps
in Nov and 100-bps in Oct) and Fed (which may have signalled to the ECB that
it would enter zero % territory later that month).
JC Trichets press conference suggests a return to incrementalism, rather than
the end of the easing campaign, which could extend until rates reach 1.00%.
EURUSD was boosted by higher than expected US jobless claims (524K
from 470K) as well as the obligatory post-press conference choppy trading,
reaching as high as $1.3239 before retreating towards $1.3050. We reiterate
the $1.3030 support remains the trend line support extending from the Nov 21
low through the Dec 04 low. Philly Fed and Empire State showed no marked improvement.
Tomorrows US figures on indus production are more likely to trigger
market impact than the CPI as production decline seen greater than 1.0%
following previous 0.6% drop, while capacity utilization seen falling
below 75%.
USDJPYconsolidation ensues between 89.40 and 88.60, while staying clear
from retesting the upside limit of 90.20. While much talk is being focused
on USDs risk-driven gains, USDJPY remains in a negative bias, with the shorts
still looking to test the 88.60 support, a breach of which seen calling up
87.80 and 87.00.
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