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Today's fresh 9-month high of $1.4627 in EURUSD coincides top of the rally
in mid December (when FOMC moved to 0.25%) and the Lehman high in September
(when Lehman collapse boosted gold and EUR). More below.
Unusual Forex Price Action
Current price action in currencies may be sending some interesting signals.
Broad dollar damage is being accompanied by broad yen strength, which is an
unusual pattern when risk appetite is on the rise. This suggests that dollar
weakness is not necessarily a reflection of improved risk appetite but of secular
weakness in the greenback (as a result of Chinese gold purchases and most importantly
hedge funds testing key dollar support levels vs. EUR (1.4620) GBP (1.67) and
AUD (0.8640-50s).
If the explanation that the greenback has become the sole candidate for financing
carry trades into equities may be plausible, then this promises for emerging
bounce at the next bout of equity selling. But with the higher lows displayed
by the euro and high yielders (AUD, NZD) remaining a major part of the FX trading
landscape, dollar bulls scan still find solace vs. GBP, CAD and CHF.
EURUSD hit a fresh 9-month high of $1.4627, coinciding with the key
61.8% retracement of the decline from the $1.6033 record high to the $1.2315
low. Euros broadening strength is also bolstered by inclinations towards a
global exit strategy, in which case would support EUR due to the ECBs relatively
less generous quantitative easing. Most interestingly, the $1.4610-20 region
was the top of the rally in mid December (when FOMC moved to 0.25%) and mid
September (when Lehman collapse boosted gold and EUR).

But the fact that oil had been unable to break above the key $72.40 resistance
suggests caution with overinterpreting dollar weakness to be a result of improved
risk appetite. In the event of a breach of 72.40, oil faces 73.40-45 as the
enxt barrier, Aside from USDJPY falling to 7-month lows below 91, EURJPY, GBPJPY,
CADJPY, AUDJPY and CADJPY are all under pressure, drifting at their own session
lows. Yesterdays CADJPY
HotChart is a manifestation of the yens rally against commodity currencies
even during improved risk appetite. Our unchanged bearish calls
for sub-90 USDJPY since October are materializing, especially as we characterized
this pair to be a lose-lose due to the combination of broad USD-weakness and
intermittent yen-strength.
Whether overall yen strength could be suggesting equities to be topping out
may be supported by a decline in US bond yields and the persistent inability
for oil to regain $73.00. The Nikkeis 0.7% decline overnight and golds inability
to close above $1,000 could also offer signals about contained risk appetite.
Euro Never Looks Back
One of the most potent signs of technical strength in EURUSD has been
the preservation of major lows on the monthly chart. Ever since reaching its
all time lows in October 2000, EURUSD has never closed a month below prior
major lows. The $1.2455 in March was above the $1.2387 low of Nov 08, which
was in turn higher above the Oct low of $1.2328. This is not only a case of
higher lows, but of previous lows never been breached. On a shorter-term horizon,
$1.3740 continued to serve as a major support since May 38% retracement of
the decline from $1.6050 high to the $1.2327 low. While we stick with our $1.57
target by year-end, (0.94 in EURGBP), were not yet ruling out a break below
$1.37 and onto $1.32.

More recently, the stabilization of the euro has been among the most overlooked
phenomena in financial markets, since the March lows. The lack of significant
overhaul in Eurozone banks and the lingering threat from the impact of a banking
failure in the Baltics were long described as the red flags to the euro and
most EUR crosses.
But the two main forces to the euros solid showing have been the following:
1. Acting as the anti-dollar, the EURUSD has been the most immediate
currency pair for punishing the dollars structural weaknesses (budget/deficit
nearing 10.5%) and cyclical weakness (unemployment near 10% and foreclosures
far from peaking). With the EURUSD pair accounting for 28% of all currency
pairs, the bulk of these trades remains instrumental in moving the euro.
2. ECB monetary policy veered away from the quantitative easing of
the Fed and the BoE, which not only produced zero interest rates but, gave
the green light for FX traders to sell USD and GBP. Although the ECBs 1-year
auction received a subscription of a record euros 4442 bln at 1.0%, subsequent
auctions arent likely to draw amounts that are near half due to the self-sufficiency
of the first auction.
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