Dollar in Fresh Selloff, Yen and Euro Strong

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Fresh selloff in seen in Dollar as we enter into US session. Euro was lifted earlier today by strong PMIs. But it could be taken over by Yen before weekly close. Mild risk aversion in Europe is keeping Yen afloat. US futures are mixed at the time of writing, but looks vulnerable. As for the week, Dollar is set to end as the worst performing, followed by Aussie and Loonie. Yen will likely end up as the strongest, followed by Euro.

Technically, USD/JPY’s break of 107.75 is another sign of Dollar weakness, and it could be heading to next fibonacci level at 105.77. Now, our attention will be on when EUR/USD would break through 1.2079 temporary top to resume the rebound form 1.1703. Besides, USD/CHF may follow and break through 0.9127 temporary low too.

In Europe, currently, FTSE is down -0.58%. DAX is down -0.93%. CAC is down -0.57%. Germany 10-year yield is down -0.0227 at -0.274. Earlier in Asia, Nikkei closed down -0.57%. Hong Kong HSI rose 1.12%. China Shanghai SSE rose 0.26%. Singapore Strait Times rose 0.20%. Japan 10-year JGB yield rose 0.0006 to 0.069.

UK PMI composite rose to 60, second strongest spell in 23 years of records

UK PMI Manufacturing rose to 60.7 in April, up from 58.9, above expectation of 59.0. That’s the highest level in more than 26 years. PMI Services rose to 60.1, up from 56.3, above expectation of 59.0, a 80-month high. PMI Composite rose to 60.0, up from 56.4, an 89-month high since November 2013.

Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit, said: “Companies are reporting a surge in demand for both goods and services as the economy opens up from lockdowns and the encouraging vaccine roll-out adds to a brighter outlook. In more than 23 years of PMI history, we have only seen one spell of faster growth than this, recorded between August and November 2013”.

Also released, retail sales rose 5.4% mom in March, well above expectation of 1.50%. Ex-fuel sales rose 4.9% mom, above expectation of 1.3% mom. Over the year, headline sales rose 7.2% yoy, ex-fuel sales rose 7.9% yoy. The strongest growth was in clothing stores, other non-food stores and automotive fuel retailers of 17.5%, 13.4% and 11.1% respectively.

Germany PMI composite dropped to 56.0, pandemic third wave stifled progress

Germany PMI Manufacturing dropped slightly to 66.4 in April, down from 66.6, above expectation of 65.9. PMI Services dropped to 50.1, down from 51.5, below expectation of 50.8. PMI Composite dropped to 56.0, down from 57.3.

Phil Smith, Associate Director at IHS Markit said: “The third wave of the pandemic has stifled progress in Germany’s service sector, with April ‘s flash PMI data showing activity close to stalling following the return to growth at the end of the first quarter. The country’s manufacturing sector remains on a strong footing, though even here the data show growth being held back by supply problems.

France PMI composite rose to 51.7, finally managed to achieve growth

France PMI Manufacturing dropped to 59.2 in April, down form 59.3, above expectation of 59.0. PMI Services rose to 50.4, up from 48.2, above expectation of 44.0, hitting a 8-month high. PMI Composite rose to 51.7, up from 50.0, a 9-month high.

Eliot Kerr, Economist at IHS Markit said: “Latest PMI data pointed to the first increase in private sector activity since the end of the initial COVID-19 rebound last summer. The result was a continuation of the improved trend seen in recent months, but previously growth had remained elusive due to an ongoing decline in the service sector. However, with an expansion in services activity and another strong rise in manufacturing production during April, the French private sector finally managed to achieve growth.”

Japan CPI core rose to -0.1% yoy in Mar, negative for the 8th straight months

Japan CPI core (all-item less fresh food) improved to -0.1% yoy in March, up from -0.4% yoy, above expectation of -0.2% yoy. But that’s still the eight straight months of negative reading. Further fall in core inflation is expected due to drag from mobile phone fee cuts. All-item CPI rose to -0.2% yoy, up from -0.4% yoy. CPI core-core (all-item less fresh food and energy) also ticked up to 0.3% yoy from 0.2% yoy.

Separately, BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told reiterated to the parliament, “when Japan’s inflation approaches our target, we will deliberate an exit strategy at our policy-setting meeting including details such as the timing and means for selling ETFs.” But for now, inflation remains distant from target.

Japan PMI manufacturing rose to 53.3, highest since Apr 2018

Japan PMI Manufacturing rose to 53.3 in April up from 52.7, above expectation of 53.1. That’s the strongest reading since April 2018. PMI Services was unchanged at 48.3. PMI Composite ticked up from 49.9 to 50.2, returned to expansion for the first time since January 2020.

Usamah Bhatti, Economist at IHS Markit, said: “While some Japanese private sector businesses noted that a resurgence in COVID-19 cases could dampen prospects in the second quarter of the year, firms remained optimistic that overall business activity would improve in the coming 12 months. That said, there is concern the impact of the pandemic will be prolonged further.”

Australia PMI composite rose to record 58.8 in Apr, strong start to Q2

Australia PMI Manufacturing rose to 59.6 in April, up from 56.8. PMI Services rose to 58.6, up from 55.5. PMI Composite rose to 58.8, up from 55.5. All three indexes were at record highs.

Pollyanna De Lima, Economics Associate Director at IHS Markit, said: “Australia’s private sector started the second quarter on a strong footing, with growth of output accelerating for the second time in a row to the steepest on record as sales were boosted by improved market confidence due to a reduction in the negative impact of COVID-19.

“The stronger growth momentum filtered through to the labour market… The overall degree of business sentiment improved from March’s seven-month low and was above its average… Ongoing supply-chain disruptions continued to exert upward pressure on inflation. The flash results highlighted the steepest increases in both input costs and selling charges since the inception of the survey.”

USD/JPY Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 107.87; (P) 108.01; (R1) 108.19; More…

USD/JPY’s decline from 110.95 extends lower today and breaks 38.2% retracement of 102.58 to 110.95 at 107.75. Intraday bias is now on the downside for deeper decline to 61.8% retracement at 105.77. On the upside, break of 108.53 minor resistance is needed to indicate short term bottoming. Otherwise, deeper decline will remain in favor in case of recovery.

In the bigger picture, current development suggests that rise from 102.58 might have completed at 110.95, as the third leg of the pattern from 101.18 low. Medium term outlook is neutral first, as the pair could have turned into sideway trading between 101.18/111.71. We’d look at the structure and momentum of the fall from 110.95 to gauge the chance of upside breakout at a later stage.

Economic Indicators Update

GMT Ccy Events Actual Forecast Previous Revised
23:00 AUD Manufacturing PMI Apr P 59.6 56.8
23:00 AUD Services PMI Apr P 58.6 55.5
23:01 GBP GfK Consumer Confidence Apr -15 -12 -16
23:30 JPY National CPI Core Y/Y Mar -0.10% -0.20% -0.40%
0:30 JPY Jibun Bank Manufacturing PMI Apr P 53.3 53.1 52.7
6:00 GBP Retail Sales M/M Mar 1.50% 2.10%
6:00 GBP Retail Sales Y/Y Mar 4.20% -3.70%
6:00 GBP Retail Sales ex-Fuel M/M Mar 1.30% 2.40%
6:00 GBP Retail Sales ex-Fuel Y/Y Mar -1.50% -1.10%
6:00 GBP Public Sector Net Borrowing (GBP) Mar 21.3B 18.4B
7:15 EUR France Manufacturing PMI Apr P 59 59.3
7:15 EUR France Services PMI Apr P 44 48.2
7:30 EUR Germany Manufacturing PMI Apr P 65.9 66.6
7:30 EUR Germany Services PMI Apr P 50.8 51.5
8:00 EUR Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Apr P 62 62.5
8:00 EUR Eurozone Services PMI Apr P 49.1 49.6
8:30 GBP Manufacturing PMI Apr P 59 58.9
8:30 GBP Services PMI Apr P 59 56.3
13:45 USD Manufacturing PMI Apr P 59.3 59.1
13:45 USD Services PMI Apr P 61.5 60.4
14:00 USD New Home Sales Mar 875K 775K

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