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A Tale of Two Weeks

A tale of two weeks and how quickly investor sentiment can turn. Last week, Tumpenomics’ rally has given way to a vote of no confidence from investors who are growing leery of President Trump’s agenda and are restless about the lack of focus on the fiscal front.

The weekend’s immigration headlines have won the president few friends globally. There's an increasing level of unease amongst investors that the recent executive orders are eroding minted political relationships abroad and will have negative impact on US trade negotiation.

While the Muslim travel ban may have been universally condemned, keep in mind, capital markets lack a moral compass, and while it makes a compelling storyline, the market meltdown overnight was investors voting with their feet in a direct challenge to the Tump-inflation trade. Sure the immigration ban was risk adverse, but leeriness will quickly fade if the US administration comes through on the fiscal front.

While the markets have started the week on a sour note, it is not the time to bury your head in the sand as we are in for one of the busiest data calendars in some time. The key risk events are the three central bank events: the BoJ, FOMC and the BoE, where we have the Quarterly Inflation Report. Last of all and at the top of my agenda, Friday’s grandaddy of all data releases, US Non-Farm Payroll

The BoJ is expected to give their policy announcement between 10am to 11:30am (Singapore time), but as we have seen so often in the past, there is no specific timetable for the release. Nonetheless, the BoJ is not expected to yield any real surprises as they will likely be more than happy to leave policy unchanged and continue to see inflation drift towards their target. However, the markets may be on forwarding guidance watch after reports that the BoJ is looking into how they could raise their 10y bond yield target from zero in the future without roiling the financial markets, as market chaos usually ensues if the BoJ surprises.

Speaking of which, it was a year ago yesterday, when the BoJ unexpectedly slashed rates into negative territory for the first time and kicked off the seven-month chase for yield with dominated trade flow through much of 2016. Let's see what rabbit the BoJ pulls out of its hat later today.

Australian Dollar

The Aussie has been stuck in the muck, over the past 24 hours while the Kiwi has basked in the sun. The market is voicing their opinion on the probable course of each country's monetary policy. While the AUD has sat glued to .7555-60 level overnight, the Kiwi appears ready to test the rarified air above .7300 once again.

To be honest, I had to take a second at my Aussie screen as I thought it was a stale price given the unwind and aboutface we have seen on the broader USD sentiment overnight.

It once again illustrates the importance of the Carry, in the 3C equation (Carry Commodity and China) for the Aussie dollar.

Japanese Yen

For USD JPY, the focus is all on the BoJ monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, where it is widely believed the policy will be left unchanged. However, dealers will be homing in on forwarding guidance after reports surface that the BoJ was looking for ways to taper for 0% 10 Year Rinban targets. But, it is likely too early for the BoJ to rock the boat despite the recent uptick in inflation.

I believe the shift away from 0% 10 years’ is inevitable given the likelihood of US 10 Year Yield moving above 3% and global yield shift higher. It sure feels like the markets’ love affairs with Trumpenomics is fading with USDJPY falling below 114 coat tailing the 1% drop in the S&P. While the move was triggered after the US economy, it's difficult to determine just how much the move is related to pre-data position expectations, month-end rebalancing or risk off. I suspect the truth lies within all. 

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