With the dollar bulls still languid, markets could continue to look for
carry before a likelier hike in Sep. We continue to favor buying on dips. Any
further indications of possible China monetary easing, softer US data (i.e.
rates volatility and diminishing fear of the Fed), and fading Greek risk could
maintain current rise in bond yields, commodities technical rally and euro
upside. In the region, USD/AXJs are likely to retain their downside bias with
the exception of USD/THB given its capital outflow policies.
The soft dollar was welcomed by equity markets. Tame inflation and
tightening job market gave a goldilocks feel to the US economy, boosting
stocks. No surprise that dollar remains on its corrective slide.
Key release this week is FOMC Minutes on Wed night. Recall that the lackluster
data for 1Q was only partially attributed to the weather and labour dispute.
Dollar strength shouldered the rest of the blame and Fed is thus perceived less
likely to raise the funding rate in Jun. The Minutes will be scrutinized for
another confirmation of a Sep rate hike as opposed to one in Jun. US data out
next week include housing starts (Tues, 19 May, Cons 1020K), existing home
sales (Thurs, Cons. 0.6% m/m) and CPI M/m (Cons 0.1% m/m). With oil
moving higher it will be harder for USD upside momentum to pick up, even if the
US data starts to turn. Also with US economic softness and monetary policy
divergence factors being unclear now, we think USD strength could still remain
mildly at risk.
Minutes from RBA and BOE are out this week. RBA had already put the
easing option back to the table with its quarterly Statement on Monetary
Policy but we do not think the central bank can deliver a cut as soon as Jun
or Jul. The Minutes may reiterate the same. That should leave sometime for
more upsides in AUD. On the other hand, BOE revised growth forecast lower in
its quarterly inflation report but made a mild upside revision in CPI forecasts.
While timing the first hike will always be a guessing game at this juncture,
expectations of the move itself should keep the pound sticky on the downside
in the near-term. BOJ meets next Fri but we expect no action.
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EUR/USD seen consolidating recent gains around 1.1380/1.1415 with EUR
longs coming in more recently on the back of better possible repatriation and
risk appetite and should retain its momentum, but in the next 3-6 months we
still expect eventual euro declines towards 1.04 as euro shorts set in.
Spread between US and Bund little changed near lows and will weigh on
asset classes until volatility subsides. Greece is expected to repay another
1.5 billion euros to the IMF and another three billion euros to the ECB in July
and August. Germany ZEW index (19 May, Tues, Cons. 69), Eurozone CPI (Apr, 19
May Cons 0.2% m/m) and Eurozone Flash PMIs (Thurs, Cons 51.7). Further
indication of cyclical moves in the Eurozone and unwinding of Greek risk
premium could be further supportive of the euro towards 1.15 levels in the
interim as the dollar retains its muddied outlook.
In Asia, Thailand will unveil 1Q GDP (Cons. 3.4%y/y) early on Mon. Other
data released that day includes Singapore’s Apr NODX (Cons. -5.0%y/y), China’s
property prices. Singapore will release its growth numbers (Cons.
2.2%y/y) anytime next week as well. Tue should see BI static on its policy
reference rate at 7.50%. Wed is PMI-mfg estimate day with China’s HSBC flash
PMI-mfg (Cons. 49.4 vs. prev. 48.9) to kick start the releases, followed
by European Union and US. Come Fri, Malaysia will release CPI for Apr. The euro
strength could help support the SGD on a relative basis compared to other
regional currencies. USD/SGD has dropped more than 2cents this week on
the back of the dollar and euro swings and we expect the USD/SGD to potentially
hover lower towards 1.3150-1.3250 next week. The SGD NEER remains close to the
mid-point with band still limiting it at around an implied 1.3000-1.3550 range
at this point in time.
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