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USDMXN Trades to Four Month Low Below 20.00

FOREX
  • Friday’s session was characterised by a strong rally for the Euro, as headlines suggested Germany have found a solution to the debt brake passage. EURUSD rose from around 1.0850 to 1.0912 following the news, falling short of most recent cycle highs which reside at 1.0947. The pair has since tracked back to 1.0875 ahead of the weekend close.
  • With the associated move higher for European yields, it is the low yielding JPY and CHF which have really felt the pinch, with EURJPY and EURCHF rising 0.7% and 0.55% respectively.
  • Overall, there was considerably more optimism across global markets, as major equity indices rose around 1.5% on both sides of the Atlantic. This allowed the likes of AUD and NZD to outperform G10 peers. UK economic data out this morning surprised to the downside, with GDP surprisingly contracting in January while industrial and manufacturing production data came in well below forecast. GBP is notably softer as a result.
  • Rengo pay tallies in Japan have again proved market moving - while unions are set to demand a faster pace of pay rises this year (5.46% from 5.28%), the final demand may turn out lower than many surveys had estimated - undermining the JPY. The firmer risk sentiment has seen the likes of AUDJPY and NZDJPY surge over 1%, entirely reversing yesterday’s misfortunes.
  • Following the breach of key support on Thursday around 20.13, USDMXN has continued to grind lower during today’s session, and the clean break highlights the growing potential for a stronger reversal lower. The pair is 1% lower on the session as we approach the close, trading at the lowest level for four months, around 19.88. Below here, attention turns to the lows seen in the aftermath of the election results at 19.7618, while resistance moves down to 20.3851, the 50-day EMA.
  • Activity data in China is scheduled on Monday’s, before US retail sales headlines the economic data calendar. Next week, will see a plethora of central bank decisions, including the Fed and BOJ.
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  • Friday’s session was characterised by a strong rally for the Euro, as headlines suggested Germany have found a solution to the debt brake passage. EURUSD rose from around 1.0850 to 1.0912 following the news, falling short of most recent cycle highs which reside at 1.0947. The pair has since tracked back to 1.0875 ahead of the weekend close.
  • With the associated move higher for European yields, it is the low yielding JPY and CHF which have really felt the pinch, with EURJPY and EURCHF rising 0.7% and 0.55% respectively.
  • Overall, there was considerably more optimism across global markets, as major equity indices rose around 1.5% on both sides of the Atlantic. This allowed the likes of AUD and NZD to outperform G10 peers. UK economic data out this morning surprised to the downside, with GDP surprisingly contracting in January while industrial and manufacturing production data came in well below forecast. GBP is notably softer as a result.
  • Rengo pay tallies in Japan have again proved market moving - while unions are set to demand a faster pace of pay rises this year (5.46% from 5.28%), the final demand may turn out lower than many surveys had estimated - undermining the JPY. The firmer risk sentiment has seen the likes of AUDJPY and NZDJPY surge over 1%, entirely reversing yesterday’s misfortunes.
  • Following the breach of key support on Thursday around 20.13, USDMXN has continued to grind lower during today’s session, and the clean break highlights the growing potential for a stronger reversal lower. The pair is 1% lower on the session as we approach the close, trading at the lowest level for four months, around 19.88. Below here, attention turns to the lows seen in the aftermath of the election results at 19.7618, while resistance moves down to 20.3851, the 50-day EMA.
  • Activity data in China is scheduled on Monday’s, before US retail sales headlines the economic data calendar. Next week, will see a plethora of central bank decisions, including the Fed and BOJ.