Goldman Sachs is taking profits and exiting its GBP
position. "We do see further potential upside to Cable...but Cable strength is
no longer a strong out-of-consensus call given the recent improvements in U.K.
data and we have reached our initial 1.65 target," they said. They do still
recommend betting on GBP vs EUR. (RFO)
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Thursday, March 26, 2009
USD/TWD declines
| USD/TWD declines in moderate volume, down at 33.816 vs last close 33.888, tracking weaker USD/KRW, gains in stocks (Taiex +0.9%). "Nobody's buying the U.S. dollar, so it's easy to push the Taiwan dollar higher," says trader at government-owned bank. Tips pair in 33.750-33.950 band today. |
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
The $34 billion five-year
| The $34 billion five-year Tsy notes to be auctioned at 1 p.m. EDT will entice demand as the pre-auction selling make yields more attractive and as the Fed is committed its bond buying program, traders say. "The market is down and they [the Fed] just took $7.5B securities out of the market so there should be decent interest," says Thomas Roth, head of U.S. government bond trading in New York at Dresdner Kleinwort Securities LLC. |
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
The S&P 500
| The S&P 500 is more than 20% off its March 6 low, and has taken out key resistance levels, Brown Brothers Harriman notes; the next key is the "double top," firm says. "The next significant challenge will be breaking the late-January and February double top around 870 as well as the downtrend line drawn off the failed rally peaks of October, November and January," firm writes. On the downside, 760 and 745 are the 38.2% and 50% Fibonacci retracement levels of the rally through Monday's high, and will be important support to hold when the first real pullback sets in." |
Monday, March 23, 2009
USD/KRW sustains losses
| USD/KRW sustains losses, at 1,394.65 vs 1,412.50 last close, on Kospi gains (last +2.4%), strong foreign interest in local stocks, says local bank trader. Foreigners currently net buyers in stock market, picking up KRW151 billion worth local shares so far today. Tips pair in tight 1,390-1,400 band for rest session; immediate support eyed at 1,390, next at 1,380. Samsung Futures currency analyst Jeon Seung-ji adds, nation's trade surplus so far this month (data from Korea Customs Service shows Korea posted $2.6 billion trade surplus in March 1-20 period), together with widespread expectations that nation will post large trade surplus this month supported KRW in March. USD/KRW climbed as high as 1,534 at end-February. |
Monday, March 16, 2009
The South Korean won ended
| The South Korean won ended 3% higher Monday to close at a one-month high as offshore market participants dumped the dollar to track regional-market trends, dealers said. The big question now on everyone's mind is whether the won can sustain its gains, with traders saying that Wall Street's performance will likely hold the key to the domestic currency's fortunes. The dollar rose to a high of KRW1,488 in early trade, but reversed course to close at its weakest since Feb. 16, when it had closed at KRW1,427.50. "There appears to have been some offshore players betting on a short-JPY/KRW position by buying the dollar versus the yen and simultaneously selling the dollar against the won," a local bank trader said. On Tuesday, traders say that market participants will keenly watch whether the dollar will recover support at KRW1,450. Domestic treasury bonds ended a tad lower following weak results at an auction for KRW800 billion worth of 10-year treasury bonds, which were sold at 4.97%, compared with their close Friday of 4.88%. The country's chief financial regulator said Monday that money market funds will be required to diversify their holdings into bonds and commercial paper later this year. These funds must invest at least 40% of their assets in bonds and commercial paper, the Financial Services Commission said in a statement. Funds will be allowed to invest at most 5% of their assets in treasury bonds with maturities ranging from one to five years. Revising rules to allow investments in long-term securities is a bond-friendly move, but the impact will be likely limited, analysts said. Money-market funds have frequent deposits and retrievals, and as such, "fund mangers would be reluctant to invest in instruments with such long maturities as five-year treasuries," said Woori Investment & Securities analyst Ough Chang-sup. |
Friday, March 13, 2009
Former Fed Gov. Frederic Mishkin
| Former Fed Gov. Frederic Mishkin says current environment a good time for derivatives exchange sector, as moving over-the-counter products onto exchange platforms is a viable means of mitigating counterparty risk in the markets. Mishkin, speaking at Futures Industry Association's annual meeting in Boca Raton, Fla., lauded the derivatives industry, saying that futures markets have become a critical means of hedging risk. |
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