Dollar Treads Water As 10-year Yield Knocks On 2.40%

The US dollar is narrowly mixed in mostly uneventful turnover in the foreign exchange market. There is a palpable sense of anticipation. Anticipation for the ECB meeting on Thursday, which is expected to see a six or nine-month extension of asset purchases at a pace half of the current 60 bln a month. Anticipation of the new Fed Chair, which President Trump says will be announced: “very, very soon.”  Anticipation of US tax reform proposal that will be released as soon as the budget is approved.  Anticipation of US corporate earnings, with FANG, shares off for the fifth session yesterday, the longest downdraft of the year.  

The 10-year US yield is sitting just below the 2.40% level, which marks the upper end of the six-month trading range. It has finished the North American session once above there since the end of Q1. This has helped put a floor under the dollar against the yen. When the yield faltered at the cap yesterday, the dollar pulled back to JPY113.25 and recovered in the afternoon session in Tokyo and through the European morning to return to the JPY113.75 area. There is nearly a $1 bln option struck at JPY113.50 that expires today and a nearly $720 mln strike at JPY114.00 the will be cut. 

The Nikkei extended its gains for a 16th consecutive session. There have been two developments to note in Japan. First, the flash manufacturing PMI for October eased to 52.5 from 52.9, though output remained strong. The September reading was a four-month high. Second, reports suggest that next week the BOJ may lower its forecast for (core) CPI for the current fiscal year. Japan reports the September CPI figures at the end of the week. The targeted core rate, which excludes fresh food, is expected to be steady 0.7%.The BOJ’s current forecast is for it to reach 1.1% by the end of March 2018.  

The eurozone reported its flash PMI readings. They were mixed and gave a sense that the regional economy continues to expand at an above-trend clip but a slightly slower pace. The composite slowed to 55.9 from 56.7, which is somewhat more than expected. The weaker results were a function of unexpected slowing in the service sector, which is about the domestic economies, while the manufacturing sector, where exports are more significant, accelerated. The services PMI slipped to 54.9 from 55.8, while the manufacturing PMI rose to 58.6 from 58.1. Manufacturing employment was the highest on record (time series began 1997).  

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