Margin trading products are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 75-95% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading on margin with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how margin trading works and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

USD

The Daily Fix: A bullish wave rips through markets

Chris Weston
Head of Research
Oct 5, 2020
Fiscal stimulus hopes are rising with Trump leaving the Walter Reed Medical Centre, apparently feeling better than he did 20 years ago.

House Speaker Pelosi suggesting Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis increases the possibility of stimulus, although it feels like this isn’t a Trump play and more whether the Dems choose to come down to the REPs plan and give Trump some additional support. An above consensus 57.8 read on the US September Service ISM hasn’t hurt sentiment either.

Support is certainly needed as Trump’s well behind in the polls and needs to pull a rabbit out of a hat. One could argue we’re seeing this view expressed today and that a blue wave is increasingly the consensus and perhaps being expressed through markets as per my playbook. Looking into the sectors in the S&P 500 and we see energy (+2.9%), tech (+2.3%) and healthcare (+2.1%) rocketing higher. Three sectors that could have headwinds under a ‘blue wave’, with even names like Marathon Petroleum higher by 3.4%.

(2020 election odds matrix)

06_10_2020_DFX1.png

A 6% move in crude is punchy, although there is some wood to chop into $41.30 and some decent resistance, where we may see supply kick in. However, the move in crude clearly overlooking the prospect of Biden restricting the Keystone XL pipeline and re-engaging with Iran further down the line. But a solid move in crude has seen reflation play out in markets, with US Treasuries well offered in 10s (+7bp to 0.77%) and 30’s (+9bp to 1.59%). With 30’s closing above its 200-day MA for the first time since March 2019, this resulted in a solid steepening of the Treasury curve.

There's been some movement in breakeven inflation expectations, with both 5- and 10-yr breakevens up 5bp, but this hasn’t quite outpaced nominals, so ‘real’ Treasury yields are a touch higher. This hasn’t weighed on precious metals to any great extent and we see gold up 0.7% at 1913, just failing to push above Friday’s high of 1918. A break here and I’d be expecting 1941/55 to come into play and will re-assess here. Staying on the commodity theme and we did see copper-0.5%, but copper has been all over the shop of late so I wouldn’t read into that too much. That said, the reflationists would have liked to have seen copper participate in this rally to give it some backbone.

(US2000 daily)

06_10_2020_DFX2.png

Equities are all bid, with European bourses mostly up 1% and as things stand should open on a firmer footing later today. In the US, small caps have led the charge with the US2000 +2.8% and the risk here is that this index re-tests the August highs, so I’d be holding longs until price can close below the 5-day EMA which is defining the ST trend. The US500 looks bullish too, having printed a higher high, with excellent breadth as you’d imagine on a 1.8% move – that said turnover was light-ish and 18% below the 30-day average. Again, happy to be long here with stops on a close through the 5-Day EMA, but with implied vol so high (the VIX sits at 27.94%). I would be keeping position sizing to a minimum. In my view, volatility defines risk and position size – two factors which are at the heart of all traders’ frameworks and process.

In FX markets the reflationary moves have been given additional wind by a weaker USD, with the USDX -0.4% and tracking in a bearish channel. This is obviously an environment where the USD move could flip at any stage, but the flow of capital seems to be moving out of the USD for now and I can’t fight that. On the leaderboard we see the NOK working well, naturally given life by the moves in brent crude and the trend on the 4-hour or daily is lower. Although, price may find support into horizontal support at 9.1832.

(USDNOK daily)

06_10_2020_DFX3.png

The MXN and EUR have also worked well, with EURUSD pushing back into its former July-August trading range. Hard to be long EURUSD and if I were to take a position then I would be closing out below 1.1720, but 60-pips of risk seems a lot. So trying to extract 100-120-pips of upside seems a tall order. However, the options market suggests if the pair is going to move the upside will be more intense than a downside move, with 1-week risk reversals at +0.42.

GBP has worked well too and GBPJPY especially looks bullish. I want to see a break of 137.41 to get excited, which is a touch higher than where spot sits now, so I’ll be watching to see if we see supply kick in at all – hard to chase at these levels though, especially with Brexit headlines only likely to be more prevalent this week.

AUDUSD hit a session high of 0.7193 and has underperformed other risky currencies on a day where one could argue the backdrop was there to break the 72-handle. A big day for the AUD, and the AUS200, with the RBA due at 14:30 AEDT and Budget at 19:30 AEDT. I wrote about both events in depth in yesterday’s note, so find the previews here. The 50-day MA (0.7209) could be tested today in AUDUSD should the RBA not meet the markets pricing and expectations of a move in November, and supply has kicked in above the 9 September pivot low. So, a break here, especially on a closing basis would be bullish. For mean reversion traders, unless the RBA truly surprise moves intra-day should be capped into 0.7230/40. On the downside a move I’d be looking to fade moves into 0.7125/35.

Ready to trade?

It's quick and easy to get started. Apply in minutes with our simple application process.

The material provided here has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Whilst it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research we will not seek to take any advantage before providing it to our clients. Pepperstone doesn’t represent that the material provided here is accurate, current or complete, and therefore shouldn’t be relied upon as such. The information, whether from a third party or not, isn’t to be considered as a recommendation; or an offer to buy or sell; or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security, financial product or instrument; or to participate in any particular trading strategy. It does not take into account readers’ financial situation or investment objectives. We advise any readers of this content to seek their own advice. Without the approval of Pepperstone, reproduction or redistribution of this information isn’t permitted.