Forex today was a quiet affair in Asia this RBA Tuesday, with risk-aversion back in vogue amid the re-emergence of the US-China trade war fears after China retaliated to the US tariffs. Despite persisting risk-off flows, most higher-yielding assets were well bid while the safe-haven Yen and gold also failed to benefit. In fact, the risk currencies, the Antipodeans, advanced amid better fundamentals and higher oil prices, with the Aussie having tested the 0.77 handle following the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) status-quo. Meanwhile, the US dollar stalled its upside and traded neutral across its main competitors, awaiting fresh trading impetus from the session ahead.
Main topics in Asia
Trump wants a NAFTA rewrite in two weeks - CNBC
CNBC is reporting on reports from the White House that President Trump wants an outline of a NAFTA revamp ready to go in time for the Summit of the Americas in Peru on April 13th, as originally reported by Bloomberg.
China imposed tariffs on US products to "balance losses": State Media
China's retaliation to US tariffs is only aimed at "balancing the losses" caused by US duties according to a commentary on the front page of the official People's Daily.
Japan’s Seko: Chinese retaliatory tariffs do not benefit anyone
Japanese Trade Minister Seko was out on the wires earlier today, via Reuters, responding to China’s retaliatory tariffs on the US imports.
China's ambassador to US: Will fight back any new US tariffs at equal strength, value and scale
China’s state media reported comments from the Chinese ambassador to the US, as saying that China is prepared to fight back any new US tariffs at equal strength, value and scale.
BOJ Tankan inflation expectations still well below 2% target
Japanese companies expect consumer prices to rise an average 0.8 percent a year from now, unchanged from the previous forecast and well below Bank of Japan's (BOJ) 2 percent inflation target, the central bank's Tankan survey for March released today showed.
White House's Navarro: ‘smart money’ is going to buy on the dips as economy ‘is as strong as an ox’
In the interview on CNBC, Navarro said, "I’m looking at this market and the economy and I’m thinking the smart money is certainly going to buy on the dips here because the economy is as strong as an ox."
RBA holds rates a record low of 1.50 percent, keeps steady view
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) at its monetary policy meeting today, left the official cash rate (OCR) unadjusted at a record low of 1.50%, as widely anticipated.
RBA: Inflation likely to remain low for some time
Following are the key headlines from the RBA monetary policy statement (via Reuters) …
Key Focus ahead
Looking towards the EU calendar this Tuesday, we have a relatively busy one, with the German retail sales data to be published ahead of the European open. Meanwhile, a flurry of final manufacturing PMI releases will be dropping in from across the Euro area economies. Also, in focus, remains the UK manufacturing PMI data, which is expected to come in at 54.8 in March versus 55.2 last.
In the NA session, New Zealand’s fortnightly dairy auction results from Fonterra will be closely eyed among a couple of minority reports from the US. Besides, the speech by the FOMC member Brainard will hog the limelight in the American afternoon, as she is scheduled to speak about financial stability at New York University's Stern School of Business.
EUR/USD fighting back from 1.23 ahead of EU PMIs for Tuesday
Europe sees an array of macro data early in Tuesday's action, kicking off with German Retail Sales at 06:00 GMT and the month-on-month figure is expected at 0.8 percent, a noted upswing from the previous period's -0.7 percent contraction.
GBP/USD: Eyes UK PMI, trade wars and risk aversion could hurt Pound
The GBP/USD avoided a break below 1.40 during the Easter holidays, but the relief will likely be short-lived if the trade war fears drive stocks lower and UK PMI misses estimates by a wide margin.
Look to buy GOLD at 1307 major support this week
Gold has been in a sideways congestion period between 1307 and 1360 in recent months, within the context of what appears to be a long-term upward swing.
Source: fxstreet.com
Forex today was a quiet affair in Asia this RBA Tuesday, with risk-aversion back in vogue amid the re-emergence of the US-China trade war fears after China retaliated to the US tariffs. Despite persisting risk-off flows, most higher-yielding assets were well bid while the safe-haven Yen and gold also failed to benefit. In fact, the risk currencies, the Antipodeans, advanced amid better fundamentals and higher oil prices, with the Aussie having tested the 0.77 handle following the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) status-quo. Meanwhile, the US dollar stalled its upside and traded neutral across its main competitors, awaiting fresh trading impetus from the session ahead.
Main topics in Asia
Trump wants a NAFTA rewrite in two weeks - CNBC
CNBC is reporting on reports from the White House that President Trump wants an outline of a NAFTA revamp ready to go in time for the Summit of the Americas in Peru on April 13th, as originally reported by Bloomberg.
China imposed tariffs on US products to "balance losses": State Media
China's retaliation to US tariffs is only aimed at "balancing the losses" caused by US duties according to a commentary on the front page of the official People's Daily.
Japan’s Seko: Chinese retaliatory tariffs do not benefit anyone
Japanese Trade Minister Seko was out on the wires earlier today, via Reuters, responding to China’s retaliatory tariffs on the US imports.
China's ambassador to US: Will fight back any new US tariffs at equal strength, value and scale
China’s state media reported comments from the Chinese ambassador to the US, as saying that China is prepared to fight back any new US tariffs at equal strength, value and scale.
BOJ Tankan inflation expectations still well below 2% target
Japanese companies expect consumer prices to rise an average 0.8 percent a year from now, unchanged from the previous forecast and well below Bank of Japan's (BOJ) 2 percent inflation target, the central bank's Tankan survey for March released today showed.
White House's Navarro: ‘smart money’ is going to buy on the dips as economy ‘is as strong as an ox’
In the interview on CNBC, Navarro said, "I’m looking at this market and the economy and I’m thinking the smart money is certainly going to buy on the dips here because the economy is as strong as an ox."
RBA holds rates a record low of 1.50 percent, keeps steady view
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) at its monetary policy meeting today, left the official cash rate (OCR) unadjusted at a record low of 1.50%, as widely anticipated.
RBA: Inflation likely to remain low for some time
Following are the key headlines from the RBA monetary policy statement (via Reuters) …
Key Focus ahead
Looking towards the EU calendar this Tuesday, we have a relatively busy one, with the German retail sales data to be published ahead of the European open. Meanwhile, a flurry of final manufacturing PMI releases will be dropping in from across the Euro area economies. Also, in focus, remains the UK manufacturing PMI data, which is expected to come in at 54.8 in March versus 55.2 last.
In the NA session, New Zealand’s fortnightly dairy auction results from Fonterra will be closely eyed among a couple of minority reports from the US. Besides, the speech by the FOMC member Brainard will hog the limelight in the American afternoon, as she is scheduled to speak about financial stability at New York University's Stern School of Business.
EUR/USD fighting back from 1.23 ahead of EU PMIs for Tuesday
Europe sees an array of macro data early in Tuesday's action, kicking off with German Retail Sales at 06:00 GMT and the month-on-month figure is expected at 0.8 percent, a noted upswing from the previous period's -0.7 percent contraction.
GBP/USD: Eyes UK PMI, trade wars and risk aversion could hurt Pound
The GBP/USD avoided a break below 1.40 during the Easter holidays, but the relief will likely be short-lived if the trade war fears drive stocks lower and UK PMI misses estimates by a wide margin.
Look to buy GOLD at 1307 major support this week
Gold has been in a sideways congestion period between 1307 and 1360 in recent months, within the context of what appears to be a long-term upward swing.
Source: fxstreet.com