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JPY

Even higher for even longer

• Rates re-pricing. Positive US GDP & jobless claims data has seen interest rate expectations adjust higher. US bond yields have moved up.• USD firm. The repricing has supported the USD, although yesterday’s better than expected AU retail sales data has helped the AUD hold its ground.• AUD events. Ahead of next week’s ‘line-ball’ RBA rate decision, the China PMIs, Eurozone CPI, and US PCE deflator are due today. Bond markets came alive overnight, with yields spiking on the back of stronger than anticipated data. In the US, the run of positive surprises continued. Q1 US GDP growth was revised...

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Stabilizing policy expectations drive volatility lower

Markets are preternaturally calm, with most major pairs trapped in sub-20-pip ranges this morning after policymakers stuck to their “higher for longer” scripts during yesterday’s panel at the European Central Bank’s summit in Sintra, Portugal.  The Bank of England’s Andrew Bailey delivered a relatively hawkish message, hammering it home by saying “I’ve always been interested that the market thinks the peak will be short-lived in a world where we’re dealing with more persistent inflation”. Christine Lagarde seemed to suggest that her shop could follow a widely-expected July hike with another in September. And Jerome Powell said a “strong majority” of...

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AUD tumbles

• Central bankers. Fed Chair Powell, ECB President Lagarde & BoE Governor Bailey maintained a ‘hawkish’ message. The BoJ remains an outlier.• AUD slides. AUD has continued to fall (now 4.3% below its mid-June highs). A firmer USD compounded the slowdown in Australian headline inflation.• AU events. Retail sales & job vacancies due today. A soft retail sales print is likely to add to the AUD’s woes. RBA meets next week. Central bank speak was in focus overnight with Fed Chair Powell, ECB President Lagarde, BoE Governor Bailey, and BoJ Governor Ueda appearing on a panel. On net, a ‘hawkish’...

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CPI adds to the AUD’s woes

The AUD continues to fall back down to earth with the larger than expected slowdown in Australia’s monthly CPI indicator the latest piece of news that has exerted pressure on the currency. At ~$0.6640 the AUD is ~3.7% below its mid-June highs. The pull-back has been inline with our thinking, given we believed that the AUD had run too far too fast earlier this month (see Market Musings: AUD: break-out or bull-trap?) Data wise, the monthly headline inflation measure slowed sharply, from 6.8%pa to 5.6%pa in May (market forecast 6.1%pa). This is the slowest annual run rate in headline inflation...

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Higher for longer

• Diverging markets. US equities higher, supported by stronger data. Bond yields up with ‘hawkish’ rhetoric from ECB President Lagarde also at play.• FX markets. USD mixed. EUR firmer, while USD/JPY edged up. The world’s key central bankers speak tonight. Could this rattle risk markets?• AUD mixed. AUD unwound its CNY strength inspired gains. AUD/EUR lower. Australia’s monthly CPI indicator is released today. Mixed fortunes across markets overnight with stronger than expected US economic data and ‘hawkish’ messages from central bankers pulling asset classes in different directions. In terms of the data, US new home sales increased to their highest...

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