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    Forex: Dollar Wedged Between 1.3400 and 1.3325, Awaiting Catalyst

    • Dollar Wedged Between 1.3400 and 1.3325, Awaiting Catalyst
    • Swiss Franc Posts Biggest Collapse in 14 Months, Is it Free?
    • Japanese Yen Drops but Recovers After Officials Says Collapse May be an Issue
    • Euro Most Overextended Currency of the Majors
    • New Zealand Dollar Posts Standout Rally after Data Mix
    • British Pound Awaits CPI for Update on Policy Bearing
    • Gold at Immediate Breakout Risk

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    Dollar Wedged Between 1.3400 and 1.3325, Awaiting Catalyst

    With risk trends struggling for consistency and Fed officials passing up the opportunity to offer a tangible shift in monetary policy, the dollar was a mixed bag Monday. The Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index’s (ticker = USDollar) performance on the session was essentially a technical advance by the thinnest of margins. Turning away from the USDCHF and USDJPY (spurred on by counterparty fundamental catalysts), most dollar traders are keeping their gaze fixed on EURUSD. Aside from its authority as the Forex market’s most liquid pairing, this benchmark has shown the greatest degree of depreciation since last week and is arguably the dollar’s weakest point. In other words, if there is to be a recovery registered, it will be done so through this pair. However, if we want to break back below 1.3300, we may need to see the S&P 500 below 1,450.

    Swiss Franc Posts Biggest Collapse in 14 Months, Is it Free?

    While the Japanese yen and euro continue to stand out for their impressive performances, these two high-profile currencies would not put in for the most impressive performance for the day Monday. That title goes to the Swiss franc. Long ago relegated to the position of afterthought, this currency may once again deserve our attention. Since September 2011, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has vowed to keep a floor of 1.2000 underneath EURCHF. Since April of last year, the pair had essentially flat-lined at that level. That meant that however euro traded against its third party crosses, the franc essentially did the same. That anchor started to loosen up in September of this past year, but has finally shown serious signs of a permanent departure from the imposed boundary. In fact, through early morning trading, EURCHF has rallied almost 300 pips in the span of less than four trading days. Monday’s rally alone was the biggest since November 7, 2011. That is serious.

    Japanese Yen Drops but Recovers After Officials Says Collapse May be an Issue

    The Japanese yen was already leveling off Monday, but the it made a concerted move higher during Tuesday’s Asian session. There is certainly weight behind a necessary correction of an immensely oversold currency – but as economist John Maynard Keynes said: ‘the markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.’ The yen’s tumble has been fully engaged and driven through most sensible arguments of being ‘oversold’. What changed? There was a potential crack that formed in the government’s otherwise unwavering vow to stimulate the currency to the ground. Economy Minister Amari broke rank and remarked that an ‘excessively weak yen’ has negative effects on Japanese. This is hardly a wholesale change in the policy line, but bulls are looking for a reason to take profit. A true retreat comes with risk aversion.

    Euro Most Overextended Currency of the Majors

    While the Euro-area’s tail risk seemed to be receding, the shared currency didn’t seem to exhibit too much inherent strength through the opening session of the new trading week. Through the final 48 hours of the past trading week, the euro was spurred on by the ECB’s hold on policy (offsetting dovish expectations) as well as Spain’s financial improvements (strong debt sales and suggestions that the rescue program would drop seniority claims in the event of a default). Over the previous session though, there was limited follow up on that strong wave. Germany’s Finance Minister remarked that the Eurozone would be stable even if Greek reforms faltered – seen as pandering. In other headlines, Standard & Poor’s affirmed the top credit ratings of Netherlands, Luxembourg and Finland (raising the outlook of the latter two). Positive, but not bullish.

    New Zealand Dollar Posts Standout Rally after Data Mix

    The New Zealand dollar advanced against every one of its liquid counterparts Monday – a considerable feat given the performance of counterparts like the euro and the lack strength from equities (as a measure of risk appetite) through the same period. The kiwi’s performance began early in the trading session and continued through the lull in equity futures performance. Fundamentals kicked in for the investment currency shortly after the US close. The REINZ housing inflation indicator noted a quick, 0.6 percent drop in prices through December and sales growth (year-over-year) cooled to an 8.2 percent clip – just off the slowest pace since April 2011. Yet, that negative influence was more than offset by the news that 4Q Business Confidence (from the NZIER) swelled to a 20 reading – a positive showing a majority projecting growth.

    British Pound Awaits CPI for Update on Policy Bearing

    With the exception of the unique plunge from the Swiss franc, the British pound leveraged a particularly weak opening to the new trading week. The docket was light for the sterling on the opening session. The only thing to raise interest was a proposal made by the Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee to be able to adjust the amount of reserves banks hold against real estate assets, bonds and derivatives in order to strengthen the financial system. In effect, this is an austerity measure for the financial system to avoid a full crisis. Yet, this is still a proposal. In the coming session, FX traders should watch the economic docket. The UK will release inflation (CPI and RPI) figures which will tell us how much room the BoE has to maneuver with monetary policy – or whether it has to make a move to avert a policy impasse.

    Gold at Immediate Breakout Risk

    Complacency has set in for gold at a very dangerous time for the financial community’s favorite metal. Including the early morning trading Tuesday, gold has produced seven consecutive days of higher lows following the commodity’s spike low on January 4. On the other opposite side of the market, we have seen a progress of consistent bear phases that began with the failure to overtake 1,800 back in early October. In technical parlance, gold has developed a wedge (with a dominant, bearish theme) that must be resolved with a breakout. Looking at other activity measures for the metal, the pressure build is clear. The CBOE’s volatility index for the commodity has leveled off just above record lows, open interest on futures has steadily built up since late December and volume has trended higher over the past week. What we need now is a spark to ignite this unstable situation. Changes in stimulus efforts would be the ‘cleanest’ fundamental development, but few things are ever clean – furthermore, we don’t have any systemic stimulus events on deck. Instead, gold traders should watch the dollar.

    ECONOMIC DATA

    Next 24 Hours

    GMT

    Currency

    Release

    Survey

    Previous

    Comments

    0:01

    GBP

    RICS House Price Balance (DEC)

    -8%

    -9%

    House Prices have been declining since 6/2010.

    4:30

    JPY

    Bankruptcies (YoY) (DEC)

    -

    -12.0%

    6:00

    JPY

    Machine Tool Orders (YoY) (DEC P)

    -

    -21.3%

    21.3% is sharpest decline since 11/2009.

    7:00

    EUR

    German Consumer Price Index (MoM) (DEC F)

    0.9%

    0.9%

    7:00

    EUR

    German Consumer Price Index (YoY) (DEC F)

    2.1%

    2.1%

    7:00

    EUR

    German CPI - EU Harmonised (YoY) (DEC F)

    2.1%

    2.1%

    8:00

    EUR

    German Public Finances Balance-GDP Ratio (2012)

    -0.1%

    -0.8%

    8:00

    EUR

    German GDP n.s.a. (YoY) (2012)

    0.8%

    3.0%

    19 year average is 1.42% growth.

    9:30

    GBP

    Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (MoM) (DEC)

    0.0%

    0.1%

    Input prices averaged 1.5% growth over 2012, Year-over-Year.

    9:30

    GBP

    Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (YoY) (DEC)

    0.4%

    -0.3%

    9:30

    GBP

    Producer Price Index Output n.s.a. (YoY) (DEC)

    2.4%

    2.2%

    Core output prices averaged 1.9% growth during 2012 on a yearly change basis.

    9:30

    GBP

    PPI Output Core n.s.a. (YoY) (DEC)

    1.5%

    1.4%

    9:30

    GBP

    DCLG UK House Prices (YoY) (NOV)

    1.6%

    1.5%

    House prices returned to growth on 4/2012.

    9:30

    GBP

    Consumer Price Index (MoM) (DEC)

    0.5%

    0.2%

    Consumer prices averaged 3.1% inflation over last 6 years on a yearly measure.

    9:30

    GBP

    Consumer Price Index (YoY) (DEC)

    2.7%

    2.7%

    9:30

    GBP

    Core Consumer Price Index (YoY) (DEC)

    2.6%

    2.6%

    9:30

    GBP

    Retail Price Index (MoM) (DEC)

    0.4%

    0.0%

    9:30

    GBP

    Retail Price Index (YoY) (DEC)

    3.0%

    3.0%

    10:00

    EUR

    Euro-Zone Trade Balance s.a. (euros) (NOV)

    8.0B

    7.9B

    Eurozone began earning a surplus trade balance on 11/2011 and has since increased by 212%.

    10:00

    EUR

    Euro-Zone Trade Balance (euros) (NOV)

    10.0B

    10.2B

    13:30

    USD

    Advance Retail Sales (DEC)

    0.2%

    0.3%

    6 year average growth rate: 0.2%

    13:30

    USD

    Retail Sales Less Autos (DEC)

    0.2%

    0.0%

    13:30

    USD

    Retail Sales Ex Auto & Gas (DEC)

    0.4%

    0.7%

    13:30

    USD

    Producer Price Index (YoY) (DEC)

    1.5%

    1.5%

    2012 average at 2.0%

    13:30

    USD

    PPI Ex Food & Energy (YoY) (DEC)

    2.1%

    2.2%

    2012 average at 2.6%

    13:30

    USD

    Empire Manufacturing (JAN)

    0

    -8.1

    2012 average at 4.23. 6 year average at 4.49. 11 year average at 9.33.

    14:00

    CAD

    Existing Home Sales (MoM) (DEC)

    -

    -1.7%

    15:00

    USD

    Business Inventories (NOV)

    0.3%

    0.4%

    Average since 1948 at 0.5%

    23:30

    AUD

    Westpac Consumer Confidence (JAN)

    -

    -4.1%

    Increased by 11% since bottoming on 8/2011.

    23:30

    AUD

    Westpac Consumer Confidence Index (JAN)

    -

    100

    GMT

    Currency

    Upcoming Events & Speeches

    13:00

    USD

    Fed's Rosengren Speaks on Economic Outlook in Providence, RI

    13:50

    USD

    Fed's Kocherlakota Speaks on Policy in Golden Valley, Minn.

    17:30

    USD

    Fed's Plosser Speaks on Economic Outlook in Rochester, NY

    SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS

    To see updated SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS for the Majors, visitTechnical Analysis Portal

    To see updated PIVOT POINT LEVELS for the Majors and Crosses, visit ourPivot Point Table

    CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE

    EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMT

    SCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT

    Currency

    USDMXN

    USDTRY

    USDZAR

    USDHKD

    USDSGD

    Currency

    USDSEK

    USDDKK

    USDNOK

    Resist 2

    15.5900

    2.0000

    9.2080

    7.8165

    1.3650

    Resist 2

    7.5800

    6.1875

    6.1150

    Resist 1

    15.0000

    1.9000

    9.1900

    7.8075

    1.3250

    Resist 1

    6.8155

    5.9190

    5.8200

    Spot

    12.6551

    1.7705

    8.7200

    7.7518

    1.2250

    Spot

    6.4655

    5.5928

    5.5302

    Support 1

    12.5000

    1.6500

    8.5650

    7.7490

    1.2000

    Support 1

    6.0800

    5.5840

    5.6000

    Support 2

    11.5200

    1.5725

    6.5575

    7.7450

    1.1800

    Support 2

    5.8085

    5.3350

    5.3040

    INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT

    Currency

    EUR/USD

    GBP/USD

    USD/JPY

    USD/CHF

    USD/CAD

    AUD/USD

    NZD/USD

    EUR/JPY

    GBP/JPY

    Resist. 3

    1.3450

    1.6234

    90.17

    0.9206

    0.9905

    1.0616

    0.8443

    120.62

    145.68

    Resist. 2

    1.3423

    1.6209

    89.92

    0.9189

    0.9890

    1.0596

    0.8423

    120.21

    145.22

    Resist. 1

    1.3396

    1.6183

    89.67

    0.9171

    0.9876

    1.0576

    0.8403

    119.81

    144.77

    Spot

    1.3343

    1.6132

    89.18

    0.9135

    0.9848

    1.0535

    0.8363

    119.01

    143.87

    Support 1

    1.3290

    1.6081

    88.69

    0.9099

    0.9820

    1.0494

    0.8323

    118.21

    142.96

    Support 2

    1.3263

    1.6055

    88.44

    0.9081

    0.9806

    1.0474

    0.8303

    117.81

    142.51

    Support 3

    1.3236

    1.6030

    88.19

    0.9064

    0.9791

    1.0454

    0.8283

    117.40

    142.06

    v

    --- Written by: John Kicklighter, Senior Currency Strategist for DailyFX.com

    To contact John, email jkicklighter@dailyfx.com. Follow me on twitter at http://www.twitter.com/JohnKicklighter

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    Market Data

    • Currencies
      Currencies
      NamePriceChange% Chg
      0.96510.00+0.01%
      AUDUSD=X
      0.63800.00+0.04%
      AUDGBP=X
      0.74610.00+0.03%
      AUDEUR=X
    • Commodities
      Commodities
      NamePriceChange% Chg
      1,453.60-8.80-0.60%
      GCJ13.CMX
      28.58-0.21-0.73%
      SIH13.CMX
      3.450.02+0.51%
      HGH13.CMX
      93.300.34+0.37%
      CLJ13.NYM