GBP JPY pounding to resume

The pound has been typically volatile over the past several days, especially against the US dollar. The GBP/USD has alternated between a red and a […]


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By :  ,  Financial Analyst

The pound has been typically volatile over the past several days, especially against the US dollar. The GBP/USD has alternated between a red and a green day for the past eight sessions. Against the yen however, it has been mostly green during this period, except today. Today, the GBP/JPY has turned lower along with almost all the other yen crosses amid the return of the “risk off” trade with both stocks and crude plunging. The momentum post Friday’s BoJ-inspired rally has also come to an end, for now anyway.

On the other side of the equation, the pound has been held back by this morning’s UK construction PMI data which moderated further in January to a nine-month low of 55.0, disappointing expectations of a 57.6 reading. Earlier this week, the UK’s manufacturing PMI was surprisingly stronger than expected. But the key PMI data is for the dominant services sector which will be released tomorrow morning. This could provide the main direction for the pound should there be a notable deviation from the expected 55.4 reading.

Then it is over to the Bank of England for ‘Super Thursday’. On this day, the BoE will make a decision on interest rates, release the MPC meeting minutes, deliver the quarterly Inflation Report and Governor Mark Carney will hold a press conference. No one is expecting the Bank to make any changes to monetary policy, but the latest inflation forecasts should shed some light into the path of UK interest rates nonetheless. With oil prices remaining stubbornly low and most major central banks dovish, the BoE will be in no rush to signal its intention to raise rates any time soon. Thus the pound could get pounded once again on Thursday, if not before. And if in the meantime stocks and oil both fall further lower then safe have flows into the yen could lead to another nasty drop for the GBP/JPY. Conversely, if risk assets rally then the GBP/JPY could further extend its short term recovery.

From a technical point of view, the GBP/JPY’s recent sell-off came to a halt around the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level of the entire 2011-15 upswing at 165.65. Although it fell below this level on an intraday basis twice, it failed to hold there on both occasions. On the first occasion, on 20th January, the resulting kick-back rally helped to create a hammer candle on the daily chart. This candlestick formation gave traders the signal they needed to take advantage of the severely oversold conditions, leading to a very nice rally over the past couple of weeks, which accelerated on Friday following the Bank of Japan’s surprise decision to cut interest rates into the negative. It should be noted that from a long-term point of view, the 38.2% Fibonacci level only represents a shallow pullback. So if price finds a solid base here then this would bode well for the long-term trend. On the other hand however it means there is still plenty of room for a significant drop, should the selling pressure resume assertively soon.

But the medium-term trend is still bearish and such rallies in downward trends often come to an abrupt halt. And this is exactly what may have happened in the case of the GBP/JPY on Monday around 175.00, a level which was formerly support. As the main moving averages are in the ‘wrong’ order, momentum-chasing traders may come back in here and drive this pair lower. Some of the bearish targets are shown on the chart. These include the Fibonacci levels of the most recent upswing at 170.75/80 (38.2%) and 168.00/20 (61.8%), followed by January low at just below 164.00 and then the 127.2% Fibonacci extension at just shy of 161.00.

However, if the GBP/JPY manages to turn back higher and eventually closes above 175.00 then it may stage a more profound recovery before deciding on its next big move. In this scenario, the 50-day moving average at 177.40 and previous support at 180.30 would be some of the bullish targets to keep an eye on.

So, in short, while the GBP/JPY holds below the pivotal 175.00 level, as it is at the moment, there is a good chance we may see some more selling pressure for the days and weeks to come. However, a closing break above this level would invalidate any short-term bearish bias; in this potential scenario, we may see a more profound recovery. The stimulus for any big moves may come from UK PMI data or Bank of England’s Super Thursday, and/or the direction risk assets take in the coming days (lower, is our base case).

16.02.02 gbpjpy

Related tags: BOE BoJ GBP/JPY trading Forex

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