Back

Flash: Large squeeze-related moves - BMO

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - Stephen Gallo European head of FX Strategy at BMO aims to make sense of the squeezes we have seen in yesterday’s session.

Key Quotes:

“Within the FX space what didn’t move today is probably a lot more than what did. The USD was basically stagnant in terms of price action during the London morning, and whilst we cannot even begin to rationalise the large squeeze-related moves in various asset classes yesterday from about midday in New York in one simple explanation, there was most definitely a large “tide” which receded yesterday in FX. When the tide went out and forced the USD lower on Thursday, the tight layering of stops in EUR/USD and GBP/USD and the aggressiveness of the squeeze may have revealed at least two things”.

“First, market participants bought the USD back from its August 8th lows (in the DXY) in a very nervous fashion and with little conviction, perhaps due to a distrust of summer markets but also an inherent distrust of the Fed’s actual intentions on QE tapering”.

“Relative to last week’s more “hawkish” Fed speak, James Bullard appears more like a “loose cannon”, but combining a “loose cannon” with summer illiquidity can lead to volatile conditions”.

“Second, by and large, FX market participants seem to be caught in between one squeeze and the next: smaller ones, such as those witnessed over the last 24 hours, and the more substantive “big” one pertaining to the broad, cyclical trend in the USD for the year as a whole. Market participants were squeezed out of their USD longs throughout July, and we’re all caught wondering when next big squeeze on the short-side will commence”.

USD/JPY looks for a clearer trend, around 97.40

The USD/JPY is now consolidating its intraday losses below the 98.00 handle, prolonging the negative trend for the third consecutive session...
Read more Previous

Session Recap: Majors stabilize into the weekend

FX market has stabilized on Friday, with the USD trading nearly flat versus its European rivals and the yen, after yesterday's sharp swings.
Read more Next