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18 03, 2024

Goldman Sachs expect 3 Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2024 (from 4 previously)

By |2024-03-18T00:11:58+02:00March 18, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


A weekend note from Goldman Sachs on their Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) outlook, in brief:

  • Inflation has been firmer in recent months, but we think it is still on track to fall enough by the June FOMC meeting for a first cut
  • This has become less obvious though, and our inflation path for the rest of the year is now in a range where small surprises could have large consequences
  • We now expect 3 cuts in 2024 (vs. 4 previously), mainly because of the slightly higher inflation path
  • We continue to expect 4 cuts in 2025 and now expect 1 final cut in 2026

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.



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17 03, 2024

PEPE Price Prediction: After 320% rally, will it erase another Zero this Week?

By |2024-03-17T23:26:26+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


For context, the highest value for March 2024 was 414.3 trillion Coin Age consumed, recorded on March 14., which is 90% lower than the February peak of 3,776 trillion.

When a crypto asset records a relatively low Age Consumed during a price pullback as observed on the PEPE network this week, it suggests that majority of long-term investors have opted to HODL rather book profits at the current prices.

If the long-term investors maintain this stance, its only a matter of time before short-term swing traders run into fatigue. In essence, PEPE price is likely to hold relatively high support level, giving the bulls a chance to regroup for the next phase of the  rally.

PEPE Price Prediction: Will it erase another Zero this Week?

The curtailed selling pressure among long-term investors puts PEPE price in good stead to erase another zero and rebound toward $0.000015 in the coming week.

At the time of writing, PEPE is currently trading at $0.000008, just above the 20-day SMA price of $0.0000073. This suggests that the bulls are still largely in control of the short-term market momentum.

But, to kickstart the next wave of the rally, PEPE bulls must first scale the initial resistance roadblock at the $0.000009.

As seen below, 18,610 addresses aped in on the rally and acquired 16.5 trillion PEPE at an average price of $0.00009 last week. Many of them could look to exit once price approach their break-even mark again.

But, if PEPE can breach that sell-wall, a rally toward $0.000015 could be on the cards as predicted.



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17 03, 2024

Weekend – de Cos says European Central Bank could start cutting interest rates in June

By |2024-03-17T22:40:07+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments




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17 03, 2024

‘$1 Million Bitcoin’ Advocate Samson Mow Owns Bitcoin ETFs, but He Sold MicroStrategy Shares

By |2024-03-17T21:54:03+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


Cover image via www.youtube.com

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of U.Today. The financial and market information provided on U.Today is intended for informational purposes only. U.Today is not liable for any financial losses incurred while trading cryptocurrencies. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions. We believe that all content is accurate as of the date of publication, but certain offers mentioned may no longer be available.

Contents

Vocal Bitcoin supporter Samson Mow is the chief executive of BTC-focused company Jan3 and former CSO at Adam Back’s company Blockstream. Mow promotes the idea within the community that Bitcoin is going to definitely reach the level of 1 million U.S. dollars in terms of price.

Samson Mow makes “Bitcoin ETF confession”

Jan3 chief executive has tweeted that he holds some energy stocks and Bitcoin ETFs, apparently referring to spot-based ETFs, which have been trading since their approval made in the middle of January by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) allow users to invest in Bitcoin and track its spot price without holding BTC directly, sparing them from all issues that come with BTC holding — potential losses to hackers and fraudsters, the necessity to keep one’s wallet password in safety and so on — by simply buying shares of those ETFs.

On Jan. 11, the SEC approved the launch of these ETFs, the biggest of which was rolled out by BlackRock — IBIT. Bitcoin inflows into these funds have been tremendous since their start. On March 15, the overall inflows into nine of them comprised 1,434 BTC worth $97.15 million. BlackRock added a lot more — 4,967 BTC evaluated at more than $336.5 million, and currently IBIT contains 228.613 BTC equal to approximately $15.5 billion.

Mow sells MicroStrategy’s “Bitcoin shares”

Besides, Mow stated that he had sold his MicroStrategy shares (MSTR), the company led by Bitcoin evangelist Michael Saylor. Since August 2020, it has been consistently purchasing Bitcoin with cash and adding BTC to its balance sheet.

Five days ago, the company acquired another massive BTC chuck of 12,000 coins, paying $821.7 million for that at an average price of $68,477 per coin. This Bitcoin was bought using proceeds from convertible notes and spare cash reserves of the company. Now, MicroStrategy holds a total of 205,000 BTC worth almost $10 billion.

As reported by U.Today on Friday, the company has announced a new debt offering to acquire still more Bitcoin for long-term storage on its balance sheet. Selling MSRT by Mow in favor of Bitcoin ETFs sounds like a step taken by a person who prefers to be as close to BTC as possible. Besides, as an “original gangster,” Mow is likely to be holding a large amount of Bitcoin directly.



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17 03, 2024

Newsquawk Week Ahead: FOMC, BoJ, RBA, BoE, SNB, PBoC LPR, NVDA GTC, UK, Japan & Canada CPI

By |2024-03-17T19:36:31+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


Week Ahead, March 18-22nd

  • Mon: Chinese Retail Sales (Feb), EZ Final CPI (Feb)
  • Tue: BoJ Announcement, RBA Announcement; German ZEW Survey (Mar), Canadian CPI (Feb)
  • Wed: FOMC Announcement, PBoC LPR, BCB Announcement, CNB Announcement, BoI Announcement, Japan Market Holiday (Vernal Equinox Day); UK CPI (Feb), New Zealand GDP (Q4)
  • Thu: BoE Announcement, SNB Announcement, Norges Announcement, CBRT Announcement, European Council Meeting; EZ/UK/US Flash PMIs (Mar), US Philly Fed (Mar), New Zealand Trade Balance (Feb), Japanese CPI (Feb).
  • Fri: Japan’s Rengo (labour union) 2nd Pay Tally, CBR Announcement, European Council Meeting; Australian Jobs Report (Feb), UK Retail Sales (Feb), German Ifo Survey (Mar)

Note: Previews are listed in day order

Nvidia GTC Event (Sun-Thu):

Nvidia’s (NVDA) GTC event will be highly watched by investors with focus on any AI/chip updates from the chip behemoth. The NVDA CEO is set to deliver a keynote speech on 18th March at 20:00 GMT / 16:00 EDT, while an analyst meeting is scheduled for 19th March at 15:30 GMT / 11:30 EDT. Goldman Sachs expects NVDA management to discuss ongoing initiatives to maintain or extend their competitive lead in the AI space. Many will be eyeing updates on the new Blackwell B100 GPU and participants will be paying attention to when it will be released and what it may be priced at. BofA writes that there expectations the price increase could be between 20-30% vs the H100 priced at c. USD 30k. Note, we will also be paying attention to whether NVDA confirms its next earnings date. It is expected to report earnings on May 22nd but it is yet to be confirmed, option traders will be cognizant of an earnings announcement given option expiries on 17th May 2024.

Chinese Retail Sales/Industrial Output (Mon):

Amid possible effects from the Chinese New Year, Retails Sales for February are expected to ease to a rate of 5.3% Y/Y (prev. 7.4%) while Industrial Output is expected ease to 4.9% Y/Y (prev. 6.8%), and Urban Investments are seen ticking higher to 3.2% (prev. 3.0%). Using the February Caixin PMI release as a proxy, the commentary suggested that “the manufacturing and services sectors both logged steady growth. External demand improved, though supply was still running ahead of demand.” ING highlights that the release will be the first look into hard data for the year; “we are expecting a small uptick for industrial production to 5.0% Y/Y, and fixed asset investment to 3.2% Y/Y, but a moderation in retail sales to 4.6% Y/Y at the start of the year,” says the bank.

BoJ Announcement (Tue):

Participants will be eyeing whether the central bank exits its negative interest rate policy as money markets are pricing a near coin flip between the central bank maintaining its rate at the current level of -0.10% or if it hikes this by 10bps to 0%. There has been plenty of speculation for the central bank to act following several hawkish source reports and commentary leading up to the meeting suggesting the BoJ was mulling a March hike although it was said to be too close to call as officials are currently split between March or April and a final decision is to be taken after the first wage talks tally. Other source reports also noted that the BoJ is said to review Yield Curve Control and will likely ditch its 10-year bond yield target upon pulling short-term rates out of negative territory with the central bank to consider a new quantitative monetary policy framework and is mulling buying nearly JPY 6tln of JGBs under a new policy framework. There has also been a wave of more hawkish-leaning central bank rhetoric including from BoJ Governor Ueda who stated that confidence has grown in the achievement of the price target. However, his more recent comments were less hawkish as he noted that they see weakness in the consumption of non-durable goods and need to see if a virtuous cycle is underway, as well as stressed data dependency in reaching an appropriate monetary policy decision. Other officials have also provided a more hawkish tone as Board Member Takata stated he would call for a gear shift in policy and that the achievement of the price target is coming into sight although he had not made up his mind when asked about whether to end negative interest rates in March or April. Board Member Nakagawa also stated that prospects of sustainably achieving the 2% inflation target are gradually heightening and it will take until autumn and beyond if they were to wait until smaller firms’ wage negotiation outcome, while she added they don’t necessarily need to wait for all small and mid-sized firms’ wage talks results in deciding when to end negative rates. As such, with the RENGO 1st wage tally showing wage growth of 5.28% (exp. 4.1%; 2023 final figure 3.6%) expectations have heightened that the BoJ will end its negative interest rate policy next week. Aside from the decision on interest rates and yield curve control, participants will also be eyeing the central bank’s intentions regarding other measures such as its ETF buying as the BoJ had previously stated it would be natural to end such purchases if the achievement of the 2% price target can be foreseen.

RBA Announcement (Tue):

The RBA is expected to keep rates unchanged at 4.35% with the ASX 30 Day Interbank Cash Rate Futures indicating a 95% expectation for rates to be maintained at the current level and just a 5% expectation for a 25bps cut to 4.10%. As a reminder, the RBA kept rates unchanged as unanimously forecast last month which was the first meeting since the overhaul at the central bank took effect, while it stuck to the hawkish rhetoric as it reiterated that the board remains resolute in its determination to return inflation to the target and that a further increase in interest rates cannot be ruled out. It also repeated that returning inflation to the target within a reasonable timeframe remains the board’s highest priority and although it noted that inflation continued to ease in the December quarter, it added that inflation remains high at 4.1%. Furthermore, the minutes revealed that the board considered a case to hike by 25bps or hold steady although the case to hold steady was the stronger one and appropriate given balanced risks to the outlook, while data gave the board more confidence inflation would return to the target in a reasonable timeframe although it would take some time before the board could be confident enough about inflation and it agreed it was appropriate not to rule out another rise in rates. The rhetoric since that meeting has been less hawkish as RBA Governor Bullock noted that the Board hasn’t ruled out a further increase in interest rates but neither has it ruled it in, while she added that inflation doesn’t need to be in the 2%-3% band for them to think about rate cuts and if consumption slows more quickly than expected, it will be an opportunity to cut rates. Furthermore, Bullock acknowledged that there are some encouraging signs although the inflation challenge is not over, while RBA’s Harper stated they will not wait until inflation is within the target band before cutting rates and are not fixating on any sort of inflation to signal a start of the easing cycle but added that they cannot rule out the need for further rate hikes. Recent key data releases from Australia also support the case for a pause as GDP for Q4 was somewhat inconclusive and printed mixed with QQ at 0.2% vs. Exp. 0.3% (Prev. 0.2%) and Y/Y at 1.5% vs. Exp. 1.4% (Prev. 2.1%), while the latest monthly inflation data was steady and remained above the central bank’s 2%-3% inflation target with Weighted CPI YY for January at 3.40% vs. Exp. 3.60% (Prev. 3.40%) which RBA watcher McCrann suggested leaves only one real option at the next meeting and noted the RBA won’t seriously consider a hike but nor are cuts on the horizon with inflation still too high to contemplate a rate cut.

Canadian CPI (Tue):

The data will be framed in the context of the BoC’s policy reaction function. At its March meeting, the central bank noted that inflation has continued to ease further, though future progress on taming prices will be more gradual, uneven, and upside risks still remain. Governor Macklem said that inflation was expected to be close to 3% through the middle of this year, but was seen easing in H2 – he does not foresee a return to 2% inflation in 2024. The BoC remains concerned about risks to the inflation outlook, and the persistence of underlying inflation, and it wants to see more sustained progress in the trend of easing core inflation before it feels confident in pivoting towards looser policy.

New Zealand GDP (Wed):

Q4 Q/Q GDP is forecast at 0.0% (prev. -0.3%) and the Y/Y rate is also seen at 0.0% (prev. -0.6%), with the Q/Q metric in-line with the RBNZ’s forecast in its February Policy Statement. Analysts suggest that the goods-producing sectors showed continued softness, whereas services, particularly tourism, saw some benefits from the ongoing recovery. Westpac forecasts flat GDP, aligning with consensus expectations as well as the RBA’s own projections. Westpac said that based on the forecasts, “economic activity has been flat over the last year, despite a migration-driven surge in population growth. The extent of the decline in per-capita output reflects how overheated the economy had become in the first place, as a result of the monetary and fiscal stimulus during the COVID period.”

FOMC Announcement (Wed):

While traders are not expecting the FOMC to adjust policy rates at next week’s meeting, attention will be on the Committee’s updated economic projections. It’s previous forecasts from December saw the central bank take a more dovish view than markets were expecting, cutting its near-term growth and inflation outlook; it also saw a lower amount of rate hikes in 2024, pencilling in three 25bps rate cuts this year, with the FFR target seen ending the year between 4.50-4.75% (vs its September projection that rates would end 2024 at between 5.00-5.25%). Ahead, traders expect the Fed to lower rates by 75bps or less this year (three 25bps cuts), according to 58 of the 108 economists surveyed by Reuters; still 26 of those surveyed are still looking for 100bps of rate cuts this year (four 25bps rate reductions). However, a majority (38 of 44 surveyed) see risks that the updated projections will show a fewer amount of rate cuts. The easing cycle is expected to start in June, which is in line with market-based pricing. “The Fed is seeking ‘greater confidence’ on inflation before it starts normalising its policy stance,” Bank of America notes, “we expect progress on inflation in the coming months will give the Fed confidence to begin a gradual cutting cycle in June,” and added that “a more forward-looking Fed might put more weight on low inflation expectations and cut sooner, but this Fed is data dependent and wants to avoid backtracking after it starts.” Traders will also be focussed on any commentary on quantitative tightening (QT), with many looking for the central bank to soon announce it will slow and then stop the process. The consensus seems to expect this announcement to come in June, but some think it could come as soon as the March meeting, according to the Reuters poll; additionally 17 of 26 surveyed think the Fed will have concluded the tapering of the programme in Q1 2025, or later.

PBoC LPR (Wed):

The PBoC maintained the rate on its 1-year Medium-term Lending Facility operation at 2.50%, as widely expected, which serves as a fairly reliable indicator for the intentions regarding the benchmark 1-year Loan Prime Rate scheduled next week which most new loans are based on. As a reminder, the central bank surprised markets last month with its benchmark Loan Prime Rates whereby it maintained the 1-year LPR at 3.45% (exp. 5bps cut) but delivered a deeper than anticipated cut of 25bps in the 5-year LPR to 3.95% (exp. 10bps reduction) which is the reference rate for mortgages in China. This was viewed as a targeted measure to support China’s ailing property sector alongside the various efforts that had previously been announced to revive demand in the industry which has been in a crisis since 2020 and was once a key driver of the country’s economic growth. Furthermore, the PBoC’s unwillingness to adjust shorter-term funding rates is evident in the lack of adjustments in 7-day reverse repo rate since August last year and the central bank has also kept the size of open market operations meagre throughout this week. Nonetheless, future monetary policy easing is likely as PBoC Governor Pan commented during China’s recent two sessions gathering that the PBoC still has sufficient room for monetary policy and that there is still room for cutting RRR, while a press report also recently noted an analyst view that China could cut its RRR and/or MLF rates in Q2.

BCB Announcement (Wed):

The BCB is expected to maintain its current pace of easing next week by reducing the Selic rate by a further 50bps. At its last meeting, the BCB voted unanimously to cut the Selic rate by 50bps to 11.25%. The move marked the central bank’s fifth rate reduction since August, and it suggested that cuts of a similar magnitude could be expected in upcoming meetings. Pantheon Macroeconomics expects that both external and domestic conditions are set to improve ahead, and that will allow policymakers to accelerate the pace of easing to 75bps over the coming meetings. “But we concede that deteriorating external conditions are a big threat to our forecasts, even though the committee has probably turned more dovish this year.” However, in wake of the policy meeting, the mid-month February IPCA-15 inflation data showed core services inflation remains elevated, and that has some analysts leaning back on the notion of more aggressive rate cuts ahead. Capital Economics writes that “the central bank has given a clear steer that it will cut the Selic rate by another 50bps at its upcoming meetings, and we don’t see anything in this data release to change that,” but adds that “we think inflation will end up a little higher this year than is widely expected later in 2024 and, as a result, prompt the BCB to shift its easing cycle down a gear to 25bps rate cuts around the middle of the year.”

UK CPI (Wed):

Expectations are for Y/Y CPI in February to decline to 3.6% from 4.0% and for M/M to print 0.6% vs. prev. -0.6%. The prior release showed headline and core CPI holding steady on a Y/Y basis as downside in furniture & household goods and food & non-alcoholic beverages was offset by upside in housing and household services. For the upcoming report, analysts at Investec note that favourable base effects are likely to play a role given increases in food & non-alcoholic beverages and clothing & footwear in February 2023 which are unlikely to be repeated this time around. Investec will outweigh any upside impacts from higher fuel prices and potential increased input costs for producers amid disruptions in the Red Sea. Beyond the upcoming release, expectations remain that inflation will slip below 2% in the coming months before picking up thereafter. From a policy perspective, an August cut is nearly fully priced in with a total of 59bps of easing seen by year-end.

BoE Announcement (Thu):

The MPC is expected to hold the Base Rate at 5.25% with the potential for another three-way split. As a reminder, the February decision saw Mann and Haskel calling for a hike, Dhingra for a cut and the remaining 6 for unchanged. In terms of market pricing, an unchanged rate is priced at nearly 100% as the BoE awaits more progress on inflation. In terms of recent data, the MPC will be presented with further inflation metrics on the day before the announcement. However, the January release showed headline and core CPI holding steady on a Y/Y basis at 4.0% and 5.1% respectively. On the growth front, M/M GDP in January expanded by 0.2%, suggesting that there may be a turning point from the H2 recession seen last year. More timely PMI data for January saw the services metric slip to 53.8 from 54.3, manufacturing rise to 47.5 from 47.0 with the composite ticking higher to 53.0 from 52.9. In the labour market, the unemployment rate in the 3M period unexpectedly ticked higher to 3.9% from 3.8%, whilst headline wage growth slipped to 5.6% from 5.8%. Commentary from the MPC has seen Governor Bailey state that “we don’t need inflation to come back to target before we cut interest rates”, whilst Chief Economist Pill said his baseline scenario for the timeline of rate cuts remains some way off. In terms of the policy statement, no major changes are expected after the Bank opted to drop its “further tightening” bias in February. Beyond the upcoming meeting, an August cut is nearly fully priced in with a total of 59bps of easing seen by year-end.

SNB Announcement (Thu):

Market pricing currently has a 34% chance of a cut and a 66% chance of an unchanged announcement from the SNB’s first policy announcement of 2024. The most pertinent development for policymakers has been the pronounced cooling in inflation YTD. CPI YY has been within the 0-2% target band since June 2023 and printed at 1.7% in December 2023. Inflation has since cooled significantly to 1.2% in February 2024; markedly lower than the 1.8% forecast by the SNB for Q1-2024 and lower than any of their quarterly forecasts across the end-2026 horizon. A marked easing which opens the door to the SNB cutting and while market pricing is focused on either unchanged or a 25bp cut, a larger 50bp move cannot be ruled out given the SNB’s history of and willingness to surprise markets. On inflation, given the YTD prints, a significant revision of the near-term CPI forecast is likely but within this it will be interesting to see if the SNB still anticipates an uptick across Q2 & Q3, particularly in the scenario of a cut occurring. Finally, the CHF appreciated markedly after the December announcement but has since pared with EUR/CHF at its highest since mid-November; given this, there is two-way risk on whether the guidance “focus is on selling foreign currency” is maintained.

Norges Announcement (Thu):

Market pricing currently has around a 5% chance of a cut at the March announcement, a gathering which includes new forecasts. The Q1 Regional Network report showed revisions higher for both the overall activity level and wage growth views, findings which are both hawkish developments. However, the magnitude of this is unlikely to be sufficient to merit the Norges Bank hiking – after saying rates were likely to remain at 4.5% for some time in January, though they did keep two-way optionality. Particularly when taken alongside the softer than expected February CPI numbers, where the Core Y/Y printed at 4.9% (NB exp. 5.5%). While inflation has moderated it remains at elevated levels and therefore an easing of policy is also unlikely. Instead, participants will be attentive to any signal around when the first rate-reduction could occur. In January, the guidance was for rates to be held for some time with the possibility of a move earlier than implied in December (Q4-2024/Q1-2025) in the scenario that the economy/inflation experiences a more pronounced slowdown/pullback, criteria which CPI arguably meets but the Regional Network does not. As such, the likes of SEB continue to look for the first cut to occur in September, but it remains to be seen if the Norges Bank will have enough conviction in the economy’s trajectory to formalise this in its forecasts now or instead wait until the June MPR.

CBRT Announcement (Thu):

Expectations lean towards policy rates being maintained after the CBRT in January signalled an end to its tightening cycle, and then maintained rates at its February meeting. At that February confab, the central bank held its Weekly Repo rate at 45%, as expected, and reiterated that the current level of the policy rate will be maintained until there is a significant and sustained decline in the underlying trend of monthly inflation. Since then, the February CPI figures printed above forecasts, with the Y/Y rate at 67.07% (exp. 65.74%), and the monthly rate at 4.53% M/M (exp. 3.70%). Following the inflation data, JPMorgan said it expects the CBRT to hike by another 500bp (to 50%) in April vs its prior view for no rate rise, though kept its year-end policy rate forecast of 45%, and suggested the CBRT might cut its policy rate in November and December. Meanwhile, Turkey’s Finance Minister Simsek said they will continue to tighten fiscal policy in order to assist the CBRT in reducing inflation. The latest CBRT survey sees the Repo Rate at 36.96% in 12 months (prev. 36.62%), end-year USD/TRY at 40.5344 (prev. 40.0212), end-2024 CPI seen at 44.19% (prev. 42.96%), and end-year GDP growth seen at 3.3% (prev. 3.3%).

EZ Flash PMI (Thu):

Expectations are for March’s manufacturing PMI to rise to 47.0 from 46.5, services to tick higher to 50.5 from 50.2, leaving the composite at 49.7 vs. prev. 49.2. The prior release saw the manufacturing metric tick lower to 46.5 from 46.6, services rise to 50.2 from 48.4 and the composite rise to 49.2 from 47.9. The accompanying report noted “the euro area economy moved closer to stabilisation in February. Although total output volumes fell for a ninth successive month, the contraction was marginal and the slowest since the middle of last year”. For the upcoming report, a further improvement in the metrics will likely be framed as a potential return to growth for the Eurozone, albeit a tentative one. From a policy perspective, the release is unlikely to have too much sway on market pricing for the ECB given the slew of guidance from policymakers which points towards a June move and the preference of the GC to monitor wage and inflation metrics.

UK Flash PMI (Thu):

Expectations are for March’s services PMI to rise to 54.2 from 53.8, manufacturing to pick up to 47.8 from 47.5, leaving the composite at 53.3 vs. prev. 53.0. The prior release saw the services metric slip to 53.8 from 54.3, manufacturing rise to 47.5 from 47.0 with the composite ticking higher to 53.0 from 52.9. The accompanying report noted “service providers continued to outperform the manufacturing sector by a considerable margin. That said, the latest reduction in output levels among manufacturing firms was the slowest for three months”. On inflation, “latest data indicated the strongest rise in input costs across the UK private sector since August 2023”. For the upcoming report, analysts at Investec are of the view that “since February we would argue that sentiment has improved, not just in the UK but also in terms of global economic momentum”. The desk adds that UK “net fiscal loosening measures have also been announced which should have fallen in the survey period and boosted sentiment, too”. From a policy perspective, the release will be noted but likely play second-fiddle to inflation metrics the day before with the BoE policy announcement due just a few hours after publication.

New Zealand Trade Balance (Thu):

There are currently no forecasts for the Kiwi Trade Balance. The prior month saw a deficit of NZD 976mln for Jan, deepening from the prior revised deficit of NZD 368mln in December. Imports were lower than the prior month at NZD 5.91bln from a revised NZD 6.22bln, and Exports saw a pullback to NZD 4.93bln from a revised NZD 5.85bln. Analysts at Westpac forecast a narrower trade deficit of NZD 131mln “thanks to a seasonal slowing in imports”, the desk says.

Japanese CPI (Thu):

National Core CPI is seen picking up to 2.8% Y/Y in Feb from the prior of 2.0% Y/Y. The data comes after the BoJ’s March policy decision, whereby expectations have tilted towards an exits of the BoJ’s NIRP policy. In the event the BoJ holds steady, an April hike is expected. ING’s analysts believe “that an April hike is slightly more likely than a March hike. Next week, we expect the BoJ to change its forward guidance and scrap the yield curve control policy but keep its government bond purchase programme.”

Japan’s Rengo 2nd Tally (Fri):

The RENGO (Japan’s largest trade union) second tally will be released on March 22nd ahead of the third tally on April 4th and the final tally in early July. In the first tally (released on March 15th), RENGO said it had secured the highest wage hikes since 1991 in preliminary data – with wage increases of 5.28% (exp. 4.1%; 2023 final figure 3.6%). A Bloomberg survey noted that the BoJ needed at least 3.8% to proceed with a rate hike. The second tally will be released after the BoJ’s March meeting (on the 19th) and will likely not sway the dials much at this moment in time unless there is a notable revision.

Australian Jobs Report (Fri):

The February Labour Force report is expected to show an addition of 30k jobs in February (vs 0.5k in Jan), with the participation rate seen steady at 66.8% and the unemployment rate ticking lower to 4.0% (prev. 4.1%). Desks suggest that January typically sees the most seasonal variation in the labour market, and that trend is expected to continue this year, with a softening of labour market conditions, influenced by seasonal shifts. The labour force data for February is thus anticipated to show a rebound, reflecting a moderate uptick in comparison to the more pronounced seasonal changes seen in previous years. “Of particular interest will be the dynamics around hours worked – its sharp moderation over the past six months standing in stark contrast to the relatively milder slowdown in employment growth.” Westpac also notes that there will also be attention on other measures of labour underutilisation, like underemployment, youth unemployment, and medium-term unemployment, which have been trending upward and are indicative of cyclical sensitivity within the labour market.

UK Retail Sales (Fri):

Expectations are for headline Y/Y retail sales to contract 0.4% vs. prev. +0.7%, M/M -0.1% vs. prev. 3.4%, core Y/Y at -0.3% vs. prev. 0.7% and M/M 0.5% vs. prev. 3.2%. In terms of recent retail indicators, BRC Retail Sales rose 1.0% Y/Y with the accompanying release noting “Easing inflation and weak consumer demand led retail sales growth to slow. While the January sales helped to boost spending in the first two weeks, this did not sustain throughout the month”. Elsewhere, the Barclaycard Consumer Spending Report stated “the rainy weather in February had an impact on the overall Retail sector, with spend growth at high-street retailers in particular slowing down as consumers opted to spend more time indoors”. For the upcoming report, Oxford Economics is of the view that “January’s strength was partly due to fuel sales rebounding to a very high level” and this is unlikely to be sustained. As such, the consultancy expects “a drop in fuel sales to drive a 0.2% m/m decline in retail sales in February”.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk.



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17 03, 2024

Ripple (XRP) Price Prediction: Can this $42M Signal Turn the Tide?

By |2024-03-17T18:50:16+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


But, on the bright side, heading into the upcoming week, XRP long-term traders have now reduced their selling pressure significantly.

As of March 17, the Dormant supply in circulation stands at 8.56 million. This represents, a reduction of 56.4 million XRP, worth approximately $42 million , compared to the peak of long-term investors’ selling frenzy last week.

When selling pressure on an asset in decline drops by such a significant margin, it is a prime indicator that the market has now reached a trend reversal point.

In effect, strategic traders could consider this a signal that is a good time to re-enter the market or hedge their short positions. This scenario could put XRP price on the path to another positive start to the coming week.

XRP Price Prediction: Reclaiming $0.63 Could Flip the Momentum

Drawing insights from the $42 million in long-term holders’ selling pressure, XRP price now appears poised for a bullish rebound toward $0.70 in the coming week.

However, in the short-term XRP face major challenge breaking above the 20-day SMA price mark at $0.63.

But if the bulls can establish a steady support base above that vital $0.63 resistance level, a decisive breakout toward $0.70 could be on the cards as predicted.



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17 03, 2024

118.4 Million DOGE Sent to Robinhood, Community Makes Wildest Guess

By |2024-03-17T18:04:45+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


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Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of U.Today. The financial and market information provided on U.Today is intended for informational purposes only. U.Today is not liable for any financial losses incurred while trading cryptocurrencies. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions. We believe that all content is accurate as of the date of publication, but certain offers mentioned may no longer be available.

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Renowned cryptocurrency tracking platform Whale Alert, which traces large crypto transactions and shares their details on the X social media app (formerly widely known as Twitter) has announced that more than 100 million Dogecoin has been deposited to a popular investment platform Robinhood.

On Friday, a slightly smaller amount of DOGE was moved to the same platform, according to the aforementioned tracker, which makes it approximately 200 million DOGE sent to Robinhood within the last two days.

200 million DOGE deposited to Robinhood, Elon Musk suspected

Tweets published by the tracker show two massive amounts of crypto that were transferred by anonymous digital wallet owners to the brokerage platform Robinhood within the last 48 hours — 118,402,438 DOGE evaluated at $19,752,398 and 86,000,000 DOGE worth $14,123,854. Thus, more than $33.8 million worth of the original meme cryptocurrency has been moved to Robinhood with a likely goal of selling those meme coins.

In the comment thread under the latest transfer users began to make guesses as to who could have initiated those transactions. Two X users named the biggest Dogecoin fan Elon Musk, rather jokingly assuming that it could be him who transferred those funds to the trading platform.

Elon Musk teases potential DOGE payments for Tesla

In a remarkable development, this week during his speech at the Tesla Giga Event in Berlin, centibillionaire and chief executive of Tesla (and owner of X) Elon Musk was asked if Tesla plans on rolling out DOGE payments for its electric automobiles.

Musk revealed that at some point in the future they are likely to do that. He again reminded the community that he believes DOGE to be people’s currency, since many average Tesla workers often ask Musk to support Dogecoin rather than BTC. Musk says that for him, this is sufficient evidence that he should provide public support to this meme cryptocurrency. Bitcoin, he said, is owned by rich people, while DOGE is still affordable to average workers.

That statement made by Musk triggered a big Dogecoin increase of almost 17%, which happened between Wednesday and Thursday. However, a major decline followed, as often happens when Musk pumps DOGE, and by now the meme coin’s price has dropped by 15%, trading at $0.1621.





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17 03, 2024

Bitcoin technical analysis: Probably going to 69k

By |2024-03-17T17:18:50+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


Welcome to our latest Bitcoin technical analysis! We delve into the daily timeframe, examining the recent movements and potential future directions of Bitcoin.

🔍 Today’s bitcoin technical analysis highlights:

  • Observation of the past two daily candles and their proximity to the crucial 20 EMA, a significant indicator for algo firms and professional traders.
  • A potential downward movement was noticed, followed by a rebound over the 20 EMA, signaling a potential temporary bounce.
  • Discussion on key price levels to watch, specifically around the $68,400 and $69,250 to $70,000 range, within a notable trend line zone after a double bottom pattern, suggesting a possible breakout.

📈 What’s Next for Bitcoin?

  • Bitcon probably going to 69k next. We’re closely monitoring these developments for signs of a temporary bounce. However, trading involves risks, and we advise trading at your own risk.

🌐 Stay Updated:
For more insights and updates, remember to return to ForexLive.com, your go-to source for real-time forex news and analysis.

📊 Disclaimer:
This analysis is for informational purposes only. Itai Levitan and ForexLive.com are not providing financial, investment, or trading advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

💬 Join the Discussion:
Have thoughts on where Bitcoin is headed? Share your predictions and questions in the comments below! Let’s dive into the analysis and explore the potential scenarios together.



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17 03, 2024

$314 Million BTC Transferred From Coinbase to Unknown Wallet

By |2024-03-17T16:32:41+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


Cover image via www.freepik.com

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of U.Today. The financial and market information provided on U.Today is intended for informational purposes only. U.Today is not liable for any financial losses incurred while trading cryptocurrencies. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions. We believe that all content is accurate as of the date of publication, but certain offers mentioned may no longer be available.

In a surprising turn of events, the tranquility of Sunday afternoon was shattered as a substantial amount of Bitcoin was swiftly withdrawn from Coinbase, one of the United States’ largest cryptocurrency exchanges.

According to Whale Alert, a whopping 4,799 BTC, valued at approximately $314.13 million, made its way from Coinbase to an undisclosed wallet, sparking curiosity and speculation within the crypto community.

Delving into the on-chain data, it was revealed that this hefty sum had previously been part of a larger transaction originating from one of the exchange’s wallets. However, the trail led to these tokens being transferred to Coinbase’s hot wallet, as per insights from Arkham’s data. One may suggest that this transfer likely constituted an internal shuffling of Bitcoin between hot wallets orchestrated by the exchange itself.

Remarkably, this massive movement of funds occurred against the backdrop of Bitcoin experiencing a downturn in its price. Currently trading at $66,800, the cryptocurrency has witnessed a 10% decrease from its recent all-time high, achieved just three days prior.

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BTC to USD by CoinMarketCap

The timing of this significant transfer has sparked speculation among investors, with many pondering its potential implications on the market sentiment and the trajectory of Bitcoin’s price in the near future.

As the cryptocurrency landscape continues to evolve and surprise, the transfer of such a substantial amount of BTC from Coinbase to an unknown destination adds yet another layer of intrigue to the recent situation. Investors and enthusiasts remain vigilant, eagerly awaiting further developments and insights into this intriguing maneuver within the crypto space.



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17 03, 2024

Weekly Market Outlook (18-22 March)

By |2024-03-17T15:46:55+02:00March 17, 2024|Forex News|0 Comments


UPCOMING EVENTS:

  • Monday: China
    Retail Sales and Industrial Production, Canada PPI, US NAHB Housing Market
    Index.
  • Tuesday: BoJ
    Policy Decision, RBA Policy Decision, Eurozone Wage data, Eurozone ZEW,
    Canada CPI, US Housing Starts and Building Permits.
  • Wednesday: PBoC
    LPR, UK CPI, FOMC Policy Decision, New Zealand GDP.
  • Thursday: Australia/Japan/Eurozone/UK/US
    Flash PMIs, Australia Labour Market report, SNB Policy Decision, BoE
    Policy Decision, US Jobless Claims.
  • Friday: Japan
    CPI, UK Retail Sales, Canada Retail Sales.

Tuesday

The BoJ is expected to finally exit the
negative interest rate policy (NIRP) raising their policy rate by 10 bps.
Moreover, the central bank is seen ditching yield curve control (YCC) but
keeping QE and discontinue ETF purchases. Such expectations were solidified by
many leaks
and reports
and the highest wage
hikes
in 30 years. The market has
already priced in the BoJ exit
, so there’s a big risk for disappointment.
In fact, we can expect the Yen to selloff hard in case the central bank
refrains from delivering on expectations. On the other hand, the bar for
another round of big Yen gains is pretty high as the BoJ will need to sound
hawkish and signal more to come.

BoJ

The RBA is expected to keep the Cash Rate
unchanged at 4.35%. Given the recent lower inflation
numbers and another ugly labour
market
report, the central bank is
likely to drop the tightening bias and keep a neutral stance
. The market is
expecting the first rate cut in August, but I suspect the market will bring
expectations forward in case the RBA drops the tightening bias.

RBA

The Canadian CPI Y/Y is expected at 3.1%
vs. 2.9% prior, while the M/M measure is seen at 0.6% vs. 0.0% prior. As
always, the focus will be on the underlying inflation measures as that’s
what the BoC is most concerned about
. In the last
report
, we saw a miss across the board and it
will certainly be good news for the central bank if it happens again,
especially in light of the easing in wage growth in the recent labour
market
report. A miss is likely to weigh on
the Canadian Dollar, while a beat shouldn’t change much for the market.

Canada Inflation Measures

Wednesday

The PBoC is expected to keep the LPR rates
unchanged. The central bank recently delivered two bigger than expected cuts to
its RRR
rate and the 5-year LPR
rate. Last weekend, the Chinese
Inflation
data beat expectations across the
board by a big margin with the Headline Y/Y reading jumping to 1.0% and the
Core Y/Y measure to 1.2%. The PBoC might not feel the urgency to cut rates
further at the moment.

PBoC

The UK CPI is expected at 3.6% vs. 4.0%
prior, while the M/M measure is seen at 0.7% vs. -0.6% prior. The Core CPI Y/Y
is expected at 4.6% vs. 5.1% prior, while there’s no consensus for the M/M
figure at the time of writing although the prior reading was -0.9%. The
market expects the first rate cut in August and we will likely need a notable
miss, especially for services inflation, to see the pricing shifting towards a
June move
.

UK Core CPI YoY

The Fed is expected to keep interest rates
unchanged at 5.25-5.50%. The focus will be on the economic projections and the
dot plot. It’s unlikely to see major changes as the central bank will want to
keep optionality and not overreact to the recent inflation readings. If the
dot plot shifts from three to two rate cuts this year, that will be likely
taken as a hawkish “surprise” by the market
, but Fed Chair Powell could
smooth it down in the Press Conference striking a more neutral message and
saying that it’s all conditional to incoming economic data. On the other hand,
if the dot plot still shows three rate cuts, Powell is likely to sound a bit
more hawkish just to counterbalance the likely dovish reaction from the
unchanged dot plot.

Federal Reserve

Thursday

Thursday
will be the Flash PMIs day for many major economies, but the market will likely
focus on the US ones:

  • Eurozone
    Manufacturing PMI 47.0 vs. 46.5 prior.
  • Eurozone
    Services PMI 50.5 vs. 50.2 prior.
  • UK
    Manufacturing PMI 47.8 vs. 47.5 prior.
  • UK
    Services PMI 54.0 vs. 53.8 prior.
  • US
    Manufacturing PMI 51.7 vs. 52.2 prior.
  • US
    Services PMI 52.0 vs. 52.3 prior.

PMI

The
Australian unemployment rate is expected to tick lower to 4.0% vs. 4.1% prior,
with 30K jobs added in February vs. 0.5K in January. The last report missed
expectations across the board with the unemployment rate continuing to trend
higher steadily. Another ugly report is likely to bring rate cuts
expectations forward while a beat shouldn’t change much at this point
.

Australia Unemployment Rate

There’s
basically a 50/50 chance that the SNB cuts interest rates by 25 bps at the
March meeting. The expectations for an earlier move rose after another
downtick in the latest inflation data
where the Headline CPI Y/Y eased to
1.2% and the Core CPI Y/Y to 1.1%, both well below the SNB’s projections and
comfortably within the 0-2% inflation target. If the central bank refrains from
cutting at this meeting, it’s very likely that they will signal a move in June
and by then they could even cut by 50 bps.

SNB

The
BoE is expected to keep interest rates unchanged at 5.25% with Mann and Haskel
voting for a hike, Dhingra for a cut and the rest for a hold. The economic data
leading into the meeting has been mostly benign with no particular surprises.
The MPC will also see the latest UK inflation figures on the first day of the
meeting, so that could influence the voting split but very unlikely to
change anything else
. The market is fully pricing the first rate cut in
August.

BoE

The
US Jobless Claims continue to be one of the most important releases every week
as it’s a timelier indicator on the state of the labour market. Initial Claims
keep on hovering around cycle lows, while Continuing Claims remain firm around
cycle highs. There’s no consensus at the time of writing for the claims
figures, but the prior report saw a
beat across the board with huge positive revisions to the Continuing Claims figures
which led to a strong hawkish reaction in the markets
. This
is because disinflation to the Fed’s target is more likely with a weakening
labour market. A resilient labour market though will make the achievement of
the target much more difficult.

US Jobless Claims

Friday

The
Japanese Core CPI Y/Y is seen jumping to 2.8% vs. 2.0% prior with no consensus
for the other measures although the prior readings saw the Headline CPI Y/Y at
2.2% and the Core-Core CPI Y/Y at 3.5%. Depending on the BoJ’s forward
guidance at the policy decision
, a beat will likely trigger a bigger
reaction with the Yen strengthening across the board.

Japan Core-Core CPI YoY



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