Hawkish remarks from Fed Chair Powell and ongoing tension in the Middle East saw the US Dollar continue to gain while stocks and most commodities sold off firmly, excepting precious metals.
Fundamental Analysis & Market Sentiment
- Long of the NASDAQ 100 Index following a daily close above 18400. This did not set up.
- Long of Gold following a daily close above $2373. This set up last Monday and gave a winning trade of 0.36%.
- Long of Silver following a daily close above $28.45. This set up last Monday and gave a losing trade of 0.66%.
- Long of the USD/JPY currency pair. This gave a winning trade of 1.03%.
- Long of Gasoline futures following a daily close above 2.8516. This did not set up.
- Long of Cocoa Futures, but with only half a normal position size. This gave a winning trade of 4.27%.
The overall result was a net win of 5.00%, resulting in a gain of 0.83% per asset.
Last week saw unchanged volatility in the Forex market, which has been relatively low since 2024 started.
Last week’s key event was Fed Chair Jerome Powell making clear that there has not yet been enough progress on inflation to justify imminent rate cuts. This is not a new message at all, but it did produce more of a hawkish tilt to general market sentiment. This risk-off sentiment was given a boost by the first direct attack by Iran on Israel and the Israeli retaliation which followed some days later.
Bearishness in stock markets was very notable this week. We may be entering a new environment for stock markets, with major US indices finally giving exit signals to trend traders after a lengthy bull run, as prices fall to levels well off recent highs.
Other important data was a slew of CPI releases, which showed:
- Lower than expected Canadian inflation at 2.9%.
- Higher than expected UK inflation.
- New Zealand inflation as expected at 3.2%.
Apart from these factors, it was a relatively quiet week, although we did see the froth come off the market with several assets retreating from recent highs.
There were only a few other important economic data releases last week:
- US Retail Sales – higher than expected.
- US Empire State Manufacturing Index – lower than expected.
- UK Retail Sales – considerably worse than expected.
- US Unemployment Claims – as expected.
- Chinese Industrial Production – considerably worse than expected.
- UK Claimant Count Change (Unemployment Claims) – lower than expected.
- Australian Unemployment Rate – increased by less than expected to 3.8%.
The Week Ahead: 21st – 25th April
The most important items over the coming week will be the release of US Core PCE Price Index and Advance GDP data, as well as the Bank of Japan’s monthly policy meeting. Apart from these, there are a few other important releases due:
- US, UK, German, French Flash Manufacturing & Services PMI
- US Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment
- Australia CPI
- US Unemployment Claims
- US Pending Home Sales
Monthly Forecast April 2024
Weekly Forecast 21st April 2024
Last week, I made no weekly forecast, as there were no strong counter-trend price movements in any currency crosses, which is the basis of my weekly trading strategy.
I again give no forecast this week.
Directional volatility in the Forex market was unchanged last week, with 26% of the most important currency pairs fluctuating by more than 1%.
Last week, relative strength was observed in the Euro, and relative weakness was observed in the Japanese Yen.
Key Support/Resistance Levels for Popular Pairs
Gold
Gold rose strongly last week, making its highest every weekly close, ending with a weekly candlestick that looks like a bullish inside bar. The high price of last week was not far from the record high made during the week before. The weekly close was not very far from the high, either. These are all bullish signs.
It is important to remember that Gold has historically been positively correlated with the stock market and other risky assets and does not tend to act as a hedge against them as is commonly supposed. Nevertheless, Gold held up well last week despite the uptick in the US Dollar and the strong selloff in stock markets, suggesting that Gold and other precious metals may be fulfilling such a hedging role right now.
I see Gold as a buy, but it might be safest to wait for a daily close above $2400 before entering a new long trade.
USD/JPY
The USD/JPY currency pair continued to rise firmly for another week following its recent strong bullish breakout beyond the former key resistance level at ¥152, which had been seen as a price that the Bank of Japan would defend.
The price closed at a new 34-year high and closed very close to the high of the week’s range. These are both very bullish signs.
The Japanese Yen is weak, as the Bank of Japan and the Japanese financial establishment do not seem to be very serious about halting the Yen’s slide. On the other side of this pair, the US Dollar is the strongest major currency, as the risk-off environment sends a money flow into the greenback, supported by the growing feeling that US interest rates will have to remain higher for longer.
I see the USD/JPY currency pair as a buy, but we may see profit taking or general resistance at ¥155 which is not far from the closing price.
Cocoa Futures
Cocoa Futures made yet another bullish move last week and rose to reach a new multiyear high. The price ended the week extremely close to the high of its weekly price range. These are very bullish signs.
You can apply a linear regression analysis to the start of the increased bullish momentum 16 weeks ago. Since then, the price of Cocoa futures has almost tripled! Cocoa is now considerably more expensive pound for pound than Copper.
This amazing trend will eventually end, but there is no point in calling a top. However, using a trailing stop in this kind of trade is extremely important. The stop should be based upon volatility, which has become extremely high. Weekly price movements of about 10% are now quite normal here, so position sizing should be small, especially on new trades as the price is overbought on any technical indication – the price chart below shows that the close is very near the top of the standard deviation channel which has contained the price over recent weeks.
I see Cocoa as a buy but only with a half-sized position.
Bottom Line
I see the best trading opportunities this week as follows:
- Long of Gold.
- Long of Silver.
- Long of the USD/JPY currency pair.
- Long of Cocoa Futures, but with only half a normal position size.
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