Gbp-jpy
GBPJPY weekly analysis 🦐GBPJPY has been trading between 2 structures since March 2021.
After such a long range the price is now to the 158 area and possibly break above.
I can see how after the previous test price has turned at the 0.786 Fibonacci level and creates a sold green candle afterward.
How can i approach this scenario?
I will wait during next week for a break of the resistance and in that case, i will move on the lower timeframe to spot and entry point for a long order according to the Plancton's academy rules.
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Follow the Shrimp 🦐
Keep in mind.
🟣 Purple structure -> Monthly structure.
🔴 Red structure -> Weekly structure.
🔵 Blue structure -> Daily structure.
🟡 Yellow structure -> 4h structure.
⚫️ Black structure -> <4h structure.
Here is the Plancton0618 technical analysis , please comment below if you have any question.
The ENTRY in the market will be taken only if the condition of the Plancton0618 strategy will trigger.
Sold GBPJPY at this area. Goodluck to me.I was assuming that the markets just got open and I feel like reversal are coming anytime soon. That is why even though it goes up I do the opposite. I am more of a Swing Trader, so probably you might got confused why I do that decision. Just looking 50-100 pips here and we are done
The Pound Strengthens Over The Yen!The GBPJPY has not been successful at breaking and remaining above the
major level of resistance at 156.60 since June 2016, which formed the high
of an area of consolidation.
Price really started to attack this level from October 2021 for a number of
months, but has now cleared this level by around 700 pips.
The candle for March is currently looking strong, and with only a few days
of the month left to go, we may see a close outside of the consolidation zone.
Price now has a lot of clear space to form a trend before the next major level
of resistance at 195.88, which is the high of June 2015.
See below for more information on our trading techniques.
As always, keep it simple, keep it Sublime.
GBP JPY - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSGBP
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
The BoE hiked rates by 25bsp as expected at their March meeting but delivered what was seen as a bearish hike as it was not a unanimous decision with BoE’s Cunliffe voting to leave rates unchanged. This was a very stark change from February where 4 members voted for a 50bsp hike. Cunliffe noted the negative impacts of higher commodity prices on real household incomes and economic activity as the main reason for his dissention, while the remaining members thought a 25bsp hike was appropriate given the tight labour market and risks of second round effects. Even though inflation forecasts were upgraded to 8% in Q2 (previous 7.25%), the negative view that GDP was expected to slow to subdued rates once again showed growing concern of stagflation risks. For us, the most bearish element of the statement was a change in language regarding incoming rates where the bank said they judge that some further modest tightening MIGHT be appropriate where previous guidance said more tightening was ‘likely to be’ appropriate, which was a very clear push back against the overly aggressive rate path that has been priced in for the bank. The bank further pushed back by noting that the current rate path implied by markets would mean inflation would be below their target in three years’ time, in other words saying they won’t hike as much, and confirms our estimates that policy reached peak hawkishness in February. The 100% odds of a 25bsp for May has drifted to just above 80% on Friday, and markets will pay very close attention to incoming BoE speak, where a further push back against higher rates could be enough to see markets pricing out some of the 4 hikes still priced for the rest of the year.
2. Economic & Health Developments
With inflation the main reason for the BoE’s recent rate hikes, there is a concern that the UK economy faces stagflation risk, as price pressures stay sticky while growth decelerates. That also means that current market expectations for rates continues to look way too aggressive even after the BoE’s recent push back. This means downside risks for GBP if growth data push lower and/or the BoE continue to push their recent dovish tone.
3. Political Developments
Political uncertainty is usually GBP negative, so the fate of PM Johnson remains a focus. Fallout from the Sue Gray report was limited but as distrust grows the question remains whether a vote of no-confidence will happen (if so,short-term downside is likely). Focus will then be on whether the PM can survive a no-confidence vote (a win should be GBP positive and a loss GBP negative). The Northern Ireland protocol remains a focus with the UK threatening to trigger Article 16 and the EU threatening to terminate the Brexit deal if they do. For now, markets have rightly ignored this as posturing, but any actual escalation can see sharp downside for GBP.
4. CFTC Analysis
Recent CFTC data showed GBP positioning continues to deteriorate across market participants with net-short increases for large specs and net-long reductions for leveraged funds. After the more dovish than expected BoE last week (and since it took place Thursday) incoming CFTC data should see this trend continue.
JPY
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: BEARISH
1. Monetary Policy
No surprises from the BoJ at their March meeting. As usual, the BoJ continued their three decade long easy policy with Governor Kuroda dismissing any chances of starting to debate an exit from the current policy stance. The language and tone were very similar to their prior meeting where the bank remained committed to provide any additional easing if necessary and noted that the current geopolitical situation increases the risks and uncertainty for Japan’s economy. The bank did note that they expect inflation to rise to close to 2% in Q2 as a result of the recent upside in oil prices, but the governor did explain that recent fears of stagflation in places like Japan, EU and US are overdone. Furthermore, Governor Kuroda explained that rates in Japan will remain low and the rate differential between Japan and other major economies are expected to lead to a weaker currency and higher domestic price pressures in the months ahead.
2. Safe-haven status and overall risk outlook
As a safe-haven currency, the market's risk outlook is usually the primary driver. Economic data rarely proves market moving, and although monetary policy expectations can affect the JPY in the short-term, safe-haven flows are typically more dominant. Even though the market’s overall risk tone saw a huge recovery and risk-on frenzy from the middle of 2020 to the end of 2021, recent developments have increased risks. With central banks tightening policy into an economic slowdown, risk appetite is jittery. Even though that doesn’t our medterm bias for the JPY, it does means that we should expect more risk sentiment ebbs and flows this year, and the heightened volatility can create strong directional moves in the JPY, as long as yields play their part.
3. Low-yielding currency with inverse correlation to US10Y
As a low yielding currency, the JPY usually shares a strong inverse correlation to moves in US yield differentials. Like most correlations, the strength of the inverse correlation between the JPY and US10Y isn’t perfect and will ebb and flow depending on the market environment from both a risk and cycle point of view. With the Fed tilting more aggressive, we think that opens up more room for curve flattening to take place. In this environment there could be mild upside risks for the JPY, but we should not look at the influence from yields in isolation and weigh it up alongside underlying risk sentiment and price action in other safe havens.
4. CFTC Analysis
Even though the JPY’s med-term outlook remains bearish , the big net-shorts for both large specs and leveraged funds and asset managers always increases odds of punchy mean reversion when risk sentiment deteriorates. Thus, equities, US10Y and oil will remain very important drivers for the JPY in the weeks ahead.
GBPJPY Sell a break setup,GBPJPY - Intraday - We look to Sell a break of 160.37 (stop at 160.81)
We are trading at overbought extremes.
Bearish divergence is expected to cap gains.
A higher correction is expected.
A Doji style candle has been posted from the high.
Our profit targets will be 159.27 and 158.97
Resistance: 161.10 / 161.50 / 162.00
Support: 160.40 / 160.00 / 159.50
GBP JPY - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSGBP
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
The BoE hiked rates by 25bsp as expected at their March meeting but delivered what was seen as a bearish hike as it was not a unanimous decision with BoE’s Cunliffe voting to leave rates unchanged. This was a very stark change from February where 4 members voted for a 50bsp hike. Cunliffe noted the negative impacts of higher commodity prices on real household incomes and economic activity as the main reason for his dissention, while the remaining members thought a 25bsp hike was appropriate given the tight labour market and risks of second round effects. Even though inflation forecasts were upgraded to 8% in Q2 (previous 7.25%), the negative view that GDP was expected to slow to subdued rates once again showed growing concern of stagflation risks. For us, the most bearish element of the statement was a change in language regarding incoming rates where the bank said they judge that some further modest tightening MIGHT be appropriate where previous guidance said more tightening was ‘likely to be’ appropriate, which was a very clear push back against the overly aggressive rate path that has been priced in for the bank. The bank further pushed back by noting that the current rate path implied by markets would mean inflation would be below their target in three years’ time, in other words saying they won’t hike as much, and confirms our estimates that policy reached peak hawkishness in February. The 100% odds of a 25bsp for May has drifted to just above 80% on Friday, and markets will pay very close attention to incoming BoE speak, where a further push back against higher rates could be enough to see markets pricing out some of the 4 hikes still priced for the rest of the year.
2. Economic & Health Developments
With inflation the main reason for the BoE’s recent rate hikes, there is a concern that the UK economy faces stagflation risk, as price pressures stay sticky while growth decelerates. That also means that current market expectations for rates continues to look way too aggressive even after the BoE’s recent push back. This means downside risks for GBP if growth data push lower and/or the BoE continue to push their recent dovish tone.
3. Political Developments
Political uncertainty is usually GBP negative, so the fate of PM Johnson remains a focus. Fallout from the Sue Gray report was limited but as distrust grows the question remains whether a vote of no-confidence will happen (if so,short-term downside is likely). Focus will then be on whether the PM can survive a no-confidence vote (a win should be GBP positive and a loss GBP negative). The Northern Ireland protocol remains a focus with the UK threatening to trigger Article 16 and the EU threatening to terminate the Brexit deal if they do. For now, markets have rightly ignored this as posturing, but any actual escalation can see sharp downside for GBP.
4. CFTC Analysis
Recent CFTC data showed GBP positioning continues to deteriorate across market participants with net-short increases for large specs and net-long reductions for leveraged funds. After the more dovish than expected BoE last week (and since it took place Thursday) incoming CFTC data should see this trend continue.
5. The Week Ahead
In the week ahead the main focus for Sterling will be incoming PMI data, the UK annual budget release and geopolitics. On the data side, with stagflation risks continuing to grow, markets will be keenly watching the PMI data to see how fast growth sentiment has deteriorated after recent geopolitical tensions. Keep in mind that the BoE has been concerned about the slowing growth environment from before the war, and a bigger than expected drop could add to those fears. Remember that PMIs are diffusion indexes based on the subjective inputs from purchasing managers. It’s basically asking businesses whether they think the outlook is better or worse than it was the previous month and given the war in Ukraine we should not be surprised by a bigger than expected miss. On the geopolitical front any key developments will be especially important for the GBP and EUR given their proximity and the impact of sanctions. On the budget side, markets will want to see whether Chancellor Sunak is able to ease some of the growth concerns by alleviating some of the pressure on consumers where real incomes have been a concern given rising food and energy prices. Given the one-side downside in Sterling recently, the GBP will arguably be more sensitive to positive news compare to negative.
JPY
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: BEARISH
1. Monetary Policy
No surprises from the BoJ at their March meeting. As usual, the BoJ continued their three decade long easy policy with Governor Kuroda dismissing any chances of starting to debate an exit from the current policy stance. The language and tone were very similar to their prior meeting where the bank remained committed to provide any additional easing if necessary and noted that the current geopolitical situation increases the risks and uncertainty for Japan’s economy. The bank did note that they expect inflation to rise to close to 2% in Q2 as a result of the recent upside in oil prices, but the governor did explain that recent fears of stagflation in places like Japan, EU and US are overdone. Furthermore, Governor Kuroda explained that rates in Japan will remain low and the rate differential between Japan and other major economies are expected to lead to a weaker currency and higher domestic price pressures in the months ahead.
2. Safe-haven status and overall risk outlook
As a safe-haven currency, the market's risk outlook is usually the primary driver. Economic data rarely proves market moving, and although monetary policy expectations can affect the JPY in the short-term, safe-haven flows are typically more dominant. Even though the market’s overall risk tone saw a huge recovery and risk-on frenzy from the middle of 2020 to the end of 2021, recent developments have increased risks. With central banks tightening policy into an economic slowdown, risk appetite is jittery. Even though that doesn’t our medterm bias for the JPY, it does means that we should expect more risk sentiment ebbs and flows this year, and the heightened volatility can create strong directional moves in the JPY, as long as yields play their part.
3. Low-yielding currency with inverse correlation to US10Y
As a low yielding currency, the JPY usually shares a strong inverse correlation to moves in US yield differentials. Like most correlations, the strength of the inverse correlation between the JPY and US10Y isn’t perfect and will ebb and flow depending on the market environment from both a risk and cycle point of view. With the Fed tilting more aggressive, we think that opens up more room for curve flattening to take place. In this environment there could be mild upside risks for the JPY, but we should not look at the influence from yields in isolation and weigh it up alongside underlying risk sentiment and price action in other safe havens.
4. CFTC Analysis
Even though the JPY’s med-term outlook remains bearish, the big net-shorts for both large specs and leveraged funds and asset managers always increases odds of punchy mean reversion when risk sentiment deteriorates. Thus, equities, US10Y and oil will remain very important drivers for the JPY in the weeks ahead.
5. The Week Ahead
In the week ahead, we once again expect one of the biggest influences for the JPY to be on geopolitics and US10Y. Further escalations in tensions between Russia and Ukraine expects to see safe haven inflows while deescalations are expected to see outflows. Apart from risk sentiment, US10Y and oil prices remain a key focus. Despite last week’s recovery in risk assets, the overall sentiment remains jittery with geopolitical risks, cyclical slowdowns and tighter policy all to blame. With rising stagflation risks we still expect long-end yields like US10Y to push lower in the weeks ahead which should be supportive for the JPY, but bearish momentum is firmly in control right now. On the energy front, it’s important to keep in mind that Japan imports more than 90% of all their energy consumption, which means oil prices explains why the JPY has not exactly been benefitting from its usual safe haven attractiveness during bouts of strong risk off moves and means oil prices will be an important asset to watch. Research from JP Morgan suggests that a WTI price of $150 could erode Japan’s current account surplus (which is one of the reasons the currency enjoys safe haven appeal).