Chapter 6
In This Chapter
Getting up to speed on market developments
Finding the news, information, and data
Making sense of it all with themes
Anticipating data and market reactions
As Roseanne Roseannadanna used to say, “It just goes to show you. It’s always something. If it’s not one thing, it’s another.” Okay, maybe we’re dating ourselves with a reference to the classic Saturday Night Live “Weekend Update” commentator, played by Gilda Radner way back in the 1970s, but her tagline fits the forex market nicely.
Any number of real-world forces are at work in the forex market at a given moment — economic data, interest rate decisions, and geopolitical events, to name just a few. And they all get filtered through the market’s collective consciousness and translated into price movements.
As currency traders, we’re focused on trying to make money based on those price movements, but we’re not alone. A whole raft of participants is active in the currency market, and they’re all analyzing the same news and data, and drawing differing conclusions. To add yet another dimension, they’re making trades based on those conclusions, which is what ultimately moves currency prices.
Which brings us back to the observation: If it’s not one thing, it’s another. The “other” in this case boils down to how markets process information — and there’s a lot of it. We’ve spent years in the forex market as traders, analysts, and strategists, and just when we think we’ve seen it all, something new and unexpected comes along. So you’re not alone when it comes to having to sift through the mountain of information and make trading decisions.
Your aim is to avoid paralysis by analysis and to absorb and understand as much as you can about what’s driving the market, all with the goal of making successful currency trades. Our aim is to give you a better understanding of the types of information that move the market and a solid foundation to interpret and apply that information.
The jumping-off point for the discussion of market information has to be getting the market information in the first place. Institutional traders have teams of economists, analysts, and strategists providing them with up-to-the-minute observations and interpretations. Does this give them an advantage? Not necessarily. In the big picture, most of the information they’re getting is available to individual traders, but you have to make the effort to find it, read it, and understand it.
Anyone who’s ever tried to jump on a moving train knows you have to start running alongside it before you reach out and try to grab hold. If you’re standing flat-footed and you try to grab on, you’re likely to get your arm ripped off. The forex market is no different, and any trader who tries to jump in without first getting up to speed is asking for trouble.
Getting up to speed in the forex market means learning what current themes are driving the market. To do that, you’re going to need to know where to find market information and how to interpret it.
As online currency trading has grown in popularity in recent years, there’s been a proliferation of currency-specific websites targeted at individual traders. We can’t possibly begin to review them all here, but you’d do well to start out with FXstreet.com (www.fxstreet.com), a comprehensive site featuring diverse sources of market analysis, many from big-name institutional contributors, all for free. Twitter is another good source of information, especially around major data releases and breaking news events.
Most online currency trading platforms also offer various types of market research and analysis, so when you’re deciding which broker you should open your account with, look at the quality of its research offerings.
In the past, we tended to focus on the mainstream financial press, which provide continuous coverage of the major financial markets. Their websites provide frequent intraday updates that cover data releases and announcements, usually with some institutional commentary as well, so you can better understand how and why the market is reacting. In alphabetical order, our favorites are
That said, it’s always worth following trusted sources on Twitter. Some of the most respected analysts tweet throughout the day, and you can also follow most of the major news outlets to get a quick view of what’s going on. It’s also worth looking at some blogs, which can provide useful information, including Forex Factory (www.forexfactory.com) and Baby Pips (www.babypips.com). As with anything, quantity doesn’t always mean quality when it comes to analysis, so check out a few sources and then narrow them down to the ones that work for you.
When interpreting news and information, always ask yourself:
The forex market moves on news quickly, and the institutional players generally have multiple live feeds from the major accredited newswires, such as Dow Jones, Bloomberg, and Reuters. These days, one of the quickest ways to get real-time news, especially data releases, is from Twitter, which gives you access to hundreds of thousands of news sources and can be an effective way to get real-time market information. We’re prolific tweeters here at FOREX.com, and you can follow us at @forexcom. Everyone on our global research team tweets throughout the day, so you can get 24-hour coverage no matter where you are.
The forex market revolves around economic data and events, and you’re going to need to find a reliable market calendar to see what’s coming down the road next. The best market calendars contain all the major upcoming economic releases, showing the time of the report, what the market is forecasting, and the prior report indicated.
Later in this chapter, we look at how markets anticipate data and events, and how this anticipation can affect currency prices. But you can’t anticipate if you don’t know what’s scheduled.
Most of the financial media are keen on institutional forecasts of where currency rates are headed, and you’ll likely encounter a lot of one-month, quarterly, and year-ahead currency-rate forecasts in your market research. However, treat these as an indication of overall market sentiment and outlook instead of as a concrete trading recommendation. Most forecasts are heavily skewed to current circumstances and are a much better guide to what the market is thinking at the moment than to where rates will actually be in a month or a year.
As if there weren’t enough legitimate news and information to contend with in the 24-hour-a-day forex market, rumors have the nasty habit of popping up at unpredictable times. All financial markets love rumors. Here is a pair of the forex market’s favorites:
The key is to be aware that an intraday move or test of a technical level is under way and to have a relatively tight exit strategy if the market turns tail. If there is a rumor behind a sudden reversal, you’ll usually find out only after the fact anyway, but a tight exit plan will save you from getting left behind in the reversal.
At any given moment in the forex market, several themes dominate the market’s attention. Market themes are the essence of the real-world forces currently holding sway in the market. Themes are what market commentators and analysts are talking about when they explain what’s happening in the market. But most important, themes are the filters through which new information and data are absorbed by the market.
Market themes come in all shapes and sizes, and have differing impacts on the market over time. Some are long-term themes that can color the market’s direction for months and years, such as the persistent U.S. trade deficit. Others may hold sway for only a few hours, days, or weeks, such as unexpectedly hawkish comments from a central banker.
Market themes come in two main forms that coexist in parallel universes but that also frequently overlap. The two types of themes that we like to focus on are fundamental themes and technical themes.
Each currency has its own set of fundamental circumstances in which it’s being evaluated by the market. The basic fundamental environment is ever-present, but it’s also subject to change over time, just as economic conditions will change in the course of business cycles. Fundamental themes will also shift in relative importance to one another, with certain themes being pushed to the side for a period when news or events focus the market’s attention on other, more pressing themes.
As you read the following sections, keep in mind that each theme applies to each and every currency but in varying degrees at any given moment. We include some examples of what’s likely to happen to a currency based on what incoming information means for each theme; we go into more detail on how the market processes fresh data at the end of this chapter.
Markets are constantly speculating about the direction of interest rates, even though interest rate changes are relatively infrequent. For example, as of this writing, the Bank of England hasn’t changed the level of interest rates since 2009. Speculation over the direction and timing of interest rate changes is one of the primary drivers of a currency’s value on a daily basis as well as over longer time frames.
The information inputs that drive the interest rate outlook are centered on economic growth data and inflation reports, which we cover in detail in Chapter 7. The stronger the growth picture is, or the higher inflation pressures are, the more likely interest rates are to move higher, normally improving a currency’s outlook. The weaker the growth outlook or the lower the inflation readings, the more likely interest rates are to remain steady or move lower, typically hurting a currency in the process.
Economic growth prospects are the linchpin to a host of currency value determinants, from the interest rate outlook to the attractiveness of a nation’s investment climate (stocks and bonds). Not surprisingly, the stronger the outlook for growth, the better a particular currency is likely to perform relative to currencies of countries with weaker growth outlooks. Strong economic growth increases the likelihood of higher interest rates down the road, as central bank officials typically seek to restrain too rapid growth to head off inflationary pressures. Weaker growth data increases the prospect of potentially lower interest rates, as well as dampening the outlook for the investment environment.
Inflation is the bogeyman that all central bankers have nightmares about. Even when inflation is low, they still worry about it — it’s just part of the job. When inflation is running too high for their comfort, fuhgeddaboutit. As a currency trader attuned to monetary policy developments, you need to monitor inflation readings as well. (We look at the key inflation reports in greater detail in Chapter 7.)
The same phenomenon can happen when a central bank holds rates too high for too long, usually based on fighting inflation, and the market begins to speculate that an economic downturn is ahead. The response is actually not that bizarre if you consider that the forex market is, first and foremost, always anticipating future interest rates.
The Great Financial Crisis of 2008–2009 (GFC) along with the Eurozone debt crisis of 2009–2013 exposed financial stability as another overarching theme. In the initial phases of the crisis, the financial sector (banks and insurers) was shaken to its core and required massive government intervention to prevent a system-wide failure. The subsequent economic downturn later exposed excessive government debt levels and budget deficits as a threat to sovereign debt and economic growth. The road to recovery in the developed economies remains a tough haul, and government debt levels and the risk of a sovereign default may continue as a theme for years to come.
Beyond interest rates, growth, inflation and, stability, several other prominent themes regularly assert themselves, mostly in the structural sphere (the big-picture elements of how an economy is performing).
Structural themes can be fleeting — they can be in full force one day or for several weeks or months and then drop from the radar screen altogether. These themes are also usually secondary to those we outline in the preceding sections (interest rates, growth, inflation, and stability), but structural themes can still exert significant influence on a currency on their own. Most important, they can amplify the impact of the primary themes, like throwing gas on a fire. Following are frequently recurring structural themes:
Technical themes are perhaps a little harder to grasp than fundamental themes (see the preceding section), especially if you’re not familiar with technical analysis (see Chapter 11). But to make a long story short, sometimes currency prices move simply because currency prices are moving.
The fundamental economic or political themes may not have changed dramatically, but price levels have, and that is frequently enough to bring major market interest out of the woodwork.
In most cases, breaks of major technical or price levels will be in the direction suggested by the prevailing fundamental themes, but the timing is often suspect and can leave traders scratching their heads, asking what just happened. But sizeable price movements have a way of taking on a life of their own, forcing market participants to take action based on price adjustments alone.
In addition, the prevalence of technical analysis as the basis for many trading decisions can add weight to existing fundamental-driven moves, generating yet another theme to propel the move — the technical theme. It may be a trending market movement that attracts trend-following traders who don’t give a hoot about the underlying fundamentals. As long as the technical trend is in place, they keep pushing the market in the direction it’s going, perhaps far beyond what the fundamentals would dictate.
When a currency pair has broken through important technical levels, it’s also going to attract breakout traders — speculators who focus on jumping in on breaks of key price levels, looking to get in on the move for an easy trade. (But nothing is ever quite that easy, and breakout traders can suffer when the breaks are false and the ranges survive.) The additional interest entering the market in the direction of the move again propels the price farther and faster than it may ordinarily go.
The technical-theme phenomenon also stems from several real-life considerations that all relate back to the relative level of currency prices.
In one case, the data or news may be in line with the dominant themes of the moment, and the initial directional price reaction may be extended even further in subsequent trading action. The market may be anticipating lower U.S. interest rates, for example, and a weak U.S. consumer confidence report is released, sending the USD initially lower against other currencies. Because the weaker confidence reading supports the theme that the U.S. economy may be weakening, additional selling interest may materialize and lead to further price declines in the USD.
In other cases, the data report may fly in the face of the prevailing market themes, leading to an initial reaction in the opposite direction of the recent theme. The market may be trading on the theme that Eurozone interest rates are going higher and that the Eurozone economic outlook is improving. A subsequent Eurozone retail sales report may come in on the weak side, potentially leading to an initial market reaction that sees the euro weaken. Whether the euro’s move lower will be sustained depends largely on what the market decides the latest retail sales report means in terms of the larger theme of stronger European growth and higher Eurozone interest rates.
The data report may have been influenced by bad weather keeping shoppers at home, for example, and may be interpreted as just a bump in the road on the way to higher Eurozone interest rates. In such a case, initial euro weakness may be short lived and eventually reverse course higher. On the other hand, the weak retail sales report may cause the market to reconsider that higher European Central Bank (ECB) rates are a sure thing and keep on selling euros.
Data reports and news events don’t happen in a vacuum. Forex markets evaluate incoming data reports relative to market forecasts, commonly referred to as consensus expectations or simply the consensus. Consensus expectations are the average of economic forecasts made by economists from the leading financial institutions, and private firms or academia. News agencies like Bloomberg and Reuters survey economists for their estimates of upcoming data and collate the results. The resulting average forecast is what appears on market calendars, indicating what is expected for any given data report.
Additionally, the degree to which a data report is better or worse than expected is important. The farther off the mark the data report is, the greater the likelihood and degree of a subsequent price shift following the data release.
When evaluating central bank statements and comments from monetary policymakers, the market evaluates the language used in terms of hawkish (leaning toward raising interest rates) and dovish (leaning toward steady to lower interest rates). (We look at interpreting central bank rhetoric in greater detail in Chapter 5.)
Unfortunately, there’s no clear way to always tell whether or how much the market has priced in consensus expectations, so you need to follow market commentaries and price action in the hours and days before a scheduled report to get a sense of how much the market has priced in any forecast. And it’s not always a case of the market pricing in an as-expected result. Market sentiment may have soured (or improved) in the run-up to the release, leading the market to price in a worse-than-expected (or better-than-expected) report. Stay on top of the market reports to get a handle on the mood.
Data miss is the market euphemism for when a data report comes in outside expectations. If the consensus was for an improvement in a particular indicator, and the actual report is worse than expected or disappointing, the result may be a sharp reversal in price direction. If core U.S. durable goods orders are expected to rise, for example, but they end up falling, we may be looking at a sharp drop in the USD. If the USD has gained prior to the release on the basis of pricing in the positive consensus, those who went long are going to be dumping their positions alongside traders selling the USD on the weak result. The same thing can happen in reverse if negative expectations are met by a surprisingly positive data report.
For example, if the market is expecting an increase in the upcoming U.S. ISM manufacturing index, we like to ask ourselves what’s the likely reaction if the ISM disappoints those expectations, and also what happens if it surprises to the upside and is even stronger. This makes us focus on the most recent price action, and perhaps we note that the USD has declined slightly in advance of the report based on better Eurozone data overnight.
If the ISM comes in below expectations, we’re now thinking about how many pips lower the USD is likely to fall. We pinpoint key support levels and use those as our benchmarks to gauge the subsequent market reaction. If the report should surprise to the upside, we’ve also identified key resistance levels above that may come into play and where the next resistance levels are after them.
When the data does come out, we have a fairly rational baseline to judge the subsequent market reaction. If ISM rises as expected, we’ve identified which USD resistance levels may be tested. If they’re not being tested, we’re starting to think that maybe the market is more intent on buying EUR than buying the greenback, and it may not be wise to fight the near-term trend. If the ISM surprises on the weak side, we’ve also identified downside USD support levels (EUR/USD resistance levels), breaks of which may see further USD weakness/EUR strength.
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