Global currency markets show signs of surviving virus scare
A sense of apathy about the coronavirus appears to be taking root in global foreign exchange markets. Haven currency, the Swiss franc, slipped to nearly a threeweek low against the dollar on Wednesday, even after Hong Kong initiated travel bans to contain the disease. The Japanese yen, another traditional refuge for investors, has failed to gain since then, while the Australian dollar is showing signs of weathering the outbreak.Currency markets may be becoming desensitised even as headlines about the virus have helped dictate sentiment across other asset classes. The move in the franc in particular indicates some traders have already adjusted their portfolios and may be looking toward other risks instead.Previous outbreaks of deadly diseases suggest currencies may be relatively resilient toward the spread of coronavirus, Nordea Bank said in a research note earlier this week. While traditional bellwethers of risk appetite such as equities may face a temporary sell-off and bonds gain ground, moves in currencies are likely to be more contained, the bank predicted. Option markets are now signaling less bearish sentiment on the Australian dollar, a commodity-linked currency influenced by the country’s trade with China. One-week risk reversals, a barometer of positioning and sentiment, rallied in favor of buying the Australian dollar by the most in five months on Wednesday.Signs are also emerging that the euro could be about to strengthen against the Swiss franc. An indicator of whether the euro is oversold against the franc rebounded from a five-year low on Wednesday. The so-called relative strength index rose above 30, a level seen as signaling a reversal in direction. On technical charts, a candle pattern on the euro’s spot price against the franc on Tuesday suggested the shared currency could rise, or at least that a short-term bottom is in place.Moreover, the euro-franc pair closed above a key long-term level at 1.0673, the 38.2 per cent Fibonacci retracement of its gains since January 2015.
from Economic Times https://ift.tt/2GDA1tO
from Economic Times https://ift.tt/2GDA1tO
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