Keeping the Buy Positions in USD/JPY With the USD Remaining Bullish

USD/JPY has resumed the long term uptrend this week as inflation numbers keep the FED hawkish

USD/JPU bounced off the 100 daily SMA this week

The USD turned bullish in summer last year after being bearish since the beginning of the pandemic. Inflation started surging in 2021 and by summer it increased above 5% which forced the FED to turn hawkish. The USD remained bullish until December last year, which kept USD/JPY bullish.

Earlier this month this pair retreated down, but the FED sounded really hawkish on Wednesday’s press conference, suggesting that they might hike by 50 bps in March and continue hiking throughout the year, which would be very bullish for the USD. So, USD/JPY resumed the bullish trend this week and today’s PCE inflation figures support the uptrend here for weeks to come. So, we decided to buy this pair again after cashing in on yesterday’s buy forex signal here.

December US PCE Inflation and Consumer Data

  • US December core PCE 4.9% vs 4.8% expected
  • Novemer PCE was 4.7%
  • PCE price index MoM +0.4% vs +0.6% prior
  • PCE price index YoY +5.8% vs +5.7% prior

Consumers spending and income for December:

  • Personal income +0.3% vs +0.5% expected.
  • Personal spending -0.6% vs -0.6% expected.
  • Real personal spending -1.0% vs -0.2% prior

There’s nothing here that would have spooked Powell this week. You would like to see the month-over-month number start too cool. Energy prices fell in December but the slack was picked up elsewhere, pushing the overall index 0.4% higher.

US Employment Cost Index

Employment
Employment cost index for 4Q
  • US employment cost index for 4Q 1.0% versus 1.2% estimate
  • prior 3Q gains was 1.3%
  • employment wages 1.1% versus 1.5% previously
  • employment benefits 0.9% versus 0.9% previously
  • YoY employment costs rose 4.0% vs 2.5% in 2020
  • Wages and salaries in 2021 rose 4.5% vs 2.6% in 2020
  • Benefits YoY rose 2.8% vs 2.3% in 2020
  • Private Employment costs increased 4.4% YoY vs 2.6% in 2020
  • Public employment costs increased 2.6% YOY vs 2.3% in 2020
  • For the full report CLICK HERE

The markets are concerned about online-pharmacy.org the impact on higher wages on inflation. The trend higher in 2021 will be worrisome for the Fed. Although this report shows an easing of the move higher, the 1.3% and 1.0% back-to-back gains are still a concern, it just is not as bad as expectations. So there is some relief.

USD/JPY Live Chart

 

USD/JPY

ABOUT THE AUTHOR See More
Skerdian Meta
Lead Analyst
Skerdian Meta Lead Analyst. Skerdian is a professional Forex trader and a market analyst. He has been actively engaged in market analysis for the past 11 years. Before becoming our head analyst, Skerdian served as a trader and market analyst in Saxo Bank's local branch, Aksioner. Skerdian specialized in experimenting with developing models and hands-on trading. Skerdian has a masters degree in finance and investment.

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