On its daily chart the pair is testing the downside of channel
support in place since the current climb started back on September 7.
That support comes in within a whisker of current levels (as of 0100 GMT
Wednesday), at 113.76. US Dollar bulls are going to have to work hard
to secure a daily close above this level and keep the channel intact.
They may well feel encouraged if they can, of course. The putative
channel base has so far only been tested once, at the end of October.
One more successful trial would validate the channel still further.
However, should they fail to defend that downside then what
happens next will be crucial. The case could be made that a period of
consolidation might ensue, with USD/JPY trading a wide band between the
recent high of 114.72 and the recent low of 112.58 before shaking out
stale bulls and heading higher again.
Those betting against the Dollar will probably have to force the
Yen below those levels in quite short order if anything more
swashbuckling than a consolidative pause is their aim.
Meanwhile the New Zealand Dollar appears to be doing rather better
against the Japanese currency at last. The Kiwi had been under pressure
from its home county’s election on September 23 which produced no overall majority. That pressure increased in mid-October with the formation of a coalition government centred on the left-wing Labour party which was not New Zealand Dollar bulls’ first choice to put it mildly.
The currency showed a marked tendency to rise before the vote on
the release of any opinion polling which suggested that the
then-incumbent National Party would return to power in Wellington.
However, those bulls seem to be warming to the idea, or at least learning to live with it. NZD/JPY
remains very much within the downtrend channel seen since late
September, but it is edging a little close toward the upper boundary.
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