COT Report: CHF And JPY Out Of Favor As Inflation Rises

Looking at this week's Commitments of Traders Report, speculators are selling -sensitive currencies including the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc. The British pound remains out of favor following both poor economic data and weak guidance from the Bank of England. Finally, speculators also dumped positions in the Australian dollar, thanks to ongoing US-China trade tensions. The net result of these changes is a significant build-up of US dollar positions. While speculators remain net short USD, the size of the net short position has fallen significantly over the last three weeks.

Looking at extremes in speculator positioning, net long positions in crude oil and the Japanese yen are no longer at a bullish extreme this week. Instead, net short positions in the Swiss franc are now at a bearish extreme based on trailing 12-month and 36-month averages. With almost 33,000 futures and options contracts short the Swiss franc, bearish positioning in the currency is at multi-year highs.

The purpose of this weekly report is to track how the consensus is positioned across various major currencies and commodities. When net long positions become crowded in either direction, we flag extended positioning as a risk. Crowded positions do not suggest an imminent reversal, but should be considered as a significant risk factor when in the same direction as the crowd. This is shown below:

CFTC COT speculator positions (futures & options combined) – May 8, 2018

Source: CFTC, MarketsNow

Notable extremes, significant changes in weekly positions, and large net positions as a proportion of open interest are highlighted above. Extremes in net positions are highlighted when speculator positioning is more than two standard deviations above trailing 1-year and 3-year averages. Weekly changes are highlighted when they are significant as a proportion of open interest. Finally, net positions as a proportion of outstanding interest are highlighted when they are large relative to historical averages. 1-year and 3-year z-scores are visually represented below:

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