Large Speculators turn bullish on US Dollar bets in Forex Futures data

By CountingPips.com



The latest data for the weekly Commitments of Traders (COT) report was released on Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and showed that large futures speculators turned bullish on the US dollar last week after four straight weeks of bearish positions.

Non-commercial large futures traders, including hedge funds and large International Monetary Market speculators, had an overall US dollar long position totaling $7.02 billion as of Tuesday November 5th. This was a weekly change of $10.17 billion from the total position of $-3.146 billion that was registered on October 29th, according to data from Reuters that calculates this amount by the total of US dollar contracts against the combined contracts of the euro, British pound, Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar and the Swiss franc.

US dollar positions, on November 5th, were at their most bullish level since September 17th when US dollar bets were long at a total of $10.8 billion.

 

Individual Currencies Large Speculators Positions in Futures:

The large non-commercial net positions for each of the individual major currencies directly against the US dollar on November 5th showed weekly increases for just the Mexican peso while there were declines for the euro, British pound sterling, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, Canadian dollar, Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar.

 

Individual Currency Charts:


EuroFX:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: EuroFX

Date Large Trader Net Positions Weekly Change
10/01/2013 68276 2432
10/08/2013 68683 407
10/15/2013 60374 -8309
10/22/2013 72434 12060
10/29/2013 70617 -1817
11/05/2013 33143 -37474



British Pound Sterling:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: Pound Sterling

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 1496 322
10/08/2013 8771 7275
10/15/2013 12231 3460
10/22/2013 14262 2031
10/29/2013 10162 -4100
11/05/2013 -2392 -12554



Japanese Yen:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: Yen

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 -82324 10494
10/08/2013 -57097 25227
10/15/2013 -59266 -2169
10/22/2013 -71802 -12536
10/29/2013 -62395 9407
11/05/2013 -73792 -11397



Swiss Franc:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: Franc

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 6636 891
10/08/2013 10415 3779
10/15/2013 10767 352
10/22/2013 10931 164
10/29/2013 11451 520
11/05/2013 8095 -3356



Canadian Dollar:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: CAD

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 -955 4720
10/08/2013 -8663 -7708
10/15/2013 -10814 -2151
10/22/2013 -5364 5450
10/29/2013 -15237 -9873
11/05/2013 -18002 -2765



Australian Dollar:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: AUD

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 -28804 6015
10/08/2013 -26404 2400
10/15/2013 -32237 -5833
10/22/2013 -22111 10126
10/29/2013 -23198 -1087
11/05/2013 -25067 -1869



New Zealand Dollar:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: NZD

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 10891 2836
10/08/2013 10766 -125
10/15/2013 12668 1902
10/22/2013 13114 446
10/29/2013 10625 -2489
11/05/2013 9708 -917



Mexican Peso:

Last Six Weeks of Large Trader Positions: MXN

Date Lg Trader Net Weekly Change
10/01/2013 14601 578
10/08/2013 10933 -3668
10/15/2013 7761 -3172
10/22/2013 7214 -547
10/29/2013 4896 -2318
11/05/2013 5180 284



*COT Report: The weekly commitment of traders report summarizes the total trader positions for open contracts in the futures trading markets. The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators).

The Commitment of Traders report is published every Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and shows futures positions data that was reported as of the previous Tuesday (3 days behind).

Each currency contract is a quote for that currency directly against the U.S. dollar, a net short amount of contracts means that more speculators are betting that currency to fall against the dollar and a net long position expect that currency to rise versus the dollar.

(The graphs overlay the forex spot closing price of each Tuesday when COT trader positions are reported for each corresponding spot currency pair.)

See more information and explanation on the weekly COT report from the CFTC website.




Article by CountingPips.comCurrency Trading News

 

FX_Trdr