Speculative position adjustments in the currency futures were minimal in the immediate aftermath of the ECB’s December 3 meeting and US employment data the following day. However, activity dramatically increased in the days ahead of the FOMC meeting on December 16.  

In most Commitment of Traders reports the gross position adjustment of 10k or more contracts is seen in three or four of the 16 gross currency positions we track. In the latest report, which covers the five sessions before the conclusion of the FOMC meeting, there were seven gross currency position adjustments of more than 10k contracts. Also, there were only two gross currency position adjustments of less than 5k contracts, which is also unusual.  

The first development to note is that among the major currencies (euro, yen, sterling and Swiss franc), there was a short squeeze.  The speculative bears covered 21.5k gross short euro contracts (leaving 231.3k). During the previous reporting period, only 9k gross short contracts were covered.   

The yen bears cut the gross short position by nearly a third to 63.9k contracts. In percentage terms, it is the largest bout of short-covering in four years. In sterling, 9.5k short contracts were covered (leaving 56.0k). This helped drive the net short sterling position to 16.9k contracts, which is the smallest net short position in a month. Short-covering reduced the gross short Swiss franc position by a quarter to 27.8k contract. In percentage terms, the 9.3k contracts was the largest reduction of short positions since May.  

The second broad trend was a more bearish view of the dollar bloc currencies and peso. The Australian dollar is an exception, but the gross longs were cut in the Canadian dollar (4.5k contracts), the New Zealand dollar (8.1k contracts) and Mexican peso (10.4k contracts). The gross short positions were mixed. In the Aussie and Kiwi, they were reduced by 8.9k contracts and three hundred contracts respectively. Gross shorts increased by 6.4k contracts in the Canadian dollar and 25.5k contracts in the Mexican peso.  

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