Forex Blog

January 27, 2012

Week in FX Europe Jan 22-27

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:50 am

Plans for the Greek Private Sector Involvement remain a source of considerable uncertainty for peripheral markets, and the inconclusive result of negotiations over the past few days will leave the EUR and risk complex vulnerable to a large correction. However, the EU economic and monetary commissioner has indicated that authorities are very close to concluding their talks, either later today or over the weekend. Will the market add to the risk trades that have been applied since the Fed, earlier this week, increased its “free money” term length by 18-months? So far it’s been too tempting for the market to refuse and risk is being added accordingly.

The mixed signals from the Euro-zone debt market means investors need to tread with caution. Thus far, ECB liquidity has boosted demand for Spanish and Italian debt. The same cannot be said for Portugal. Peripheral bond yields have resumed their collapse this week, with Italian 10-year yields down -18bp to +5.84%, a long way from that +7% imploding benchmark. Portugal remains the outlier, with yields still under upward pressure. Perhaps if China invested in Europe we would not care so much?

Below are some other highlights of the week:


EUROPE

  • EUR: Greek talks were expected to show something of substance last weekend. Not unexpected, this week began with Greece failing to yield agreement on the public sector involvement. Negotiators have been squabbling over the coupon that restructured bonds will carry.
  • EUR: The single currency opened lower in the Chinese New Year and despite all the negatives, soared through last weeks highs allowing the techies to start talking about outside weekly reversals as the currency remains elevated.
  • EUR: Analysts expect that even a successful conclusion to discussions would still leave the actual degree of private sector uptake unclear. EUR bears are still looking for that top, as default risks will not fully ‘abate’.
  • FRF: French January business confidence surprised weak, falling to 91 from 94. The market had been expecting a small uptick, especially after the German IFO and EU PMI prints.
  • EU: Portuguese debt worries have resurfaced to add to Greek default concerns.
  • EU: Finance Ministers reject Greek debt swap offer, coupon demands too high.
  • S&P’s Chambers: Greece ‘In all likelihood’ is down to a selected default. However, this default is not expected to destroy the credibility of EMU.
  • EU: Euro-zone flash PMI’s came in firmer than expected with the composite back above 50 after four-months in contraction territory. This suggests that the region ‘should avoid a collapse in output’ and another quarter in the GDP ‘red’. Manufacturing PMI rose to 48.7 from 46.9 and services PMI rose to 50.5 from 49.0.
  • GER: Their numbers were strong with manufacturing PMI at 50.9 and services PMI at 54.5. Big picture, data should help the Scandis and CE3 currencies.
  • ESP: Spain saw strong demand at its bill auction. Spanish Treasury sold +EUR2.51b of 3-and 6-month bills. The bid-to-cover was high in both issues.
  • EU: With Greek PSI negotiations inconclusive, the IMF is pushing for the ECB’s to take a haircut along with PSI as a means of distributing losses back to governments. However, the ECB and German coalition remains opposed to taking a loss on ECB holdings. Expect the heavy peripheral issuance schedule to remain a key factor in keeping the bulls on their toes.
  • GER: German ifo surprised higher with the expectations component at 100.9, above the consensus for 99 and up from 98.6 previously (the third consecutive rise) and suggests a GDP growth rate of +0.5% q/q.
  • GBP: UK GDP contracted more than expected in Q4, down -0.2%, q/q, vs. -0.1%. The weakness was driven mainly by soft industrial production in October and November and poor services at the start of the quarter.
  • GBP: BoE minuets deferred the decision on more QE until next month, as expected. The assessment on the economy was somewhat less pessimistic as members judged the most serious downside risks have abated. However, others understood that the “risks of undershooting the target meant an expansion of the QE program is likely to be required”.
  • FOMC: FX risk has rallied following the Fed’s shift to a more dovish policy stance. With US yields holding on to post meeting losses and pricing of tightening being pushed further out in the future has increased the appeal of EM FX.
  • HUF: Hungary sold HUF +48b worth of bonds (+13b more than expected). This would suggest that market perception of HUF risk has improved. PM Orban has softened his stance on recent legislation and indicated that he is willing to adjust their policies in order to win financial backing from the EU and IMF.
  • SEK: Manufacturing confidence surprised soft, falling to -14 vs. -11. Analysts believe that weak growth and the recent sharp moderation in core-inflation allows for a rate cut by the Riksbank at the next meeting.
  • EU: Peripheral bond yields have resumed their collapse, with Italian 10-year yields down -18bp to +5.84% (Friday Morning). However, Portugal remains the outlier with yields still under upward pressure.
  • EU: On Friday, Rehn indicated that PSI talks are very close to conclusion, either today or over the weekend.
  • EU: Euro area M3 growth has slowed significantly to +1.6%, y/y, from +2.0%.
  • CHF: Swiss KoF leading indicator dropped to -0.17 this month from +0.01 in December (ninth consecutive monthly decline and the first negative reading in two years). However, the release is at odds with the recent upward surprise in the PMI back above 50.
  • Fitch: Downgrades Belgium, Italy and Spain.
  • PLN: Poland recorded above consensus 2011 GDP growth of +4.3%, y/y.
    Should continue to attract foreign capital and support the PLN.

US GDP Hidden Surprise Supports QE

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:50 am

“Key” surprises have ended up being the theme of this week. The Fed has extended the term of free money by 18-months and the door is now ajar for further QE. It’s the “when” that many appear to disagree with. It seems unlikely to be applied until after operation twist ends in June. QE2 and the ‘twist’ arrived after extensive debates and many months of weak data. In the medium term, both equities and commodities should continue to benefit from the idea that the Fed has better than even odds of performing additional QE.

US GDP, despite growing at a solid +2.8% in Q4, provided its surprise in the details. The mix of growth suggests weakness this quarter and beyond. The bulk of last quarter’s growth came from the inventory sector (+2% of the top-line). Real GDP ex-inventories were a poor +0.8%, the weakest pace in a year.

Below are some other highlights of the week:


AMERICAS

  • CAD: Retail Sales rose a tad more than expected in November (+0.3% vs. +0.2%). However, it was the smallest of four consecutive monthly gains, on increased sales of gas and clothing. Sales rose to +$38.7b slowing from a revised +0.9% increase in October. Sales volume at +0.5% was also the fourth straight increase.
  • USD: Obama’s campaign begins. In the State of the Union address he called for the creation of a trade enforcement division to investigate unfair trade practices, an end to tax deductions related to US company closures of facilities in the US for relocation abroad. He also announced plans to provide financing for US firms competing with overseas firms receiving state financing.
  • USD: December Pending Home Sales (-3.5% to 96.6) fell from its 19-month high print the prior month. The results were +5.6% above the December 2010 point.
  • USD: Weekly crude inventory report increased by +3.6m barrels last week to +334.8m barrels.
  • FOMC: The Fed surprised markets mid-week by extending its contingent commitment to low policy rates through 2014 (an extension of 18-months). In their transparency approach, the FOMC central projections showed only 6 of 17 committee members anticipate no easing before 2015.
  • USD: December durable goods orders firm with a +3% increase and a +2.1% ex-transport print. This supports recent manufacturing survey’s that the sector is regaining some momentum.
  • USD: As expected, seasonally adjusted initial unemployment benefit claims contracted upwards last week to +377k, up +21k w/w. The less volatile four-week average stands at +377.5k. Continuing claims now at +3.55m is more consistent with a +8.6% unemployment rate.
  • USD: December new home sales unexpectedly fell -2.2% to +307k, well below consensus estimates of +320k. It’s disappointing data on the back of other recent housing indicators having been positive. The data suggests that the market cannot be confident of a strong and sustained boost to GDP despite lower mortgage rates.
  • USD: First reading of the US Q4 GDP did not live up to hype. Economists expected +3% and they got +2.8%, however, still a notable improvement from the +1.8% in Q3 print.
  • USD: The belief that more jobs are to be had pushed the UoM consumer sentiment higher to 75 from 74. Sentiment has been expanding for five-months; stronger payrolls lead to stronger sentiment.
  • USD: UoM inflation expectations edged higher to +3.3% at the end of January from +2.7% earlier in the month.

November 26, 2011

Trading Week Outlook: Nov. 28 – Dec. 2

Nov. 25, 2011 (Allthingsforex.com) – The week ahead will mark the beginning of the final month of the year with a series of important U.S. economic data culminating with the Non-Farm Payrolls and Employment Situation report, as traders continue to ponder the impact of the EU debt crisis, the state of the U.S. economy and the odds of a QE3 announcement at the Fed’s December 13 meeting.

In preparation for the new trading week, here is the outlook for the Top 10 spotlight economic events that will move the markets around the globe.

1.    USD- U.S. New Home Sales, an important gauge of housing market conditions measuring the number of newly constructed homes with a committed sale during the previous month, Mon., Nov. 28, 10:00 am, ET.

In light of the better-than-expected existing home sales report, sales of new homes in the U.S. could follow suit with a small increase to 315K in October from 313K in September.

2.    USD- U.S. Consumer Confidence Index of consumers’ outlook on present and future economic conditions, Tues., Nov. 29, 10:00 am, ET.

The confidence of U.S. consumers is forecast to recover from the disappointing drop to 39.8 in September as the index rises to 43.0 in October.

3.    EUR- Euro-zone HICP- Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices, the main measure of inflation, Wed., Nov. 30, 5:00 am, ET.

Inflationary pressures in the Euro-zone are expected to remain unchanged at 3.0% y/y in November, same as the 3.0% y/y reading in October, but the European Central Bank might just look the other way as rising borrowing costs and fears of a double dip have placed concerns about the stubbornly high inflation on the back burner for the time being.

4.    USD- U.S. ADP-Automatic Data Processing Employment Report, a measure of jobs lost or added to the private sector of the economy, also serving as a leading indicator of the monthly non-farm payrolls, Wed., Nov. 30, 8:15 am, ET.

After adding 110K new jobs in October, the U.S. private sector payrolls are forecast to continue the trend with another 130K jobs in November. An upbeat ADP report could offer a nice prelude to Friday’s non-farm payrolls.

5.    CAD- Canada GDP- Gross Domestic Product, the main measure of economic activity and growth, Wed., Nov. 30, 8:30 am, ET.

The Canadian economy is forecast to return to growth by up to 0.4% q/q in the third quarter of 2011 after shrinking unexpectedly by 0.1% q/q in the second quarter. The data should be in line with recent forecasts expecting that the Canadian economy may slow down but would be able to avoid a recession, as growth picks up from 2.1% y/y in 2011 to 2.4% in 2012 and above 3.0% y/y in 2013.

6.    USD- U.S. Pending Home Sales, a leading indicator of housing market activity measuring the amount of homes under contract to be sold, Wed., Nov. 30, 10:00 am, ET.

An optimistic sequence of housing market data could continue with the U.S. pending home sales index which is forecast to rise by 1.4% m/m in November after the disappointing drop by 4.6% m/m in October.

7.    CHF- Swiss GDP- Gross Domestic Product, the main measure of economic activity and growth, Thurs., Dec. 1, 1:45 am, ET.

Growing at 0.3% q/q pace in the first quarter, the Swiss economic growth in the second quarter was revised lower at 0.4% q/q from the preliminary estimate of 0.6% q/q, and it is expected to slow again to 0.2% q/q in Q3 2011. The lower GDP reading should serve as an indicator of the negative impact of the strong franc on the Swiss economy, which coupled with the rising threat of deflation could prompt the Swiss National Bank into additional action to weaken its currency.

8.    USD- U.S. ISM Manufacturing Index, a leading indicator of industrial activity, where a reading above or below 50 is the dividing line between economic expansion and contraction, Thurs., Dec. 1, 10:00 am, ET.

While purchasing managers indexes in other major economies have been declining into contraction territory, the U.S. manufacturing and services indexes have managed to sustain above the 50 boom/bust line. The U.S. manufacturing sector is forecast to show resilience for another month with an ISM manufacturing index reading of 51.5 in November from 50.8 in October.

9.    CAD- Canada Employment Situation and Unemployment Rate, the main gauge of employment trends and labor market conditions, Fri., Dec. 2, 7:00 am, ET.

Following the dismal October report when the Canadian labor market lost 54,000 jobs, the economy is expected to add up to 17,000 new jobs in November. The unemployment rate is forecast to stay at the same 7.3% level in November.

10.    USD- U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls and Employment Situation Report, one of the most important indicators of economic health, measuring the number of new jobs created or lost in the world’s largest economy, Fri., Dec. 2, 8:30 am, ET.

The upbeat economic data throughout October was followed by some reports with negative undertones throughout November, raising QE3 odds. With more FOMC policy makers warming up to the idea of additional asset purchases ahead of the Fed’s meeting on December 13, the Non-Farm Payrolls report will be a crucial part of the QE3 puzzle. The consensus forecasts are pointing to another cautiously optimistic for the U.S. labor market report with the economy adding up to 117,000 jobs in November, compared with 80,000 in October, while the unemployment rate remains unchanged at 9.0%. 

November 25, 2011

Week in FX: Europe Nov. 20-25

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:55 am

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