Forex Blog

May 2, 2011

US Home Prices Decline

For the eighth straight month, the price for single-family homes fell in February. The S&P/Case Shiller composite index – which measure home prices for twenty cities across America – declined by 0.2 percent.

“There is very little, if any, good news about housing. Prices continue to weaken, trends in sales and construction are disappointing,” David Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Indices, said in a statement.

“Recent data on existing-home sales, housing starts, foreclosure activity and employment confirm that we are still in a slow recovery.”

Source: Bloomberg

Eurozone Continues to Rely on France, Germany to Power Economy

France and Germany continued to lead other members of the Eurozone according to the latest Markit Purchasing Managers Index for the month of April. Germany’s factory activity expanded for a 19th consecutive month in April while in France, industrial activity expanded at its fastest rate in five months.

The news was not so positive for other Eurozone members where growth was on the decline in Spain and Italy while Greece made only marginal gains.

Source: BBC News

bin Laden dollar premium short lived

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:23 am

The death of Bin Laden will affect all asset classes, however, the true effect is yet to be felt because of semi-holiday trading conditions. The May Day has had most centers closed, adding to liquidity constraints. Already the dollar seems to have lost most of the bin Laden advantage after a healthy Euro-zone PMI release (58) this morning.

In the broadest sense, the dollars decline continues and the rally in other asset classes remains strong and getting stronger. The end of QE2 does not seem to be dampening the enthusiasm for the liquidation of the dollar in the FX market. Investors continue to look for better levels to unload the currency and this is the major reason why the bin Laden positive dollar effect has been short lived.

Over the weekend, China’s April PMI fell -0.5 points to 52.9, defying the seasonal tendency for the measure to rise in April. New orders fell -1.4 points to 53.8, and forcing commodity block currencies to under-perform.

The US$ is mixed in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is lower against 9 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ session.

Forex heatmap

The USD is lower against the EUR +0.23% and higher against GBP -0.18%, CHF -0.19% and JPY -0.35%. The commodity currencies are weaker this morning, CAD -0.47% and AUD -0.15%.

The loonie has taken a beating in the O/N session after commodities took a giant step lower on the news of Bin Laden’s death. His demise has only added fuel to the fire as the CAD underperforms against most of its major trading partners for a fourth straight week after GDP unexpectedly contracted in February (-0.2%) on Friday. However, outright against the dollar, similar to most other major currencies, the loonie managed to print a new three-year high last week, on speculation that the Fed will trail the BoC in raising interest rates. In just under a year the currency has appreciated +12% against the dollar.

Today the country goes to the polls to elect a new parliament. To date, politics has played a minor role in the currency’s value. The market should expect some event risk calculation to pressurize the currency in the medium term (0.9510).

The AUD fell outright against the greenback after Obama declared that Bin Laden had been killed. The initial market reaction was to push up US equity stock futures, and to boost the allure of assets in the world’s largest economy. The Aussie’s pullback has been somewhat limited despite the market expecting the RBA to keep benchmark interest rates on hold tomorrow.

Last week was the currency’s sixth consecutive weekly advance outright as lower-than-estimated US growth increases speculation that the RBA will be raising interest rates before the Fed. Traders have added to their bets that policy makers will be hiking rates +25bps points over the next year.

Currently, the RBA seem comfortable with interest rates as highlighted in the released minutes last month. The Governor viewed his policy setting as appropriate, saying they will ‘look through’ higher inflation and slower growth stemming from natural disasters. It’s expected that Governor Stevens will want to see more data that’s not so distorted by weather, which may take some time to come through, before moving on rates again.

Australian yields are still the highest in the G10 and do look attractive. The expected mix of trade surpluses and rising capital inflows should provide support for the currency on any pullbacks as the currency wants to march above 1.10 outright (1.0949).

Crude is much weaker in the O/N session ($111.36 -$2.57c). Crude prices settled at their highest level in two-and a half-years on Friday as a weaker dollar and geopolitical concerns in MENA overshadowed demand worries in the face of slower US economic growth. April was the eight consecutive month of monthly gains. However, in the O/N session, crude has plummeted -2.4% on the news of Bin Laden’s death.

Last weeks crude inventories rising +6.16m barrels to +363.1m. It was the biggest one-week advance since July 2010. The market was expecting a build of only +1.7m barrels. Crude imports rose +1.21m barrels to +9.23m. In contrast, gas inventories fell for the tenth consecutive week, -2.51m barrels to +205.59m, compared with expectations for a -1.1m drawdown. It’s worth noting that gas inventors fell in spite of domestic demand falling by -1.6% last month on a year over year basis. Finally, distillates (heating oil and diesel) dropped -1.81m barrels to +146.53m. Refinery utilization rose +0.2% to 82.7%. In reality, it looks like refiners have got to convert more of the oil into gas in the coming weeks.

The IEA said it maintains its 2011 global oil demand growth forecast but noted that the high oil prices are beginning to dent demand growth. OPEC have already stated earlier this month that they are unlikely to alter output targets when it meets in June as there is ‘no shortage of oil anywhere in the world’ even after supply curtailments in MENA. It’s all about the dollar’s inverse relationship with commodities.

Gold beat equities, bonds and the dollar for a fifth consecutive month in April, the longest stretch in 14-years, as demand for raw materials increases with expanding economies and on speculation that US policy makers will be slow to tighten their monetary policy, weakening the greenback and boosting the appeal of metals as an alternative asset class. Gold, as a non-yielding asset, has a higher opportunity cost when interest rates rise. The precious metal has become the currency of choice as the dollar continues to underperform against its G10 trading partners.

The metals bull-run is far from over with investors continuing to look to buy the commodity on dips. Any price pullbacks are viewed as favorable opportunities for investors to continue to diversify into safe-haven assets, especially metal being used as a store-of-value ($1,556 -40c).

The Nikkei closed at 10,004 up+154. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,581 up+67; the FTSE (UK) currently is 6,069 up+2. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year eased 2bp on Friday (3.29%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

Treasuries prices have rallied for a third-consecutive week, generating the biggest monthly return in eight-months, as weaker US economic growth indicators coupled with the Fed’s commitment to maintain stimulus encouraged demand for the safety of government debt.

The lack of growth continues to haunt investors. Last week, the Fed expressed very cautious sentiment toward growth and made it clear they aren’t going to do anything until sustainable growth has picked up. Various CBanks rate announcements and NFP is expected to keep all asset classes on their toes in this shortened holiday week.

April 8, 2011

Forex week in review: April 3-8

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 5:40 pm

The Market got what it wanted this week when it came to Central Bank announcements. The RBA, BoJ, BoE and ECB all remain mindful of inflation. The ECB tightened rates +25bp, seemingly to begin  its rate normalization policy. Their actions will provide greater forex directionality in the medium term for investors. The beginning of policy divergence between the Fed and ECB is negative for the dollar and with risk appetite back with a vengeance it seems the market cannot get enough of the ‘carry’ trade. The looser monetary policy’s of the Fed and BoJ is allowing their currency to remain favorable funding vehicles.

EUROPE

  • UK services PMI surprised with a sharp move higher to 57.1 from 52.6 in February (highest reading in 14-months). The composite PMI rose to 57.5 from 54.9, the strongest reading in over a year.
  • Euro area services PMI showed a very solid gain last month, rising to 57.2 (revised up from 56.9), the highest level so far in the recovery. Core strength comes from Germany, Italy and France. In the periphery, Spain’s services PMI fell to 48.7 and Irish services PMI fell to 51.1. Euro-zone composite PMI remains at a very high level, despite the moderation in manufacturing, and consistent with solid growth.
  • Moody’s cut Portugal’s sovereign rating to Baa1 from A3, with the negative outlook maintained.
  • Despite downgrades, Portugal successfully issued EUR 1.01bn in T-bills, slightly above the EUR 750mn to EUR 1bn range.
  • UK industrial production fell sharply in February (-1.2% vs. +0.4%, m/m), with January revised lower (+0.3%, m/m). The drop was mainly due to erratic items, the weakness will bias 1st Q GDP lower.
  • In contrast, German factory orders rose sharply in February (+2.4% vs. +0.5%, m/m) and with an upward revision to January (+3.1%).
  • Swiss inflation rose to +1.0%, y/y last month, pushed higher by energy and clothing components. Headline inflation is still benign compared to the SNB’s medium-term target of +2.0%, y/y.
  • It was not a surprise, pushed by higher funding costs, Portugal’s Prime Minister announced a request for financial assistance from the Euro-zone and became the third member to do so after Greece and Ireland.
  • Spain successfully sold €4.2bn of 3-year bonds. Perception is trying to decouple the Spanish markets from Portuguese stress to provided investors with greater comfort that peripheral financing stress is no longer a systemic threat or impediment to EUR appreciation.
  • German industrial production came in very strong (+1.6% vs. +0.5% in February), with growth in January revised up to +2.0% from +1.8%.
  • Not a surprise, the BoE left policy unchanged (+0.5%), as universally expected. Markets will have to wait for the release of the minutes on 20 April to gain insight on any possible changes in alignment within the divided MPC.
  • As expected ECB hiked the repo rate +0.25bp to +1.25%, which gives some directionality to the FX space. Trichet tone was marginally hawkish, his statement that the ECB would ‘very closely monitor’ risks to inflation suggests that the next rate rise could come as early as June. This is a significant step towards normalizing policy conditions in the Euro-area.
  • UK construction output (56.4 vs. 54.7) eases concerns about 1st Q GDP
  • UK PPI release showed inflationary pressures remained high in March. Output PPI rose to + 5.4% and core-PPI moderated only slightly to +3.0%. Market continues to prices in an 80% chance of a +25bp hike by the July meeting.

Americas

  • BoC’s Canadian business outlook survey sees slow growth on a higher loonie and commodity prices. Inflation expectations have ticked higher and respondents now expect inflation to trend at the upper end of the BoC inflation control target.
  • US data showed that the service sector is expanding at a ‘moderate’ clip. ISM non-manufacturing index eased to 57.3, but still remains above its long-run average of 53.8. Respondents are concerned of a possible spillover effects from Japan, specifically with the supply chain.
  • There were no surprises from the FOMC minutes. The meeting highlighted the dichotomy amongst the members on timing of exit. This certainly evident from the independent rhetoric jousting of late by various Fed speakers. The minutes reiterated that the FED would be hands off with QE2.
  • US jobless claims extending their ‘modest’ downward trend, beating consensus estimates by-10k (+382k vs. +392k). Since peaking two-years ago, down over +40% from the high, claims continue to hover within a tight range below that psychological +400k print which points to a ‘gradual’ pace of hiring activity.
  • Canada employment figures showed a disappointing flat headline reading (-1.5k). The details were more encouraging, with full time employment rising by 91k, and part time declining by an equivalent degree. Unemployment rate falls to +7.7%
  • US inventories increased +1% in February, driven by a big gain in petroleum amid rising oil prices

ASIA

  • In Australia, job ads were up another +1.3%, m/m in March
  • The RBA left policy rates on hold at +4.75% with the statement nearly identical to last month’s. There was an additional sentence on Japan and oil prices, and a slight change in language around the labor market commentary from ‘firm in 2010’ to ‘growth moderated’. The level of yields is still the highest in the G10.
  • PBoC hiked policy rates +25bp. Analysts expect China to keep policy rates and banks’ RRR unchanged for the next two months as evidence is mounting that policy tightening is biting into lending and consumption.
  • Australia employment rose +37.8k in March and the February fall in employment was revised from -10k to only -8.6k. The unemployment rate eased from +5.0% to +4.9%. RBA considers this to be full employment.
  • The Bank of Japan left key policy rates and its asset purchase program unchanged, disappointing those looking for new support measures. Policy makers revised down their economic assessment, and this to the provision of reserves in the banking system allows the Yen to be an attractive funding currency in this pro-carry environment.

WEEK AHEAD

  • North America dominates the data next week with CAN and US Trade Balance, BoC rate statement, US Sales, claims, Core CPI, PPI and ending with the UoM Consumer sentiment Index.
  • UK has CPI, Germany has its ZEW Economic Sentiment release early in the week.
  • Governor Stevens from the RBA speaks mid-week and China gets to show us its CPI and GDP numbers

April 1, 2011

Forex week in review: March 24-April 1

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 5:37 pm

The month-end, quarter-end ‘fix mess’ is now over. Welcome to the beginning of the ‘carry’ month. Carry is king in April. Non-farm payrolls did not bring forth ‘that’ surprise. The dollar has suffered whiplash this week on the back of Fed member jousting rhetoric. Minneapolis Fed President Kocherlakota’s comment that a hike of 75bp was possible in 2011 was negated by Friday’s dovish comments from New York’s Fed President Dudley, a close friend of Ben’s.

Ireland passing the stress tests and being downgraded, like Portugal, has done little to stem the EUR’s rise. The stress test result and Portugal’s successful bond auction seem to further limit the prospects for a near-term systemic shock that could derail Trichet’s plan to hike rates next week. The market has priced this in and all we need now is for the ECB to deliver. A new ECB rate hiking cycle will usher in a new phase of general dollar weakness versus the European currencies.

EUROPE

  • EU summit fails to deliver specifics on EFSF enhancement. Made progress in defining a new post-2013 support regime for peripheral borrowers. No decisions made on support for Portugal or interest rate relief for Ireland.
  • Chancellor Merkel’s coalition suffered heavy losses in regional voting and the CDU lost control of Baden-Wuerttemberg for the first time in 50 years. No implications in terms of the government’s ability to pass legislation on European issues.
  • UK GDP was revised a touch higher (-0.5%), but M4 growth was weak (-0.5%).
  • Italian business confidence rose to a new cycle high, echoing the message from French confidence last week. Data continue to fully support an ECB tightening at next week’s meeting.
  • Swiss KOF comes in stronger than expected, rising to 2.24 in March. The print matched the high from July, before CHF strength induced a moderation in the survey.
  • SNB Vice-Chairman Jordan’s commented that monetary conditions are currently appropriate and suggested that the SNB would only hike rates if the franc weakened first.
  • UK CBI rose to 15 in March. The expected April retail sales volume is at +18. UK index of services reversed the weather induced drop in December, rising +1.3%, m/m in January.
  • Euro zone consumer confidence came in line at -10.6 for March. Economic and services sentiment came slightly below consensus expectations, while industrial confidence held at high levels.
  • The BoE credit conditions survey reported a fall in demand for mortgages in Q1 and noted concerns from banks on the impact of an interest rate rise on defaults.
  • The Euro-region area CPI surprised, strong at +2.6%, y/y, in March.
  • German unemployment rate fell to +7.1% in March, the lowest level since 1991.
  • Portugal reported a +8.6% of GDP budget deficit for 2010 (target +7.0%), and revised up the 2009 deficit to 10% from 9.3%. Portuguese spreads have widened.
  • Irish bank ‘pass’ stress tests, coupled with a successful auction of EUR1.6bn in Portugal bonds would seem to further limit the prospects for a near-term systemic shock that could derail Trichet’s plan to hike rates next week.
  • Manufacturing PMI’s retreated in March in all core Euro-zone economies, French (55.4), Italy (56.2) and Germany (60.9). Importantly, the levels of the surveys remain very high and consistent with strong growth, which should keep ECB’s tightening plans in place.
  • UK manufacturing PMI disappointed (57.1). Weakness was driven by a sharp drop in orders from 62 to 54.9, suggesting PMI could remain soft for the months ahead. This supports the dovish camp on the MPC

Americas

  • St. Louis Fed’s Bullard says FOMC should consider curtailing QE2. Normalization may start before crises end.
  • The US housing market recession is not over yet. January’s reading for the 20-city S&P/Case-Shiller HPI (-3.1%, y/y) points to further softening in house prices before the housing sector reaches a bottom.
  • US consumer confidence fell shy of expectations this month (63.4 versus 64.9), on the back of less confidence in the ‘future’ whereas confidence in the ‘present’ circumstances picked up.
  • ADP print (+201k) inline with consensus.
  • The last major regional purchasing manager’s index, Chicago PMI, eased slightly to 70.6% in March from 71.2%.The prices paid component climbed to 83.4% from 81.2%, while new orders edged slightly lower to 74.5% from 75.9%. However, the employment index remains supportive 65.6% versus 59.8%.
  • Canadian GDP was a decent print (+0.5). Analysts note that temporary factors that boosted manufacturing distorted the headline. Market can expect the effects to be reversed in the February release.
  • NFP beat market consensus (+216k), raising expectations of a tighter monetary policy due to a stronger economy. Unemployment rate fell to +8.8% and last months release was revised higher by +2k.
  • Marginal slippage in March ISM index to 61.2 vs. 61.4. Pressure coming from new orders, while prices paid continues to rally.
  • Dovish comments from New York Fed Dudley has forced the market from pricing too much tightening.

ASIA

  • New Zealand reported a February trade surplus of NZD194mn, below the NZD270mn consensus forecast. Exports rose +17%, y/y, import growth of +23%, y/y was boosted by an aircraft purchase.
  • Japan reported strong retail sales (+0.8%) and unemployment data (+4.6%) for February. The data are pre-disaster and have been generally ignored by the market given the uncertainties that lie ahead.
  • PBOC has taken a softer tone on monetary policy in its latest statement. The reference to inflation and assessment of monetary conditions has both turned less aggressive. Market believes they are signaling a ‘pause’ in monetary tightening for 1-2 months.
  • Japan’s Ministry of Finance reported that intervention in March totaled Y693bn, or about $8bn. Most if not all of this was likely conducted on March 18
  • Australia retail sales growth rose +0.5%, m/m, however building approvals were down +7.4%, most likely flood related.
  • China’s headline PMI rose to 53.4 from 52.2 in February. The forward-looking new orders index rose only +0.9pp to 55.2, versus an average +4.9pp in the past five years, and the PMI new export orders index rose +1.6pp to 52.5.
  • Japan’s Tankan Manufacturing Index came in line with expectations and rose 6-points.

WEEK AHEAD

  • This week is dominated by Central Bank announcements, starting down-under with the RBA followed by BoJ, BoE and finishing with the ECB.
  • Bernanke gets some air time at the beginning of the week, ahead of the FOMC meeting minutes on Tuesday.
  • Canada gives us Ivey PMI and Building permits and employment changes
  • Australia will also focus on employment and the US its weekly claims

Focus on the Battle within the FED not NFP

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 10:18 am

The month-end, quarter-end ‘fix mess’ is now over. Welcome to the beginning of the ‘carry’ month, which April is historically know for. This morning, the market has the grandaddy of economic data releases to contend with, non-farm payroll, followed by ISM manufacturing and the battle of Fed speakers.

The market expects a somewhat robust payrolls headline (+200k), a steady unemployment rate (+8.9) and the ISM to soften a tad, but in line with expectations, which would be consistent with a strong growth outlook.

Today’s we get more Fed speakers, Plosser and Fisher, the market know their views, it’s Dudley, who will be front and center. Up to now he has had close ties with Bernanke’s dovish stance, so expect his copy to balance out some of the recent hawkish comments.

The US$ is little changed in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is lower against 8 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in an ‘orderly’ session.

Forex heatmap

Yesterday’s claims have not affected forecasts for today’s payroll numbers. The claims are for later in March than when the labor department jobs survey was done, but they do confirm gradual improvements in the US labor market. The headline print saw a weekly decline of-6k to +388k.

Digging deeper, the four week moving average gained +3k to +394k. Continued filings were less affected, falling-51k to +3.714m. However, the number of claimants in all programs (not seasonally adjusted) rose just over +4k to +8.77m. On the bright side, that represents a-24% drop year-over-year, compared with last weeks -22.5% decline. Now we sit back and see what payrolls has in store for us.

The last major regional purchasing manager’s index, Chicago PMI, eased slightly to 70.6% in March from 71.2%.The prices paid component climbed to 83.4% from 81.2%, while new orders edged slightly lower to 74.5% from 75.9%. However, the employment index remains supportive 65.6% versus 59.8%.

Finally, US February factory orders unexpectedly declined, -0.1%, well short of market consensus increase of +0.5%. Analysts note that the biggest surprise was that petroleum orders (-0.1%) failed to extend recent price gains. Digging deeper, nondurables increased by +0.3%, while durables were revised up to a -0.6% from a negative -0.9%.

Overall, the durable data remains weak and the nondurable increase was modest, failing to back a strong ISM manufacturing for last month. Shipments and inventory headlines could see first quarter GDP forecasts trimmed even further. The Fed will likely need to drastically revise ‘their’ central tendency GDP outlook lower, it’s currently at +3.6%. The current mark-to-market GDP estimate is now +1.6%!

The USD is weaker against the EUR +0.04% and CHF +0.01% and higher against GBP -0.07% and JPY -0.54%. The commodity currencies are little changed this morning, CAD +0.00% and AUD +0.00%.

The loonie finally got the only piece of data expected for her this week, yesterdays GDP (+0.5%). The details were softer than the headline print. The market views it as a decent print, but analysts note that temporary factors that boosted manufacturing distorted the headline. We should expect some of these effects to be reversed in the February release. If we excluded the manufacturing component, the real GDP would have grown by +0.2%.

It’s worth noting that the inflation adjusted +2.8% month-over-month manufacturing rise is based on temporary factors, specifically skewed towards the auto production in January. It is this that will lead to a downside risk to real manufacturing GDP for February. The inflation readings will not put pressure on Governor Carney to change his immediate stance, it allows policy makers to bide their time.


Digging deeper, the goods-producing industries expanded +1.1% (third consecutive month of gains) month-over-month, while the service sector (70% of the economy) saw modest growth of +0.3%, which was similar to the previous month. 

Despite a Canadian government being toppled last week, the ‘hawkish’ tone coming from Governor Carney about how the elevation in commodity prices generally leads to higher interest rates continues to give the loonie its bid tone as traders happily sell Yen against CAD, pushing that pair towards a yearly high.

In the wings there is further interest to buy the loonie as ‘carry’ becomes the go-to trade. Investors should expect the Federal political uncertainty to have a limited affect on the Canadian dollars strength. The currency will be supported in the long term by its fundamentals, a sound financial system and a strong job environment. The market will take its cue from this morning’s payroll release (0.9686).

It’s quarter end and the AUD is heading for a third consecutive gain outright and against the yen, boosted by last nights retail sales beating analysts expectations (+0.5% versus +0.4%).

April is historically know as the carry month and the AUD is starting on the front foot rallying against JPY, to its strongest level in 11-months, as investors buy higher-yielding currencies on signs Japan will keep monetary policy loose to spur the economy. The AUD strengthened +0.9% versus the dollar last quarter and +3% against the yen. Higher yielding pacific currencies also got a boost from a stronger Chinese Manufacturing data in the O/N session.

Domestic data this week has has been pro-AUD. The currency managed to touch a record high, post 1983 float, after the RBA said loans provided by banks and finance companies climbed last month. The AUD has been supported by investors pricing out the possibility of a rate cut and pricing in the chance of a rate hike again next week. The probability of a reduction in Australia’s benchmark interest rate on April 5 is 13%, down from as much as 34% last week.

Appetite for growth and commodity sensitive currencies depends on the new found stamina of risk tolerance by investors. Further appreciation depends on investor’s interpretation of global future interest rates as the carry trade becomes in vogue again (1.0340).

Crude is little changed in the O/N session ($107.09 +37c). Crude prices are again marching higher on contagion fears in the Middle-East and on the back of Libyan forces renewed aggression raising concerns about oil supplies for the near-term.

Initially, a strong weekly EIA reporting inventory at Cushing reaching record highs temporarily eased prices, but, geopolitical uncertainty is providing a bid on most pull backs.

The weekly reports showed crude stocks climbing +2.95m barrels to +355.7m last week. The market had forecasted a rise of only +1.5m barrels. At the other end of the pendulum, fuel demand fell to its lowest level since November with gas softening -2.3% to +8.87m barrels a day. That is -2.1% less than a year ago. Gas inventories were down -2.7m barrels, while distillate (heating oil and diesel) were up +710k barrels.

Recent events will make it unlikely that investors will see a ‘swift normalization’ of crude-oil production in the region. On any pull backs the Middle-East and North African situation will continue to dominate in the event risk category.

Gold has found renewed support on the back of European debt fears and the ongoing crisis in Libya boosting the appeal of the commodity as an alternative investment. Geopolitical reasons continue to provide support on these pull backs, justifying consumers wanting to own some of the asset in their own portfolios.

The commodity has preserved its tenth quarterly gain, its longest winning streak in over 35-years, as low interest rates, geopolitical and event risk pushes the commodity to record highs. It’s difficult to find a reason ‘not’ to own some of the commodity.

The metals bull-run is far from over with investors continuing to look to buy the commodity on dips. Any price pullbacks are viewed as favorable opportunities for investors to continue to diversify into safe-haven assets, with metal being used as a store of value ($1,436 -$3.30).

The Nikkei closed at 9,708 down-47. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,104 up+63; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,960 up+52. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year backed up 1bp yesterday (3.46%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

Treasuries are treading water despite the month-end and quarter-end demand. If anything, the market is softer ahead of this morning payroll release on the belief that US economic recovery is strengthening. Bonds are heading for a second consecutive quarterly decline on concern that the Fed may end its QE2 program of debt buying earlier than planned. The market is reluctant to take on big bets ahead of this morning’s employment release.

March 25, 2011

Week in Review-March 25th

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:11 pm

The theme of the week was the ‘Nothing Matters rally’ took a firm grip and promoted riskier trading activity. Global equities saw black and the EUR continued to outperform any bad news, downgrades, periphery Prime Ministers resigning, delaying of EFSF objectives or the irate Irish. The Euro-summit came up short in delivering a ‘grand bargain’. The lack of a firm plan for increasing the lendable size of the EFSF and absence of commitment from Portugal for new measures to secure EFSF funding leave the EUR vulnerable in the near term after key resistance remained intact this past week.


EUROPE

  • Trichet had ‘nothing to add’ testifying on monetary policy before the European Parliament earlier this week. Market interprets the ‘strong vigilance’ language as an indication that a rise in the ECB’s main policy rate is likely, unless something alters the official view between now and April 7.

  • BoE Minutes revealed the MPC again voted 6-3 to leave rates unchanged. Posen continues to prefer increasing QE while Dale and Weale thought a 25bp hike was appropriate and Sentance preferred a 50bp hike. Members see increased uncertainty on the inflation outlook given the oil price developments. A May hike is looking most likely

  • ECB’s Stark said that events in Japan and elsewhere had increased uncertainty but they had not changed the inflation picture, the growth picture and the threats to price stability. This is strong proof that Trichet and Co. will not be changing their appetite for a rate hike anytime soon.

  • Portuguese Prime Minister Socrates, resigned after failing to push through additional austerity cuts he promised the rest of the Europe two-weeks ago. Elections are scheduled for May.

  • Moody’s cuts 30 Spanish Banks ratings.

  • Euro-zone flash PMI’s showed moderation in manufacturing but improvement in services (manufacturing- 57.7 from 59.0 in February).

  • UK retail sales came in surprisingly weak with a 1% drop in February. The trend remains disappointing with some negative impact from the January VAT hike.

  • S&P downgrades Portugal to BBB, following Fitch downgrade. Portuguese yield to Bund spreads wider, reinforcing market expectations that access to EFSF funding will be inevitable.

  • German Ifo business climate indicator was lower in March (111.1), following nine months of consecutive improvements and an upward revision to February and keep the ECB’s plan to normalize interest rates credible.

Americas

  • US sales of previously owned homes dropped more than forecasted (-9.6%, m/m, to +4.88m annualized units last month). Median buying price managed to decline to its lowest level in nine-years (-1.1% to $156k). Months’ supply jumped to +8.6-months of listed product, up from +7.6 in the previous month.

  • US treasury announced that it was selling its $142b MBS (beginning ‘their’ unwinding of QE1). Some will view this as a form of tightening and a supposedly positive move for the dollar. However, this is ‘NOT’ the big Fed program. The Treasury portfolio is about a tenth the size of the Fed’s. The Fed still has some ways to go before announcing its own exit strategy.

  • US house prices fell -0.3% in January according to the FHFA. The Richmond Fed manufacturing activity index fell to 20 from 25 which still indicates very strong activity given the average is only 0.4.

  • Dallas Fed Fisher said the US recovery was gathering momentum and needs no further support (no QE3), and Cleveland’s Pianalto believes the recovery was modest (it’s actually strong – ISM at highest in 27-years) and that rising inflation pressures were temporary.

  • Canadian retail sales declined -0.3% in January from the previous month. The market had been expecting an increase of +1%. Ex-autos and the print came in flat. In a separate report, the country’s leading-indicators index rose in February the fastest in nine months (+0.8%), led by gains in stock prices and ‘a turnaround in manufacturing’.

  • Canada’s government faces the prospect of falling this week after opposition parties declined to back the government’s budget earlier in the week. Thus far, markets view elections as a non-issue for the currency. The most likely outcome of an election will be a status quo return of another Conservative minority government.

  • US durable goods orders unexpectedly plummeted last month (-0.9% vs. market expectations of +1.5%). For a sector that has been driving the US economy to date, it is worrisome. A bright spot was inventories climbing +0.9% and unfilled orders, a sign of future demand increasing to +0.4%.

  • US weekly claims continue to hold below that psychological +400k watermark (+382k vs. +387k). The headline print inched a tad lower, down-5k, to levels last seen in the pre-Lehman crash.

  • Bernanke will begin holding four press briefings a year. Betting that by holding press conferences he will provide clarity about monetary policy and disrupt financial markets.

  • US economy grew at a +3.1% pace in the fourth quarter, revised from +2.8%, led by a jump in consumer spending.

  • Dallas Fed Fisher states that liquidity is in excess and maintains his hawkish tone, while Atlanta’s Lockhart still sees the current policy stance as appropriate, thinking the recent spike is short term inflation measure will not persist.

  • March Michigan sentiment fell to 67.5, lowest level in a year, from a preliminary 68.2.

ASIA

  • Japanese trade surplus widened to JPY556bn in February from JPY289bn in January, led by a +4.4% m/m rebound in exports. Markets would prefer to focus on the March trade data and expect exports to fall due to the disruption from the earthquake.

  • Japan’s MoF released the latest data on international transactions in securities. The week following the earthquake, Japanese investors were net buyers of foreign bonds and notes. There was little evidence of significant transfer payment inflows or repatriation flows

  • Central bank intervention in Asia appears to be holding KRW, INR, TWD and PHP back for now.

WEEK AHEAD

  • The US kick starts the week with Pending home sales, supported by Consumer Confidence numbers and the Swiss Economic barometer.
  • Down under, we get Building approvals and Retail Sales out of Australia followed by the Kiwi business confidence index.
  • In the UK we see Current account data, manufacturing PMI and the Nationwide and Halifax HPI releases.
  • Canada is quite, only reporting GDP mid-week
  • On the labor front, the US gives us ADP non-farm, weekly claims and finishes the week with the highly anticipated Non-Farm Payroll data.
  • Japan reports the Tankan Manufacturing index, while China releases its Manufacturing PMI

March 17, 2011

Oil, Food Prices Push US Consumer Costs Higher

A 0.5 percent increase in the Consumer Price Index drove the cost of living higher in the US in February. Food prices and fuel costs led the surge.

“The headline number is being driven by the usual suspects — energy and food,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “Strip those out and inflation is relatively subdued. Businesses are going to have a difficult time passing on the higher costs because consumers are still price-sensitive.”

Source: Bloomberg

March 4, 2011

Week in Review-March 4th

The EUR continues to outperform the dollar as investors interpret the ECB’s view to oil price shocks as inflationary events requiring a tighter monetary policy, in contrast to the Fed and the BOE, who are focusing on the deflationary impact. Trichet has followed in the hawkish footsteps of his coworkers and plied the EUR with enough ammo to dominate the non-inflationary Bernanke effect. The ECB will take the fight to inflation, maybe as early as next month. With the Libyan situation showing little signs of improvement and with the sovereigns continuing to weigh on the dollar, safe heaven trading strategies are the only option in this current environment. Below, we have some of the highlights of the week.


EUROPE

  • Fine Gael wins Irish election and is in coalition talks with Labour. Victory will give them a clear mandate to try to renegotiate its EU/IMF bailout package.

  • Euro area January CPI was revised down to + 2.3%, y/y from flash estimate. Core-CPI was also a tenth below consensus. Market continues to see elevated risks of a hawkish shift from the ECB.

  • Euro manufacturing PMI’s continued to surprise to the upside, with particular strength in Ireland and Italy, driven by the forward looking components. Greece remained the weak spot amongst the periphery. Euro area was left unchanged at 59.

  • Swiss PMI and 4th Q GDP showed surprised strength. GDP grew +0.9%, q/q, while the PMI bounced to 63.5 (highest level in six-months). Strong external demand from Germany and Asia is pulling the economy along despite CHF overvaluation. No hawkish rhetoric is expected at this months SNB meeting.

  • UK PMI was flat last month, 61.5. New orders moderated, but employment hit a fresh high of 61.7 from 59. The 2011 releases show a solid recovery in the UK manufacturing sector in 1st Q and supports the hawkish camp at the MPC. King continues to send distinctly dovish signals that ‘raising rates to make a gesture is self defeating’. Market is pricing a hike in May.

  • UK services PMI fell to 52.6 from 54.5, m/m. Analysts view the softness as more of a technical reversion to trend after the weather-induced volatility in December and January.

  • Euro-zone registered strong increases in services (56.8) and composite PMI’s (58.2) for February, but below the preliminary estimates. Strong services gains were driven by France and Italy. The peripheries saw substantial gains in Ireland and Spain. Services PMI’s coupled with the firm manufacturing PMI’s point to robust growth in the Euro region.

Americas

  • US consumers are hoarding their stimulus. Consumer spending disappointed with a +0.2% gain. Offsetting this disappointment is income jumping +1%, more than double the expected pace.

  • Strong proof for the US housing markets weakness was pending home sales falling for a second consecutive month in January (-2.8% to 88.9). Even the revisions went deeper, with December falling into negative territory (-3.2%) from its original positive print (+2%).

  • February’s Chicago PMI print of 71.2 was the highest reading in 23-years, led by a surge in production to 78.2 from 73.7. This release is hot on the heels from the January ISM manufacturing index, and the Empire and Philly Fed surveys for February and providing more proof that manufacturing is picking up in the 1st Q, in part on a need to build inventories.

  • Surprisingly strong Canadian 4th Q GDP of +3.3% vs. +3% expected and an upward revision to the 3rd Q print to +1.8% from +1% pushed the loonie to new three years high outright.

  • US January ISM numbers expanded at its fastest pace in seven-years (61.4 vs. 60.8), as factories added workers and pumped up production, continuing the momentum for their expansion.

  • US construction spending fell for a second-consecutive month in January (-0.7% vs. -1.6%). Builders have had trouble getting finance and even with the tighter credit conditions, demand for credit in some places remains weak.

  • Bernanke will not be tightening monetary policy until he is more confident that US recovery can stand on its own. ‘Once we see the economy is in a self sustaining recovery and employment is beginning to improve and labor markets are improving and inflation is stable and approaching +2% or so….at that point we will begin withdrawing’. That being said, he is aware of the risk that the Fed will act too slowly and allow inflation to get controlled.

  • The BoC held rates steady at +1%. Governor Carney expressed his concern about the strength of the loonie ‘the export sector continues to face considerable challenges from the effects of the persistent strength in the Canadian dollar and Canada’s poor relative productivity performance’. The new reality is a Canadian dollar at or close to parity as the economy adjusts to this paradigm.

  • ADP Private Payrolls rose +217k last month, up from a revised +189k.

  • Fed’s Beige Book suggests that overall ‘economic activity continued to expand at a modest to moderate pace in January and early February’ and that price pressures are increasing. All the districts recorded ‘solid’ growth in manufacturing and retail sales increased in all districts.

  • US weekly claims fell by -20k to +368k, the lowest level in nearly two-years. The less volatile four-week-moving-average now stands at +388k.

  • US ISM non-manufacturing was not much of a surprise, coming in at 59.7 last month, just above market expectations. However, it’s the strongest reading since August 2005. The headline print is proof that the service growth appears to be finally entering a ‘self-sustaining’ pattern.

  • US job market rebounded last month, unemployment rate fell to 8.9%, lowest level in two-years. NFP rose +192k as private sector added +222k new jobs. The January number was revised to show an increase of +63k from a previous estimate of +36k. The Fed still expects unemployment to range from +7.5% to +8% at the end of 2012 as the economy only slowly regains the 8.75m jobs lost.

  • US January factory orders reported a strong +3.1% increase. The mixed data (strong non-durables and weak durables) remains consistent with strength in the above manufacturing surveys.

  • Canadian Ivey PMY continues to express extreme volatility rising to 69.3 last month from 41.4 in January. The correlation between PMI and total remains weak. Market perhaps should be looking at a six-month average.

ASIA

  • NZD Confidence rose to 34.5 last month – a seven-month high – from 29.5 in January.

  • Japan industrial output rose a weaker-than-expected +2.4%, m/m (+4% expected). Retail sales (seasonally adjusted) rose +4.1%, m/m, vs. +2.7%. Manufacturing PMI rose for the fourth-consecutive month to 52.9 in February, with the new orders and export orders again rising significantly. JPY remains very much a play on the US rate outlook and risk aversion trading strategies.

  • Chinese PMI data provided little excitement and little new information. Headline was in line with expectations at 52.2 in January. Analysts are calling for growth moderation and do not expect a change in monetary policy from Beijing any time soon.

  • Dovish comments from New Zealand’s PM Key this week. He said that a RBNZ rate cut priced in by markets for March was in line with his expectations given the economic impact of the recent Christchurch earthquake. Market is pricing a 25bp RBNZ cut on the 10th March.

  • Australian 4th Q GDP was weaker than expected +2.7%, y/y vs. +2.8%. The data still point to higher policy rates and AUD appreciation medium term. Analysts continue to anticipate a strong positive uplift this quarter despite severe flooding and cyclones. The RBA noted that mildly restrictive rates are appropriate. Do not expect them to get too far ahead of the RBNZ.

  • Australia reported a -15.9%, m/m, fall in building approvals in January. Market continues to look beyond January data severely impacted by the floods.

  • China’s non-manufacturing PMI fell to 44.1 last month from 56.4 and inline with seasonal patterns. The PBoC hiking 1-year lending, deposit rates +25bp and reserve requirement +50bp in February has also weighed on consumer sentiment.

WEEK AHEAD

  • Down-under will provide us with the job situation in Australia and a Kiwi rate announcement. RBNZ is expected to ease
  • Canada has housing and building permits, ending the week with trade and employment
  • Inflation indicators come from the Swiss and Chinese.
  • BoE will keep us on our toes mid-week with their MPC rate statement
  • US give us Trade, claims, and will end the week with retail sales data

September 27, 2010

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