Forex Blog

February 3, 2012

US Unemployment Falls to 8.3%

Friday’s Non-Farm Payroll indicates that 243,000 jobs were added in January marking the greatest single-month gain since last April. The influx helped lower the national unemployment rate to 8.3 percent from 8.5 percent the month before.

The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the final three months of 2011, quickening from 1.8 percent in the third quarter. However, the rebuilding of stocks by businesses accounted for two-thirds of the rise, setting the economy up for a slower growth pace this quarter.

Source: Reuters

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 4th Quarter Growth Falls Below Expectations

Despite expanding at the fastest rate in over a year, U.S. 4th quarter growth fell short of the 3.0 percent expansion economists had predicted. Still, the 2.8 percent annualized increase was a strong improvement over the 1.8 percent recorded in the previous quarter.

However, there are concerns that given the main areas responsible for driving growth for the quarter, the rate of expansion cannot be sustained.

“The economy ended 2011 on a fairly positive note, but the composition of growth in the last quarter is not favorable for growth early this year,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

Growth in the fourth quarter got a temporary boost from the rebuilding of business inventories, which was the fastest since the third quarter of 2010, after they declined in the third-quarter for the first time since late 2009.

Source: Reuters

Japan CPI and Retail Sales Fall

Japan’s Core Consumer Price Index declined 0.1 % The figure came after Tokyo’s CPI 0.4% decline a month earlier. Coupled with a 1.2% drop in Retail Sales due to a strong yen that makes Japanese exports less competitive and imports more attractive signal a reduced wage expectation from the net exporting nation.

The Bank of Japan and the government concede that the economy is in a lull, and they could come under increasing pressure to support it with currency intervention and monetary policy easing as Europe’s debt crisis weighs on external demand.

Auto and Machinery sales had record losses in 2011 even though they recovered by 2.5% in December.

Bloomberg

US Yields Move Ahead of GDP

With little excitement in the currency markets O/N, US benchmark yields have backed up a tad ahead of this mornings US GDP report. Treasuries have managed to snap a two-day rally that sent five-year yields to a record low yesterday (+0.75% intraday) as the market expects the report to show that US growth quickened in the last quarter of 2011 (+3% vs. +1.8%, q/q).

Yields along the curve are trading higher for different reasons. The shorter end, out to 5’s, has seen more profit taking by market participants, one day after Bernanke and company pledged to keep short-term interest rates “exceptionally low,” at least until late 2014. At this weeks FOMC meeting, policy makers indicated that they are extending their low rate policy for another 18-months. Currently, futures prices see lower odds of an early 2014 hike, before the meeting it was at +20%. The benchmark yield, 10-year product, trades relatively steady at +1.97%, up from this weeks low print of +1.915% after the Fed announcement and from +2.09% at the end of last week. It’s in the long end that has led the decline, 30-year bonds trade at +3.13% (up +4bps) on bets that the Fed’s decision will spur inflation. Like most initial market moves, price movements seem to get over extended.

A stronger US number this morning should encourage further swapping out of the relative safety of US government debt into more corporate product, where yields and returns are more attractive. The Euro sovereign debt crisis and the threat of a US slowdown combined to give fixed-income a +9.8% return last year (the most in three years). So far this year, treasuries have handed investors a -0.2% loss through yesterday. The Fed’s longer term low policy rate should provide further short term support for equities.

At yesterday’s $29b 7-year auction, the final treasury issue of the week, brought a record low yield, however, it was higher than the market expected, indicating buyers’ reluctance to step in at current levels. The recent run in prices, no matter what is occurring at the Euro debt debate table, US product is a tad rich at current levels despite the Fed’s mandate. The mid-2014 language will help the belly of the curve longer term, however, at these levels, market participants seem to expect stronger data short term to trump current levels.

The Nikkei closed at 8,841 down -8. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,563 up +24; the FTSE (UK) trades at 5,787 down -8. US Dow futures remained in positive territory currently trading at 12,708 up+24.

    August 3, 2011

    Bank of Japan next, after NFP?

    Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:33 am

    The Swiss had to try something. Intervention has proven too expensive, so why not a surprise rate cut? The SNB loosening their monetary policy this morning (less than 0.25%) caught the market off-guard. Dealers had been focusing on the BoJ to be the first to proactively protect its currency value. What will their actions achieve in the short term, apart from devaluing an excessively expensive currency? Perhaps just provide us with better levels to own a safe heaven currency.

    Japan may now be prompted to follow the Swiss, and seriously consider easing their own monetary policy. Both safe heaven currencies appeal have been enhanced by the US’s debt woes and too a certain extent, by the loss of US credibility in dealing with the debt ceiling impasse. The market is beginning to believe that the BoJ will need to intervene after NFP data on Friday. Central Banks will always look to maximize their intervention affect. It will be too late if the headline payroll print comes in negative!

    With the US debt ceiling impasse looked after for now, we get no default, but the bad news, there is a ‘growth’ tradeoff. Congress had to agree on fiscal contraction that will obviously weigh on growth. Before this negative equity run in the US, near record corporate earnings had been supporting global bourses. However, with a sickly housing sector, individual debt burdens, and high cost for food and energy, the income generated by the US consumer is vital. Investors require a significant improvement in the US labor market to get consumers spending again and create real-GDP growth. Today we get the first of this weeks job release that will further set the tone for Friday’s all important NFP print. Without the labor sector improving, the Fed will have to dust off the ‘shelved’ QE3 package. It will require implementation soon.

    The US$ is stronger in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 10 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in another ‘volatile’ session.

    Forex heatmap

    Moody’s reaffirmed its US AAA rating with a negative outlook after President Obama signed the US debt ceiling bill into law yesterday. S&P has yet to comment, but previously, this agency saw a higher risk it could downgrade the US to AA+. It’s worth noting and going alone, is China’s credit rating agency, Dagong Global. They announced a downgrade of the US sovereign rating to A from A+.

    Yesterday’s US data was in danger of getting lost in the mix as different global trading strategies were been aggressively implemented in the different asset classes. The US PCE report was weaker than expected. Last week’s quarterly growth data gave the market a ‘head’s up’, indicating that the core-price index for June (+0.1% vs. +0.25) and real-spending were expected to be soft. Digging deeper, analysts noted that the ‘miss’ was concentrated in the final month of the quarter. There were no additional surprises with the usual suspects, food and energy prices. The downside surprise was concentrated in the ‘imputed prices’.

    From a different perspective, the 3-month annualized growth rate of the market based core-index accelerated to +2.8% for the official core-index. This would include ‘synthetic estimates for unobservable prices such as the shadow prices for bundled financial services’. Some analysts believe that the market-based index is a better measure of the trend in prices, however, to date, the Fed uses the official version as its featured measure of core-inflation. Consumption spending also came in below expectations and real-PCE turned out to be flat in June after having falling -0.1% in each of the first two months of the quarter. Even with an expected increase in spending in July, this leaves the level of spending on a very weak trajectory at the beginning of the third-quarter. The lack of jobs combined with wage gains that have failed to keep pace with inflation raise the risk of further cuts in consumer spending. The consumer is the Fed’s go to variable and accounts for +70% of the US economy. Markets will now begin to price new stimulus measures from the Fed now that growth remains poor. Perhaps it should be called QE3!

    The dollar is lower against the EUR +0.87%, GBP +0.58% and JPY +0.02% and higher against the CHF -1.88%. The commodity currencies are mixed this morning, CAD +0.25% and AUD -0.24%.

    The loonie has got caught in the global growth tailwind. The phenomena that tends to affect risk and rate sensitive currencies that little bit more. However, the CAD seems to be outperforming most of its larger trading partners in this time of uncertainty. Not unlike the CHF and JPY, there is a basket of commodity driven currencies that seem to be wearing their ‘safer heaven hat’ during these volatile times. This can be measured by the depth of the loonies trading range versus the dollar, its largest trading partner where it ply’s just over +70% of its trade.

    The rampant currency has taken a reprieve like most of its trading partners have done outright against the dollar. Recent moves have been too quick, too strong and too far, despite the currency continuing to perform well on the crosses. Canada’s shortened trading week will focus on a couple of Cbanks interest rate decisions and a North American employment release this Friday. Canada is expected to add another +20k new jobs and to keep the unemployment rate unchanged at +7.4%. However, the currency will be at the mercy of the NFP report. The market remains a tentative buyer of CAD on US rallies (0.9565).

    For a second consecutive day, the AUD has been trading under pressure after the RBA earlier this week kept its cash rate unchanged, citing global ‘uncertainty’. In his communiqué yesterday, Governor Stevens signaled a tightening bias once the world outlook improves. Global data of late is pointing towards a ‘double-dip’ recession scenario. In the futures market, the pricing of an RBA cut has increased +15bp to +41bp over the next 12-months. While the RBA again pointed to downside risk to the global outlook, it also added that it is concerned about Australia’s medium term inflation outlook. Last weeks inflation data would suggest that there is a greater possibility of an RBA hike rather than ease in the latter half of this year, of course that all depends on world growth. In the short term, there remains better buying of the currency on these deep pullbacks, despite commodity prices remaining vulnerable (1.0762).

    Crude is lower in the O/N session ($93.36 -0.43c). Crude prices declined for a third consecutive day yesterday, completing its longest losing streak in nearly three-months after more disappointing US data showed that consumer spending fell in June. Hot on the heels of Monday’s disappointing ISM manufacturing print provides strong proof that economic expansion is faltering in the US. It seems that consumers are reducing their buying habits in response to a sluggish job creation and higher fuel costs.

    The last EIA report has put commodity prices under pressure after inventories unexpectedly increased. The market had been expecting another drawdown on stocks. However, the EIA reported a data gain of +2.3m barrels to +354m last week. The build should have not been a surprise after the SPR announcement last month. The Energy Department also announced that they will deliver +30.6m barrels of crude oil from the US’s SPR in July and August. Not to be out done, gas inventories rose +1.02m barrels to +213.5m. Stockpiles of distillate fuel (heating oil and diesel) surged +3.39m barrels to +151.8 m, its highest level in three-months. Refineries operated at +88.3% of capacity, down-2% from the prior week and the biggest decline also in three-months.

    Commodity prices can expect to remain volatile on the back of weaker fundamental data ahead of the ‘granddaddy’ of fundamental releases this Friday, NFP.

    For seven months it’s been a safe bet. Gold surged to another new record high this morning, as escalating concern that the global economy is losing momentum spurred demand for the yellow metal as an investment haven. Worries about US growth were compounded yesterday by evidence that consumer spending fell in June and on Monday by disappointing ISM manufacturing data. This has led investors to buy the metal as a store-of-value.

    Year-to-date, the yellow metal has advanced +15%, heading for its eleventh consecutive annual gain. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on pullbacks until proven wrong. There remains a demand for the commodity for insurance purposes as alternative asset classes under perform with many investors receiving margin call ($1,672 +$27.50c).

    The Nikkei closed at 9,637 down-207. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,722 down-75; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,648 down-70. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year eased 13bp yesterday (2.63%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

    Treasuries prices again rallied, pushing 10-year yields to their lowest level in nine-months as US reports showed that consumer spending unexpectedly fell in June, reinforcing speculation the economy is slowing. Last Friday’s softer than anticipated GDP report was the instigator to pushing yields much lower in amongst the US debt ceiling debate. Monday’s ISM figure was certainly a negative surprise, offsetting any of the short lived euphoric final votes on the debt ceiling. Capital markets are already turning its focus away from the debt deal to the global economic deceleration and this Friday’s job report.

    What will the rating agencies think of the deal? Potentially, there is a good chance that the US will be downgraded by a notch by ‘one’ of the agencies. Why? The deal is not the $4t expected and there remains a strong possibility that the “debt ceiling” may not be raised in the future. With so much cash on the sidelines, there are only a few alternatives investment strategies out there, this should provided bids on treasury pull backs.

    OANDA Top 100 Trader StatisticsOANDA Order Book

    Bank of Japan next, after NFP?

    Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:33 am

    The Swiss had to try something. Intervention has proven too expensive, so why not a surprise rate cut? The SNB loosening their monetary policy this morning (less than 0.25%) caught the market off-guard. Dealers had been focusing on the BoJ to be the first to proactively protect its currency value. What will their actions achieve in the short term, apart from devaluing an excessively expensive currency? Perhaps just provide us with better levels to own a safe heaven currency.

    Japan may now be prompted to follow the Swiss, and seriously consider easing their own monetary policy. Both safe heaven currencies appeal have been enhanced by the US’s debt woes and too a certain extent, by the loss of US credibility in dealing with the debt ceiling impasse. The market is beginning to believe that the BoJ will need to intervene after NFP data on Friday. Central Banks will always look to maximize their intervention affect. It will be too late if the headline payroll print comes in negative!

    With the US debt ceiling impasse looked after for now, we get no default, but the bad news, there is a ‘growth’ tradeoff. Congress had to agree on fiscal contraction that will obviously weigh on growth. Before this negative equity run in the US, near record corporate earnings had been supporting global bourses. However, with a sickly housing sector, individual debt burdens, and high cost for food and energy, the income generated by the US consumer is vital. Investors require a significant improvement in the US labor market to get consumers spending again and create real-GDP growth. Today we get the first of this weeks job release that will further set the tone for Friday’s all important NFP print. Without the labor sector improving, the Fed will have to dust off the ‘shelved’ QE3 package. It will require implementation soon.

    The US$ is stronger in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 10 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in another ‘volatile’ session.

    Forex heatmap

    Moody’s reaffirmed its US AAA rating with a negative outlook after President Obama signed the US debt ceiling bill into law yesterday. S&P has yet to comment, but previously, this agency saw a higher risk it could downgrade the US to AA+. It’s worth noting and going alone, is China’s credit rating agency, Dagong Global. They announced a downgrade of the US sovereign rating to A from A+.

    Yesterday’s US data was in danger of getting lost in the mix as different global trading strategies were been aggressively implemented in the different asset classes. The US PCE report was weaker than expected. Last week’s quarterly growth data gave the market a ‘head’s up’, indicating that the core-price index for June (+0.1% vs. +0.25) and real-spending were expected to be soft. Digging deeper, analysts noted that the ‘miss’ was concentrated in the final month of the quarter. There were no additional surprises with the usual suspects, food and energy prices. The downside surprise was concentrated in the ‘imputed prices’.

    From a different perspective, the 3-month annualized growth rate of the market based core-index accelerated to +2.8% for the official core-index. This would include ‘synthetic estimates for unobservable prices such as the shadow prices for bundled financial services’. Some analysts believe that the market-based index is a better measure of the trend in prices, however, to date, the Fed uses the official version as its featured measure of core-inflation. Consumption spending also came in below expectations and real-PCE turned out to be flat in June after having falling -0.1% in each of the first two months of the quarter. Even with an expected increase in spending in July, this leaves the level of spending on a very weak trajectory at the beginning of the third-quarter. The lack of jobs combined with wage gains that have failed to keep pace with inflation raise the risk of further cuts in consumer spending. The consumer is the Fed’s go to variable and accounts for +70% of the US economy. Markets will now begin to price new stimulus measures from the Fed now that growth remains poor. Perhaps it should be called QE3!

    The dollar is lower against the EUR +0.87%, GBP +0.58% and JPY +0.02% and higher against the CHF -1.88%. The commodity currencies are mixed this morning, CAD +0.25% and AUD -0.24%.

    The loonie has got caught in the global growth tailwind. The phenomena that tends to affect risk and rate sensitive currencies that little bit more. However, the CAD seems to be outperforming most of its larger trading partners in this time of uncertainty. Not unlike the CHF and JPY, there is a basket of commodity driven currencies that seem to be wearing their ‘safer heaven hat’ during these volatile times. This can be measured by the depth of the loonies trading range versus the dollar, its largest trading partner where it ply’s just over +70% of its trade.

    The rampant currency has taken a reprieve like most of its trading partners have done outright against the dollar. Recent moves have been too quick, too strong and too far, despite the currency continuing to perform well on the crosses. Canada’s shortened trading week will focus on a couple of Cbanks interest rate decisions and a North American employment release this Friday. Canada is expected to add another +20k new jobs and to keep the unemployment rate unchanged at +7.4%. However, the currency will be at the mercy of the NFP report. The market remains a tentative buyer of CAD on US rallies (0.9565).

    For a second consecutive day, the AUD has been trading under pressure after the RBA earlier this week kept its cash rate unchanged, citing global ‘uncertainty’. In his communiqué yesterday, Governor Stevens signaled a tightening bias once the world outlook improves. Global data of late is pointing towards a ‘double-dip’ recession scenario. In the futures market, the pricing of an RBA cut has increased +15bp to +41bp over the next 12-months. While the RBA again pointed to downside risk to the global outlook, it also added that it is concerned about Australia’s medium term inflation outlook. Last weeks inflation data would suggest that there is a greater possibility of an RBA hike rather than ease in the latter half of this year, of course that all depends on world growth. In the short term, there remains better buying of the currency on these deep pullbacks, despite commodity prices remaining vulnerable (1.0762).

    Crude is lower in the O/N session ($93.36 -0.43c). Crude prices declined for a third consecutive day yesterday, completing its longest losing streak in nearly three-months after more disappointing US data showed that consumer spending fell in June. Hot on the heels of Monday’s disappointing ISM manufacturing print provides strong proof that economic expansion is faltering in the US. It seems that consumers are reducing their buying habits in response to a sluggish job creation and higher fuel costs.

    The last EIA report has put commodity prices under pressure after inventories unexpectedly increased. The market had been expecting another drawdown on stocks. However, the EIA reported a data gain of +2.3m barrels to +354m last week. The build should have not been a surprise after the SPR announcement last month. The Energy Department also announced that they will deliver +30.6m barrels of crude oil from the US’s SPR in July and August. Not to be out done, gas inventories rose +1.02m barrels to +213.5m. Stockpiles of distillate fuel (heating oil and diesel) surged +3.39m barrels to +151.8 m, its highest level in three-months. Refineries operated at +88.3% of capacity, down-2% from the prior week and the biggest decline also in three-months.

    Commodity prices can expect to remain volatile on the back of weaker fundamental data ahead of the ‘granddaddy’ of fundamental releases this Friday, NFP.

    For seven months it’s been a safe bet. Gold surged to another new record high this morning, as escalating concern that the global economy is losing momentum spurred demand for the yellow metal as an investment haven. Worries about US growth were compounded yesterday by evidence that consumer spending fell in June and on Monday by disappointing ISM manufacturing data. This has led investors to buy the metal as a store-of-value.

    Year-to-date, the yellow metal has advanced +15%, heading for its eleventh consecutive annual gain. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on pullbacks until proven wrong. There remains a demand for the commodity for insurance purposes as alternative asset classes under perform with many investors receiving margin call ($1,672 +$27.50c).

    The Nikkei closed at 9,637 down-207. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,722 down-75; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,648 down-70. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year eased 13bp yesterday (2.63%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

    Treasuries prices again rallied, pushing 10-year yields to their lowest level in nine-months as US reports showed that consumer spending unexpectedly fell in June, reinforcing speculation the economy is slowing. Last Friday’s softer than anticipated GDP report was the instigator to pushing yields much lower in amongst the US debt ceiling debate. Monday’s ISM figure was certainly a negative surprise, offsetting any of the short lived euphoric final votes on the debt ceiling. Capital markets are already turning its focus away from the debt deal to the global economic deceleration and this Friday’s job report.

    What will the rating agencies think of the deal? Potentially, there is a good chance that the US will be downgraded by a notch by ‘one’ of the agencies. Why? The deal is not the $4t expected and there remains a strong possibility that the “debt ceiling” may not be raised in the future. With so much cash on the sidelines, there are only a few alternatives investment strategies out there, this should provided bids on treasury pull backs.

    OANDA Top 100 Trader StatisticsOANDA Order Book

    January 28, 2011

    U.S. Consumer Spending on the Rise

    The U.S. economy grew by 0.78 percent in the final quarter of the year to closeout 2010 with a yearly increase of 2.9 percent. This represents the largest annual growth since 2005 and offers further evidence that the recovery is gaining momentum. A breakdown of the results shows that a resurgence in consumer spending helped power the gains with an increase in exports providing additional support.

    For the quarter, consumer spending rose 4.4 percent after a 2.4 percent increase the previous quarter. Holiday sales were up 5.5 percent over 2009 handing retailers their best holiday season in five years.

    Exports jumped 3.4 percent for the quarter with China and other emerging countries providing most of the market. This trend could continue into 2011 as nearly $50 billion in export deals were announced during China’s state visit to Washington earlier this month. The deals involve several American icons including Honeywell, Caterpillar, and Westinghouse.

    Reminders of the recession do remain however. The Labor Department noted that wages and benefits rose 2 percent for the year, and while this is a faster pace than 2009, it is still the second slowest rate of wage growth since records have been kept starting in 1983. As of December, unemployment still remains elevated at 9.4 percent with little hope for significant advancement in the short term. In fact, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said the Fed does not expect meaningful improvement until late in the year.

    The latest unemployment claims report supports the Chairman’s statement. For the week ending January 22nd, the number of new applications for jobless benefits exceeded projections by 51,000 to a total of 454,000 new claims for the week. Until companies are convinced that the economy is well and truly on its way to recovery, expect employment to continue to lag.

    January 25, 2011

    EUR sympathizes with Sterling

    No one really cares that the Spanish 3 and 6-month Bill auction saw a huge improvement over December, with its bid to cover ratio doubling. It’s the fourth quarter UK GDP (-0.5% vs. +0.5%) print that’s caused Cable to plummet and the EUR to sympathize. The extreme cold weather, the unquantifiable factor, had the quarter reflecting a full 1% deviation from the median forecasts. Sterling has found some buyers, but continues to look heavy, with the currency expected to dominate trading even further the longer it cannot find traction. Even with the double-dip fear revived, initial market reaction has overshot the mark. Dealers expect better levels to own EUR/GBP and sell Cable outright.

    The US$ is stronger the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 14 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘volatile’ O/N session.

    Forex heatmap

    Today’s US consumer confidence release is the first of a slew of data that is expected to begin a strong week for USD. Combined with large net Treasury issuance, this week’s data could push US yields higher, benefiting the currency. Some of the luster has been taken away by the dismal UK release this morning. Markets are calling for double-dip recession in the UK. The dollar may shine because of uncertainty and not necessarily on the back of stronger data.

    The USD$ is higher against the EUR -0.42%, GBP -1.30%, CHF -0.10% and JPY -0.20%. The commodity currencies are weaker this morning, CAD -0.14% and AUD -0.27%. The loonie traded under pressure yesterday, especially on the crosses, but in a tight range ahead of this morning’s CPI data. Oil rhetoric from OPEC members had the CAD trading skittishly in a tight range. The fear of China extending a tighter monetary policy has also had commodity sensitive currencies on the back foot. An unexpected Canadian November retail sales print on Friday (+1.3%) gave the CAD some positive temporary momentum that ended up being an ideal opportunity for some speculative longs to offload their positions. Year-to-date, the loonie has benefited by association with stronger US data. The BOC dovish position, after keeping rates on hold at +1% last week, has also helped to push the loonie to back off from its strongest level in two-years as the market digests rates being on hold and an economic recovery being threatened by a European fiscal crisis. Investors will see if the dovish BOC stance is justified after this morning inflation numbers. If so, expect dealers to be pricing rate hikes even further out the curve (0.9963).

    The AUD immediate reaction was to fall -0.5% after the release of the CPI data showing headline inflation falling to +2.7%, y/y from +2.8% in the fourth quarter, vs. a market expectation of +3%. Since then, it has managed to claw back some of this losses, but not with much conviction, especially with softer commodity prices widespread. Market pricing of RBA rate hikes for the next 12 months fell to 28bp from 35bp. Weaker inflation and the devastation caused by floods will very likely delay further RBA hikes beyond the first quarter. Futures dealers expect the RBA to resume its tightening bias in the second half of the year, given rising wages, construction and housing related costs and energy and food prices. Last weeks data out of its largest trading partner, China, has the market convinced that the PBOC will move to hike their reserve rates. Their actions will reduce further the demand for the commodity sensitive growth currency. Earlier this week, Treasury Secretary Swann stated that the country faces an ‘enormous’ economic fallout from floods. ‘Queensland’s rapid development has meant that its economic performance has a much bigger influence over our national economy’. With growth expected to slow this quarter, a tightening policy would not be the prudent course of action. Currently, the market pricing of rate cuts (4.75%) for the RBA February policy meeting and of rate hikes later in the year remains broadly unchanged. Offers again appear at parity (0.9937).

    Crude is lower in the O/N session ($87.60 -27c). Crude prices never had a chance at taking on the $90 level yesterday, especially after the Saudi Oil Minister indicated that OPEC may increase production levels to meet increasing global fuel demand. His comments have certainly put a medium term cap on the black stuff. He indicated that global demand was expected to increase around +2% this year. Last week the IEA raised its estimates for this year’s global demand for a fourth consecutive month as the economic recovery seems to be gathering momentum. They anticipate that global consumption will increase by +1.69%. Last week’s US inventory report provided another excuse to offload oil contracts. Crude stockpiles increased +2.62m barrels to +335.7m. Not being left behind were gas supplies rising +4.4m to +227.7m barrels. It’s worth noting that the four week gas demand was +2%, y/y, higher and averaged +9m barrels a day. US refineries ran at +83% of total capacity, a drop of -3.4%. The supplies of distillates (diesel and heating oil) rose by +1m to +165.8m barrels vs. an expected weekly increase of +900k barrels. OPEC believes that supply and demand are ‘in balance’. There is far more oil in storage, more fuel capacity and more idle oil wells to limit a stronger market rally in the medium term. The commodity is expected to test key support levels around $85.

    After capping its third consecutive weekly loss on speculation that borrowing costs will rise as the US economy recovers, gold prices are again piggybacking their two month lows with some bottom feeders happy to want to own some as global equities rally, eroding the metals appeal. Even the announcement by the Central Bank of Russia planning to buy 100 metric tons of gold to replenish their reserves has done little to spur frantic bullish buying now that key support levels are being tested. To date, buying has been modest in the commodity, off to its worst start in 14-years and down -5.7%, year-to-date, only weeks after recording a +30% return. There is serious discussion being given to whether the gold market has peaked or if it is simply making a short-term correction. Recommendations by hedge funds to cut long positions last week, has the lemming one directional trade firmly eyeing an exit door. Aiding the metal is the Euro sovereign-debt crisis and this despite the Euro-finance minister’s pledge to strengthen a ‘safety net for debt-strapped countries’. On a macro level, analysts expect the losses may be limited on concern that inflation will accelerate. Technical analysts believe that gold ($1,327 -$17.20) will outshine other precious metals in 2011 and peak somewhere above $1,600 in 2012. Current trading however does not feel like it.

    The Nikkei closed at 10,464 up+119. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,080 up+13; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,924 down-20. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year eased 2bp on yesterday (3.40%) and is little changed in the O/N session. The belly of the US curve printed six-week high yields last week, as economic data in the US and the Euro-zone boosted speculation that a global recovery is building momentum which dampens the need for government debt as an alternate for safe heaven requirements. The 2’s/Bond spread tightened for a second consecutive day ahead of today’s $35 short-bond issue and on speculation that the increases in long-bond rates cannot be sustained (+393bp). In total this week, the Treasury will auction $99b of new debt which should require dealers to make more room to take down product and flatten the curve. Stronger fundamentals are creating a choppy trading environment with medium term support levels for 10’s becoming questionable (+3.50%).

    August 6, 2010

    Canada loses jobs first time this year

    Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 12:19 pm

    Canada unexpectedly lost jobs in July and the country’s unemployment rate increased because of a drop in full-time jobs at schools and in the finance industry.

    Employment fell by 9,300 jobs in July, the first decline this year, following a 93,200 increase in June, Statistics Canada said today in Ottawa. The jobless rate rose to 8 percent, from 7.9 percent. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted 12,500 new jobs and a jobless rate of 7.9 percent, according to the median of 22 estimates.

    Canada’s economic growth is slowing this quarter to about half the pace in the first three months of the year when low mortgage rates and temporary tax credits sparked spending, according to the Bank of Canada. The central bank last month said the risks to the recovery are “elevated” in part because consumer spending could slow more than expected.

    Canada’s economy grew at a 6.1 percent annualized first- quarter pace. Canada “is recovering, although we aren’t out of the woods yet,” Finance Minister Jim Flaherty told reporters yesterday in Ottawa.

    Bloomberg

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