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Sunday, September 20, 2009

Forex European Preview 08.06.2009

Interest rate decisions from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England headline the economic calendar in European hours. For the ECB, the name of the game is deflation. Consumer prices have now registered in negative for two months straight and are likely to continue along the same trajectory with producer prices shrinking at a record annual rate of -6.6%. Downward price pressure born of overall economic weakness is being compounded by a buoyant currency, which has boosted the Euro’s purchasing power and thereby helped to drive costs downward. Needless to say, entrenching expectations of lower prices in the future threaten to commit the Euro Zone to prolonged stagnation as consumers and businesses wait for the best possible bargain and perpetually delay spending and investment. Up to this point, Jean-Claude Trichet and company have focused primarily on offering banks unlimited borrowing ability, including an unprecedented 442 billion euro in 12-month bank loans, in the hopes that this would be passed on to the overall economy to both stimulate growth and put a floor on prices by making money cheaper. So far, this has not worked: although interbank borrowing costs have stayed well below 0.5% for over two months, this has not filtered through into the economy at large. Indeed, loans to Euro Zone businesses and households grew just 1.5% in June, the lowest since records began in 1991. European banks have yet to come to terms with an estimated $1.1 trillion in unrealized sub-prime related losses (courtesy of the IMF), a hit that could be compounded by losses from default or devaluation in some of the newly-minted EU member states, and so may be perfectly content to sit on the money they have borrowed for the time being. The ECB has also flirted with the direct approach, putting in place a 60 billion euro bond-buying scheme. Although it is too early to tell for certain, this seems too small of a program to have any meaningful impact. Bottom line, greater monetary easing is clearly needed if deflation is to be averted. A rate cut is probably too much to ask for and would be largely a moot point considering the bank has clearly allowed real overnight lending rates to drift much lower than the 1% target level. Rather, traders will be watching Jean-Claude Trichet’s post-announcement Q&A session for any clues that policymakers are open to expanding upon the current asset-buying program. The likelihood of such an outcome hinges entirely on the ECB’s perception of the moderate stabilization in leading economic indicators over recent months: if the bank believes that current trends could lead to a sustainable recovery, a wait-and-see approach is likely; conversely, if the bank sees the current environment as a temporary reprieve courtesy of government spending and (overly) optimistic financial markets, additional measures will be taken. Given the ECB’s perennially slow-moving approach to monetary policy, we tend to lead towards the former outcome, although the latter surely seems more prudent.

Turning to the BOE, an actual change in benchmark borrowing costs is effectively off the table, but traders will be closely watching to see if policymakers choose to ramp up quantitative easing measures after promising to “review the scale” of the program for the August rate decision in conjunction with the release of their quarterly inflation report. Despite the BOE’s apparent optimism and signs of stabilization in some leading indicators, economic growth disappointed in the second quarter, bolstering dovish arguments from the likes of the British Chamber of Commerce and the Shadow Monetary Policy Committee (a group of independent economists that meet at the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs). Further, as has been aptly noted by DailyFX Strategist Terri Belkas, the BOE has not done a whole lot better than the ECB having largely failed to affect lending to the real economy. Indeed, loans to non-financial firms fell by a record 14.7 billion pounds while the pace of money supply growth fell for the first time in close to a decade in the second quarter. The question facing the central bank now is whether they believe expanding the QE program by 25 billion pounds will make much of a difference to the program’s success considering 125 billion pounds have already been put in use (a total of 150 billion was authorized by the government). On balance, policymakers could make use of the recent upswing in sentiment as cover to retire the program and wait for the positive vibes now swirling around the world economy to become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Unfortunately, we are of the view that this will prove to be wishful thinking in the coming months as the flow of government cash dries up while equity markets are shown to be grossly overvalued and begin to retreat. Indeed, stocks finished July trading at the highest level relative to earnings since October 2003, which seems more than a little overdone considering the kind of revenue growth that can be expected in a year when real global output is set to shrink for the first time in the postwar period. How the BOE will deal with such an outcome remains a mystery for the time being.


Asia Session Highlights

New Zealand’s Unemployment Rate surged more than economists expected, rising a full percentage point through the second quarter to register at 6.0%, the highest in nearly 10 years. On balance, the report in and of itself does not introduce a significant change to the near-term outlook for the smaller antipodean nation. Indeed, the central bank noted in June and reaffirmed last week that the labor market is projected to continue deteriorating “well into 2010”. The release is significant in terms of its implications for wage growth and thereby the overall trajectory of inflation. Private wages rose at the slowest pace in 9 years in the second quarter and outsized gains in the jobless rate point to more of the same ahead, creating a supportive environment for the central bank to lower benchmark interest rates. As we noted in this week’s New Zealand Dollar weekly forecast, a rate cut is the next logical step to help decouple the domestic currency from risk trends and check its recent appreciation, which has weighed on exports and thereby “derailed” the economy according to Prime Minister John Key as well as “complicated” the necessary adjustments to New Zealand’s public and current account deficits according to Fitch, a ratings agency.

Turning to Australia, headline labor market figures surprised to the upside: the Unemployment Rate held steady at 5.8% in July, marking only the second time that the figure did not rise since August of last year. The details of the report are not nearly as rosy as the headline outcome seems, however. Part-time hiring accounted for all of the 32.2K net jobs gain in July; indeed, full-time employment fell by 16K. Looking at the longer-term picture of employment trends, full time positions have fallen -189.4K in the 12 months from July 2008 while part time jobs have gained a nearly equivalent 190.7K over the same period. Simply put, this means that over the past year, around 190,000 Australians were transferred from full-time to part-time employment and thereby from higher to lower wages. Needless to say, this does not bode well for consumer spending and by extension for overall economic growth.

FX Market: British Pound Plummets, FX Traders Prefer Australian Dollars

In a surprise move early in the New York morning, members of the Bank of England elected to expand its quantitative easing program following its scheduled interest rate decision. Although there was latent speculation that the measure would surface, for the most part, traders were expecting no real changes to QE with recent pickups in economic data. According to the release this morning, the Bank of England saw it necessary to pump another 50 billion pounds in to the economy to the tune of 175 GBP billion. A good plan to continually increase liquidity and credit in the country, the measure will likely produce more harm than good. As before, the more cash the MPC pumps into the economy, the higher the likelihood that the underlying currency will come under selling pressure. The more pounds that are available in the market, the lower the price will fall. Moreover, the increased supply of cash will likely lead to further inflationary pressures down the road, eroding potential growth in the near term. The sentiment can already be seen in today’s market action as the GBPUSD currency pair lost a whopping 150 pips in a matter of 5 minutes following the announcement. Once trading above the $1.7000 figure, the British pound is now trading about 220 pips lower (as of this writing, the pair is trading at $1.6771). A necessary evil, the chosen expansion will push British leaders of monetary policy to teeter a fine line when it comes to an exit plan.

Traders Profit On Cable Drop

Traders Profit On Cable Drop

Aussie, Aussie, Aussie

On the other side of the world, the Australian dollar received a nice lift on the day. The currency rose to as high as 0.8460 against the US dollar following an employment report that showed actual job growth. Optimistic, the report illustrates a more resilient Aussie economy as most other trading partners have shown continual weakness in labor reports. But job growth alone didn’t help the underlying currency. Traders now looking ahead to a yearend interest rate increase were supporting the Aussie bid as a growing consensus now believes that 25 basis points are in the cards for the overnight cash rate. According to market sentiment, there is now an 80 percent chance that central bankers will opt to raise interest rates in the fourth quarter. And why not? Economic data has been nothing but positive for the land down under. Consumer and business confidence continues to remain relatively supported as retail sales kept a 4-month winning streak going until just recently. The streak ended as sales dropped 1.4 percent in the month of June. As a result, given the recent spark in interest rate speculation, longer term prospects continue to remain optimistic for the underlying Aussie dollar.

Euro Zone Industrial Orders to Grow Most in 17 Months (Forex European Preview)

The economic calendar is decidedly bare in European hours, with June’s Euro Zone Industrial New Orders report the only item on the docket. Expectations call for orders to rise 1.6%, the largest monthly increase in 17 months. Manufacturing figures across most key markets have shown signs of improvement in recent months on the back of aggressive government stimulus measures (often focused on infrastructure projects) and widespread inventory restocking efforts. Still, the long-term trend in orders is far from encouraging: the annualized rate of decline is set to print at -28.6%, a reading well within the range of values noted since the beginning of the year. A meaningful, sustained return to growth will require the re-emergence of private demand in the Euro Zone’s key export markets, an outcome that seems unlikely considering nearly all of them (excluding Russia) are expected to see unemployment rise at least through 2010, trimming incomes and discouraging spending.


Asia Session Highlights

With no significant economic data on the calendar, currency markets took a muted tone in overnight trading. A strong equities rally failed to translate into meaningful FX volatility: Asian shares rose on last Friday’s US Existing Home Sales and optimistic comments from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, both of which have already been priced into exchange rates.

Currency options markets showed the Australian Dollar rally that began in early March may be running out of steam. Options to sell the Aussie next month rose to cost 2.32% more than to buy the currency at current rates, showing traders were willing to be the biggest premium to protect against a drop in the Australian unit since mid-February. Technical positioning is supportive of a bearish scenario.

Forex European Preview 08.27.2009

The preliminary estimate of Germany’s EU-harmonized Consumer Price Index is expected to show that inflation fell at an annual pace of -0.4% in August, a slight improvement over the -0.7% result registered in the previous month. Still, the bottom line is that prices are set to decline for the second consecutive month; if this continues to be the case, it will contribute to building expectations of lower prices in the future, threatening to unleash a deflationary spiral wherein consumers and businesses perpetually hold off on spending and investment as they wait for the best possible bargain, bringing economic growth to a virtual standstill. At the moment, a survey of economists polled by Bloomberg suggests the market sees CPI shrinking through the third quarter and returning to a path of positive growth by the end of the year. If this proves to be too rosy, traders may punish the Euro as it becomes clear that the Euro Zone’s largest economy and by extension the currency bloc as a whole are heading for a long-term period of low interest rates and sub-par economic growth. A disappointing outcome seems likely considering the European Central Bank’s apparent inability to offer effective monetary easing as well as well-founded reservations about the sustainability of the second-quarter uptick in German GDP. Indeed, the expected improvements in GfK Consumer Confidence and Bloomberg Retail PMI are all but certainly a product of fiscal stimulus both domestically and abroad, with the big question for Germany as well as most anywhere at this stage being whether growth will continue after the flow of government cash dries up.

In the UK, the Nationwide House Prices report is set to show that property values fell -3.9% in the year to August, the smallest decline in 16 months and a significant improvement over the -6.2% result noted in the previous month. The improvement follows yesterday’s surprisingly strong rise in approved loans for house purchases. Still, it must be kept in mind that any boost to consumer confidence that can be expected from rising real estate values (via a positive wealth effect) is likely to be had from changes in the actual monetary value of Britons’ homes rather than an improvement in the growth rate. Indeed, it is not difficult to produce better results in the percent-change reading considering the very low base form which prices must recovery. If expectations are to be validated, home prices will stand near October 2005 levels, putting everyone that bought real estate between then and the peak in October 2007 firmly under water. Home prices grew five-fold during this period, hinting that the number of homes sold was more than formidable and suggesting that a good portion of UK homeowners are far from seeing any income boost from their real-estate portfolio.


Asia Session Highlights

New Zealand’s Trade Balance deficit narrowed to –NZ$2.5 billion in July from –NZ$3.1 billion in the preceding month as imports fell by a whopping -20.9% from a year before, easily overwhelming a -7.3% decline in exports. The reading is likely a reflection of the impact of rising unemployment on domestic demand: the jobless rate has risen to a nine-year high of 6%, trimming incomes and discouraging consumption. The outcome is all the more ominous considering the local currency has gained 20.1% since the beginning of the year, which would be expected to have helped imports higher by boosting New Zealanders’ purchasing power of foreign goods. More of the same is likely ahead, with economists calling for the unemployment rate to continue higher to hit 7.45% next year.

In Australia, Private Capital Expenditure (a measure of business investment) surprised sharply to the upside, adding 3.3% in the second quarter to trump expectations of a -5.0% decline. The improvement likely came as the government spent 4% of GDP in stimulus to boost the sagging economy amid the global downturn. Similar developments have been readily identified across the world as governments stepped in to replace shrinking private demand, with the real question now being whether the recovery has any staying power once fiscal stimulus reaches its inherent limits.

The Euro drifted slightly lower ahead of the opening bell in Europe, shedding 0.1%. The British Pound also trended lower, giving up 0.2% to the greenback. Technical positioning suggests the US Dollar is carving out a bottom against most major currencies

Forex European Preview 08.31.2009

A preliminary estimate of the Euro Zone Consumer Price Index is expected to show that inflation fell at an annual pace of -0.3% in August, a slight improvement over the -0.7% result registered in the previous month. Still, the bottom line is that prices are set to decline for the third consecutive month, contributing to building expectations of lower prices in the future. This threatens to unleash a deflationary spiral that sees consumers and businesses perpetually hold off on spending and investment as they wait for the best possible bargain, bringing economic growth to a virtual standstill. At this point, a survey of economists polled by Bloomberg suggests the market sees CPI shrinking through the third quarter and returning to a path of positive growth by the end of the year. If this proves to be too rosy, traders may punish the Euro as it becomes clear that the currency bloc is heading for a long-term period of low interest rates and sub-par economic growth. A disappointing outcome seems likely considering the European Central Bank’s apparent inability to offer effective monetary easing as well as well-founded reservations about the sustainability of the upswing in economic growth seen in the second quarter.


Asia Session Highlights

The initial estimate of Japan’s Industrial Production showed that output added 1.9% in July from the previous month, more than economists expected but the least in four months. In annual terms, the pace of decline moderated to -22.9%, the slowest rate of contraction since December 2008. Output has rebounded from the lows noted in February as firms began to replenish inventories that had been depleted after sharp production cuts kicked in as overseas demand for Japanese cars and electronics began to drop off in March last year amid the deepening global economic crisis. Indeed, the Nomura/JMMA PMI gauge printed at 53.6 in August, showing that the manufacturing sector expanded for the second consecutive month. However, a sustainable upturn will have to come with growth in underlying demand, which seems destined to remain sluggish for some time. Indeed, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said its latest world economic outlook that global trade volumes are likely to rebound just 1% having shed a whopping -12.2% in 2009.

Meanwhile, Japanese Retail Trade unexpectedly fell just -2.5% in the year to July, the smallest drop since January. Economists had predicted a -3.5% decline ahead of the release. However, the improvement in the headline figure may not be indicative of a true rebound in consumer sentiment. Indeed, most of the improvement seems to have been driven by a 7.6% jump in motor vehicle sales, which can likely be chalked up to tax breaks on purchases of fuel-efficient cars that were included into the government’s fiscal stimulus package. Looking ahead, continued weakness in the labor market is likely to keep a lid on spending as layoffs weigh on disposable incomes.

Australian Private Sector Credit grew 0.2% as expected in July, driven by a 0.84% jump in loans for new house purchases, the largest increase since April of last year. Separately, the Housing Industry Association reported that New Home Sales grew for the second consecutive month in July, adding 0.1%. The improvement is suspect however, having likely owed to fiscal stimulus rather than improved consumer confidence as the government extended a scheme offering an A$21,000 grant for first-time home buyers in May. Most worryingly, business loans grew just 0.5%, the least in over 7 years, while Operating Profits fell by a nearly twice as much as economists expected in the second quarter. A meaningful economic recovery will not materialize without a rebound in private consumption. This, in turn, requires a rebound in the labor market, which seems highly unlikely if firms are not able to either earn or borrow adequate funding for expansion. On balance, this could translate into a double-dip recession as the inherently temporary boost from fiscal stimulus begins to fade.

In New Zealand, NBNZ Business Confidence rose to 34.2 in August, the highest in over a decade. However, as we noted in our New Zealand Dollar Weekly Forecast, improvements in the headline figure may be misleading. The higher reading implies that optimists are outnumbering pessimists by an increasingly wider margin among polled survey respondents, but this is no tall order considering the New Zealand economy has been shrinking for six consecutive quarters and could prove to be flimsy evidence of a sustainable recovery in economic growth. Put another way, the relative improvement in firms’ optimism is more so a factor of the sharp declines in the recent past rather than a meaningful surge in confidence about the future.

The Japanese Yen surged sharply higher, with a trade-weighted index of the unit’s average value adding 1.2% from Friday’s close as stocks tumbled 2% in Asian trading to boost demand for the safety-linked currency. Chinese shares led the selloff, dropping over 5% to a three-month low, as China Merchants Bank (the nation’s fifth largest lender by market value) reported a third consecutive quarter of falling profits and set aside additional funds to cover future loan defaults. Japanese stocks slipped nearly a full percentage point as an election swept the Democratic Party of Japan into power for the first time ever, raising uncertainty about the practical impact that the change of leadership will have on economic policy.


Saturday, September 19, 2009

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GBPUSD: Selling May Accelerate as Unemployment Hits 12-Year High

The UK labor market is likely to show continued weakness as Jobless Claims rise by 25,000 in August, pushing the unemployment rate (known in the UK as the Claimant Count) to a 12-year high at 5.0%. More of the same is expected going forward: a survey of economists polled by Bloomberg forecasts the jobless rate will top 9% next year. Continued job losses will trim incomes and discourage spending, threatening the economy’s ability to sustain recent improvements and potentially adding to selling pressure on the British Pound after yesterday’s damaging comments from Bank of England Governor Mervyn King. For our part, we sold GBPUSD at 1.6617.

In the Euro Zone, the Consumer Price Index is set to show inflation shrank at an annual pace of -0.2% in August, confirming initial estimates. To that effect, the reading may already be priced into the exchange rate and, barring unforeseen revisions, looks unlikely not produce a meaningful response from the currency markets. The longer-term view is not encouraging for the single currency, however: while the August reading amounts to a slight improvement from the previous month’s -0.7% contraction, the bottom line is that prices are set to decline for the third consecutive month, threatening to bring economic growth to a virtual standstill if expectations of lower prices in the future encourage consumers and businesses to perpetually delay spending and investment. This leaves the door open for traders to punish the Euro in the months ahead if it becomes clear the currency bloc is heading for a long-term period of sub-par performance and low interest rates.

Swiss Retail Sales are expected to add 0.7% in the year to July, a reading slightly lower than the previous month’s 0.9% result. Shrinking prices have boosted consumers’ purchasing power in recent months, encouraging spending, but continued deflation threatens to work against retail activity if it translates into entrenched expectations of even lower prices in the future. Rising unemployment is also setting up to be a formidable obstacle: the jobless rate surged to 3.8%in August, the highest in over three years, and is expected to hit 5% next year.


Asia Session Highlights

Australia’s Westpac Leading Index added 1.1% in July, rising to the highest level in seven months. The index fell -1.8% from a year ago, the smallest decline since October 2008. The metric seeks to forecast how the economy will perform over the coming three to nine months. Westpac chief economist Bill Evans said the upswing in the index over recent months points to “a significant improvement in [Australian economic] growth prospects in 2010.” However, Evans noted that the bank does not expect future growth will be “sufficiently robust” to warrant to raise interest rates before next February, reinforcing the cautious tone of the minutes from September’s RBA monetary policy meeting.

For streaming currency market news and analysis, please visit http://forexstream.dailyfx.com

FX Market: Currencies Set To Move Higher On Central Bank No-Show

Another Reserve Bank of New Zealand meeting has come and gone. The verdict: rates will likely be cut no further. This is according to recent statements made by RBNZ Governor Alan Bollard as the benchmark overnight cash rate was left at a record low.

Stating that economic policy seems stable, along with the current monetary policy, Bollard noted that the central bank will “expect to keep the official cash rate at or below the current level.”

As a result, the recent statements negate indications by the bank in late July that rates may need to move further lower in order to boost adequate economic expansion. The country itself has been on the recovery, although not as paced as its trading partner Australia. However, signs are beginning to surface that economic recovery may well help to back current central bank notions.

Recent economic figures point to a more positive GDP outlook as exports picked up in the quarter as imports fell on consumers seemingly turning their backs on foreign made goods. This turn of events will likely keep the currency supported in recent sessions as traders seem to be taking advantage of the higher yield in an anti-dollar environment.

Figures taken as of January 2009

(Figures taken as of January 2009)

Tonight’s monetary policy outcome is likely to set the stage for further gains in the higher yielding currency pairs as the market now turns its attention to two other central bank announcements. Both the Monetary Policy Committee and the Bank of Canada are schedule to announce rate moves (or the lack thereof) tomorrow.

Although market participants are already able to tell the future with both banks likely to hold rates steady, currency bulls will be targeting on the accompanying statements. In regards to the Loonie, it’s a straightforward expectation that commentary on the recent economic expansion and further rate direction will be eyed. However, Pound bulls will forever be focused on any mention of further quantitative expansion as an increase in asset purchases will further damage the underlying cable currency.

Further directional bias is unlikely to be established as we come towards the end of a shortened trading week. Rounding out the data ahead of the weekend will likely be a very bland University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment report, anticipated to show a slight pickup in positive sentiment.

Forex European Preview 09.03.2009

The European Central Bank will take center stage in the coming trading session, with Jean-Claude Trichet and company expected to keep interest rates unchanged at 1% for the fourth consecutive month. The announcement’s market-moving potential rests on the bank’s update to its economic outlook for the Euro Zone, with any downward revisions likely to weigh heavily on the single currency. The currency bloc’s problems are well-documented. Deflation is becoming an increasingly real concern as CPI figures continue to print in negative territory. Unemployment continues to rise, threatening the outlook for spending and thereby overall economic growth. In fact, the pace of contraction in Retail Sales is set to accelerate to -2.2% in July. Finally, the banking sector is yet to come to terms with an estimated $1.1 trillion in unrealized sub-prime related losses (according to the IMF), a hit that could be compounded by defaults or devaluations in some of the newly-minted central European EU member states that are struggling with meeting their obligations to Western European lenders. Indeed, it is perhaps the prospect of these very losses that has undermined the ECB’s attempt to stimulate economic activity by allowing overnight borrowing costs to hover well below the 1% target level between 0.5 and 0.3 percent since June, with lending to the private sector growing at a record low 0.6% in July. The recent batch of economic indicators has painted an optimistic picture, boosted by a global wave of fiscal stimulus, broad inventory restocking efforts, and firming financial markets. How this will factor into the ECB’s world view rests entirely on whether the bank sees the current stabilization as the beginning of a sustainable recovery or a temporary reprieve.

In the UK, Services PMI is set to rise to 54.0 in August from 53.2.0 in the previous month, showing that the industry expanded at the fastest pace since February 2008. However, the analogous metrics for the manufacturing and construction sectors both disappointed, suggesting rising unemployment may be starting to become a meaningful drag on leading indicators and opening the door for a downside surprise in today’s report.


Asia Session Highlights

Australia’s Trade Balance deficit widened much more than economists expected in July, showing a shortfall of –A$1.5 billion, the largest in 15 months. Preliminary forecasts ahead of the release had called for a –A$0.9 billion result. The previous month’s reading was also revised down to –A$0.54 billion from the –A$0.44 billion originally reported. The gap expanded as imports surged 4%, driven by a 21% increase in oil shipments. Imports of consumer goods advanced 2%, owing to overseas purchases of vehicles, food, and beverages. Exports fell 1%, led by a hefty 27% drop in cross-border gold sales. On the face of it, the data paints an encouraging picture of the Australian economy: rising oil demand (primarily in the form of industrial fuel and lubricants) points to an increase in production and hints at possible improvement in the employment situation while the increase in consumer demand is good news for the spending climate and thereby overall economic growth. However, not all is as rosy as it seems: much like yesterday’s surprisingly strong second-quarter GDP result, the surge in Australian demand evident in today’s data likely owes the government’s ample fiscal package, including A$20 billion in cash handouts to households and A$22 billion in infrastructure spending. Indeed, as we have previously suggested, the big question going forward will be whether the now buoyant Australian economy can maintain momentum once the flow of stimulus cash dries up.

FX Market: Australian Dollar Rises From The Depths; RBA Remains Accommodative

Plunging throughout the New York session, the Australian dollar seems to have found some solid ground heading into the European open. Incidentally, helping the currency’s gain is the newly released report showing a nice popup in economic growth for the country. Although expected to only show a mild 0.3 percent uptick for the second quarter, the actual figure jumped by 0.6 percent.

The improvement signals nothing but a turnaround for the land down under, similar to Japan, as the Bureau of Statistics release rose to double what analysts had been anticipating. Specifically, strong consumption fueled by stimulus packages and optimistic consumer and business confidence have led the recovery, which some still tout as teetering on the balance. However, with manufacturing rising for the first time in over a year and construction sector growth on the mend, it’s hard not to see the silver lining.

Nonetheless, the Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to remain accommodative in its monetary policy stance, leaving the overnight cash rate at the lowest level it has been in 49 years. But for how long? Taking a look at statements made by central bankers following the decision, the case for the rather loose monetary policy may not be as solidified as earlier expected now that improvements have surfaced. Given the recent improvements across the board, policy makers have changed their tone a bit, noting that inflationary pressures may be on the horizon.

aussie_09012009

Although the board decided that “the present accommodative setting of monetary policy remains appropriate for the time being”, the longer term probability “of inflation being persistently below the target now looks low.” The sentiment supports what market speculators have been betting on since the beginning of the summer – that rates are likely to rise by 175 basis points in the next 12 months.

The conviction was so that markets were pricing in a 50 percent chance of at least one move higher at the end of the year. And why not? Since the credit crisis abated (whether temporarily or permanently), investment continues to prop up the Aussie, which has skyrocketed since being bought up from the 0.6300 figure back in March. With more and more money entering the market on a yield searching basis, prices are expected to rise in tandem with underlying valuations.

As a result, even as the short term picture may be pushing for some intermediate downside in the currency pair, the longer term outlook continues to remain bright for the Aussie. Fundamentals continue to push for a higher valuation as we head into the final quarter of the year, as technicals point to some potential retracement from the recent runup. Longer term traders will likely do well to keep an eye on this carry currency favorite.

Forex European Preview 09.02.2009

The second revision of the Euro Zone’s Gross Domestic Product is set to confirm that the economy shrank -0.1% in the second quarter. The annual pace of contraction is expected to be revised slightly higher from -4.6% to -4.7%, but this is unlikely to be enough to stir the currency markets. Rather, traders will be looking at the expected upward revisions to the Household Consumption and Gross Fixed Capital components of the metric. An increasing number of market observers (ourselves included) are skeptical about whether the recent upswing in economic data around the globe is sustainable after the flow of government stimulus cash dries up. To this effect, measures of consumption and investment are going to be critical at this point in gauging whether a meaningful rebound in private demand can pick up where fiscal measures leave off.

In the UK, Construction PMI is set to rise to 48.0 in August from 47.0 in the previous month, showing that the industry shrank at the slowest pace in at least 13 months. However, the analogous metric for the manufacturing sector unexpectedly declined yesterday, suggesting rising unemployment may be starting to become a meaningful drag on leading indicators and opening the door for a downside surprise in today’s report.


Asia Session Highlights

Australia’s Gross Domestic Product grew 0.6% in the second quarter, topping economists’ expectations of a 0.2% result. The annual pace of economic growth advanced to 0.6%, rebounding from the 18-year low of 0.3% in the three months to March. The details of the report appear encouraging: private consumption and investment both advanced, the former by the largest margin since the fourth quarter of 2007 and the latter by the most since the three months through September of last year. Still, the acceleration seems to be a testament to the effects of the government’s ample fiscal package, including A$20 billion in cash handouts to households and A$22 billion in infrastructure spending, and the big question going forward will be whether the economy can maintain momentum once the flow of stimulus cash dries up. The Australian Dollar surged 50 pips against its US counterpart in the hour following the release but failed to meaningfully build on that momentum as stocks dropped nearly 2% in Asian trading, weighing down the risk-linked currency. Indeed, a trade-weighted average of the Australian unit’s value is now 95.6% correlated with the MSCI World Stock Index.

Forex European Preview 09.01.2009

Switzerland’s Gross Domestic Product is expected to shrink 1% in the three months to June, marking the fourth consecutive quarter in negative territory and revealing the economy is now contracting at an annual pace of 3%, the fastest in at least 34 years. Looking ahead, a survey of economists conducted by Bloomberg expects output will continue to shrink though the end of this year and begin a modest recovery in the first quarter of 2010. However, this may prove too rosy: exports of goods and services account for a whopping 51.6% of the overall economy, an overwhelming majority of which are headed for markets in the European Union. Indeed, Germany, France and Italy alone make up a whopping 37.3% of foreign demand. Continental European economic growth is expected to trail sharply behind that of most other developed economies (with the notable exclusion of Japan) through the end of next year, suggesting overseas sales and with them overall performance may remain under water for substantially longer than consensus forecasts would have us believe. Deflation adds to the downside risks for the economy: annual inflation is expected to shrink for the fifth consecutive month in August; if this translates into expectations of lower prices in the future, consumers and businesses will perpetually delay spending and investment as they wait for the best possible bargain, bringing economic growth to a virtual standstill.

Turning to the Euro Zone, German Retail Sales are expected to grow for the first in three months, adding 0.7% in July, while the annual pace of decline moderates to -1.2% . The government’s 85 billion euro spending plan (including a “cash-for-clunkers” program to boost auto sales) is the likely catalyst behind the improvement. However, labor market data to be released later in the session is set to show that the German economy shed 30,000 jobs in August, bringing the Unemployment Rate to 8.4%, the highest since November 2007. Job losses will weigh on incomes and weigh on consumption, suggesting the economy will have a hard time building positive momentum after the flow of stimulus cash dries up. The broader Euro Zone Unemployment Rate result will probably follow higher, with forecasts calling for the metric to tick up to a decade high of 9.5% in July, mimicking the dynamics seen in the region’s top economy.

In the UK, the August edition of the Purchasing Manager Index is set to show that the manufacturing sector expanded for the second consecutive month. However, more attention is likely to be given to Net Consumer Credit, which is expected to remain flat at 0.1 billion pounds in July, a hair above the record low posted in March. This will serve to keep pressure on the Bank of England to press on with quantitative easing measures as banks fail to pass on lower interbank borrowing costs to the broader economy. Indeed, the market the BOE’s dovish posture seems to be the driving force behind sterling price action despite surface-level improvements in economic data: a trade-weighted index of the Pound’s average value topped out on 08/05, the day before the last rate decision, and has been trending lower ever since; a Credit Suisse index gauging traders’ 1-year BOE rate hike expectations (as derived from overnight index swaps) topped out on the very same day.


Asia Session Highlights

Australia’s AiG Performance of Manufacturing Index rose to 51.7 in August, showing the sector expanded for the first time in 14 months. Still, AiG chief executive officer Heather Ridout struck a cautious tone, saying that although “manufacturing activity has been improving…conditions are uneven and pressures remain on employment.” Indeed, looking at the components of the metric reveals that the rate of contraction in Employment accelerated for the first time since February. Ridout added that “There is a risk, particularly if interest rates are raised too early in the recovery phase, that as the effect of stimulus measures wane, the nascent recovery will fail to get traction.” The government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has distributed over A$12 billion in cash handouts this year and set aside A$22 billion for infrastructure projects.

Meanwhile, the Current Account Balance deficit widened more than economists expected in the second quarter, revealing a shortfall of –A$13.4 billion, shaving 0.2% off GDP in the three months to June. Preliminary forecasts had called for a –A$10.7 billion result. Exports dropped by a whopping 14.9%, more than doubling the -7.16% contraction in imports, with overseas shipments of gold (-40.1%), transport equipment (-35.9%), coal (-25.5%) and metal ores (-20.5%) leading the decline. This offered a counter-balance to the encouraging manufacturing PMI result, bolstering the argument that firms will be faced with sharp declines in sales as absent private demand is unable to replace the stimulative effects of the government’s fiscal measures.

The Reserve Bank of Australia kept interest rates unchanged at 3%, as expected. Bank Governor Glenn Stevens sounded broadly optimistic, saying “consumer spending, exports and business investment [are] notable for their resilience” while “Unemployment has not, to this point, risen as far as had been expected.” On inflation, Stevens noted that lower labor demand and commodity prices are likely to see prices continue to decline in the near term but “the likelihood of inflation being persistently below the target now looks low.” Such rosy comments notwithstanding, however, the bottom line is that Stevens and company judged that the “the present accommodative setting of monetary policy remains appropriate for the time being,” a disappointing outcome considering the hawkish tone of the RBA chief’s semi-annual testimony before the Parliament’s finance committee. The Australian Dollar sold off on the release, testing as low as 0.8407 to the US Dollar.

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