Friday 11 June 2010

Sterling brushes off weak production figures

Figures released from the UK manufacturing industry this morning have disappointed, with production down 0.4% in April, undershooting market expectations.

Although the data missed forecasts by a considerable margin, the year-on-year rate remains in positive territory. UK industrial production mirrored this figure, also disappointing expectations and failing to reflect the positive numbers seen from the Purchasing Managers’ indices recently. Reaction to this latest economic news has been rather unpronounced within the markets, with investors looking at the equity markets to dictate direction.

Duncan Higgins, senior analyst at Caxton FX says, “These figures will serve as a stark reminder that the UK economic recovery is still far from assured. Although the majority of UK fundamentals are still trending upwards, the upcoming budget measures are going to provide a significant hurdle.”

Sterling has come off its highs following the release, but remains holding around €1.21.

“The pound’s foundation above €1.20 remains intact, with data continuing to have only a minimal impact on the currency markets. Investors remain focused on wider developments from the eurozone at present, which is keeping sterling on a solid footing,” comments Higgins.

In spite of the weak figures today, we expect that sterling could progress higher over the short term.

Duncan Higgins concludes, “The euro is still suffering from a severe lack of market confidence, and despite the efforts of ECB President Trichet to calm fears, investors remain sceptical. The single currency can only achieve brief rallies, and these are predominantly based on profit taking as opposed to any real shift in sentiment.”

At present sterling is trading at €1.21, and is around half a cent down on the day against the US dollar at $1.4650.