Monday 15 August 2011

A Weekly Round-Up: Sterling, Euro, Dollar

Stocks tumble but the major pairings remain in range

Attention last week was very much centred on activities in the stock market. The US debt downgrade, combined with ongoing concerns surrounding global growth and the absence of a long-term solution to the eurozone debt situation, triggered major declines in global equities. Market confidence was as low as we have seen it all year. Nonetheless, the US dollar failed to capitalise from heightened demand for safe-haven assets.

However, there have not been major moves amongst the major currency pairings; sterling remains fairly unchanged against both the euro and the dollar. The truth remains that the US, UK and eurozone economies have such serious economic problems that they cannot muster the support to sustain a rally.

The main event this week as far as the euro is concerned is tomorrow’s meeting between Merkel and Sarkozy. The two heavyweights will be looking at a long-term solution to the euro-regions debt situation which is now threatening major eurozone nations such as Spain, Italy and France.

The Fed promises record-low rates until mid-2013

Last week’s US Federal Reserve meeting was highly significant. Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the US interest rate will remain at its current record-low level of <0.25% for the next two years, in a bid to nurture the US economy’s struggling recovery. The removal of any rate hike bets weakens the US dollar’s prospects in the long-term. However, prevailing concerns surrounding another global recession are likely to keep the greenback supported via its safe-haven demand.

In terms of the US economy, we had more mixed data last week. Monthly US retail sales figures showed an encouraging uptick, but some awful US consumer sentiment data suggests future figures could disappoint. This week’s data calendar is a quiet one from the US economy, we have had some awful manufacturing data out this afternoon which will only cement pessimistic bets for growth.

MPC minutes in focus

This week brings some important UK-related news. The UK consumer price index (headline inflation) is announced tomorrow. This is forecast to show an uptick but last week’s BoE quarterly inflation report was distinctly dovish on this issue. It suggested that inflation will still spike up to 5.0% in coming months, before falling fairly rapidly back down towards the official 2.0% target next year.

The MPC minutes are released on Wednesday and it will be very interesting to see whether quantitative easing gained further air-time, and whether one of the two remaining MPC hawks defected to the dovish camp. One thing can be safely assumed, there will be no UK interest rate hike for many months to come. Thursday sees the release of the monthly UK retail sales figure, which is expected to show some further modest growth.

End of week forecast

GBP / EUR 1.13

GBP / USD 1.6330

EUR / USD 1.4450

GBP / AUD 1.55

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX


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