Friday 13 January 2012

Morning Report

Richard Driver, Analyst
It was an action packed session yesterday, with the Bank of England and the European Central Bank giving their monthly interest rate decisions, as well as a subsequent press conference with ECB President Trichet. Elsewhere, UK manufacturing and industrial production data disappointed, we saw some rare poor US figures and a remarkably positive Spanish bond auction.
There is a shortage of major data releases today, so traders will continue to reflect on yesterday’s events, though this afternoon does bring some US trade balance and consumer confidence figures.
STERLING/EURO: BoE and ECB keep interest rates on hold, but a fairly upbeat Draghi and strong Spanish bond auction give the euro a boost.
  • As expected, the Bank of England kept interest rates at 0.50%, as they will do for at least the rest of this year. They also kept the asset purchase programme at £275bn, which is not expected to be stepped up until next month. UK manufacturing production was poor yesterday, revealing a contraction and lowering expectations for fourth quarter UK GDP.
  • The ECB kept the eurozone interest rate on hold at the record low of 1.00%, though another cut is expected to come in the coming months. Draghi asserted that the cheap ECB loans issued last month are having a positive impact and by the result of yesterday’s Spanish bond auction, he may be correct. Spanish yields came down and they saw huge demand, the same may be true today of another Italian bond sale. Sterling is trading at €1.1950 and may remain under pressure today, though better levels should be revisited next week.
FORECAST

hold

STERLING/US DOLLAR: The EUR/USD pairing dragged this pair up off its multi-month lows, with retail sales figures revealing the US is not out of the woods yet.
  • US core retail sales data revealed the first monthly contraction since June 2010. Weekly US unemployment was also weaker than expected, so the market was given a reality check on the uncertainties that remain for the US recovery. Nonetheless, US consumer sentiment is expected to tick up for the fourth consecutive month.
  • Sterling is trading up towards $1.54 this morning, benefitting from a period of dollar weakness. US stocks were on the up yesterday ensured a poor session for the greenback. Sterling may be able to maintain these levels for the time being, but we continue to bet on a stronger dollar.
FORECAST

hold
EURO/US DOLLAR: The market was very short of euros leading up to yesterday’s events, and we saw the single currency benefit from some short-covering.
  • ECB President Draghi gave a fairly upbeat (or perhaps balanced) assessment of conditions in the eurozone. We were expecting to see an understandably pessimistic press conference, but Draghi was positive on the impact of cheap ECB loans on bond yields and easing credit lines.
  • This pair is trading at $1.2850 this morning, well off its lows more than a cent and a half lower. We still see EUR/USD resuming its downwards trend in the coming weeks though, particularly with S&P likely to take downgrading action soon.
FORECAST

hold
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling halted its decline against the aussie dollar as long-term support levels kicked in, but declining bond yields improved market sentiment.
  • Positive bond auctions in Spain and Italy yesterday kept risk appetite broadly on the front foot. We remain sceptical that the aussie dollar can appreciate much more, given the risks that continue to hang over the eurozone and the global economy.
  • Sterling has bounced off a rate of 1.48 and is trading half a cent higher. We are likely to see the 1.48 level retested today but we may see it hold firm.
FORECAST

hold
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Sterling benefited from a welcome bounce against the kiwi dollar, but these remain very weak levels.
  • Asian stocks climbed yesterday; the Nikkei index rose by almost a percent and a half. However, the kiwi came off marginally, showing signs of being overbought and overextended. Poor US data may have adverse impact on appetite for the kiwi dollar as well.
  • This pair is trading at 1.9350 this morning, having reached lows towards 1.92 yesterday. Sterling will surely see higher levels against the kiwi dollar as soon as eurozone downgrade and Greek default headlines spring up once again.
FORECAST

hold
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: Poor US retail sales data ensured that sterling found some support against the Canadian dollar.  
  • Contracting US retail sales naturally weighed on sentiment towards the Canadian dollar. Oil prices also fell off sharply yesterday, with Brent crude dropping from close to $115 per barrel to below $111, although it is trading a cent higher today.
  • The Canadian dollar will respond to this afternoon’s US trade and consumer sentiment data, and whilst the former is expected to be poor, the loonie may find some support from the latter. For now, this pair trades just above 1.56.
FORECAST

hold
This post is prepared by Caxton FX Ltd for information purposes only and may contain personal views that are not the opinion of the company. This is not an offer to purchase or sell any security or an investment advertisement. Caxton FX Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority, although foreign exchange transactions with Caxton FX are regulated by HM Revenue and Customs. This email does not constitute advice for any foreign exchange transaction, nor is it intended as a solicitation for funds or recommendation to trade.