Monday 13 August 2012

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up: Dollar poised for rally

Pressure on for revised UK Q2 GDP figure

Last week’s all-important Quarterly Inflation Report from the Bank of England provided sterling with support just when a return to the €1.25 level was looking probable. King seemed to discard the option of another interest rate cut, describing it as potentially “counterproductive” and the likely effects to be “neither here nor there.” There were no real signals that the BoE is poised to introduce further quantitative easing, which again was supportive of the pound. The MPC minutes released on Wednesday should provide further clarity in this regard; we expect a unanimous decision to hold fire on more QE.

In addition to being less dovish than expected on monetary policy, Mervyn King also stuck to his guns in arguing that UK growth is not as weak as headline data has suggested. King’s comments have increased hopes and expectations that the initial -0.7% GDP figure for Q2 will be revised up. This was supported by last week’s better than expected, although still alarmingly weak in the bigger picture, manufacturing and industrial production figures from June. If an improved GDP figure is not forthcoming on Friday 24th August, then sterling could well be hit hard.

ECB has done nothing so far but hopes remain high

Despite the ECB having failed to take any concrete action at its meeting at the start of this month, the euro remains well away from its late-July lows. This is largely thanks to ECB President Draghi’s indications that the central bank is gearing up to resume the purchasing of Spanish and Italian bonds, in an effort to bring down their unsustainably high borrowing costs.

However, while some short-term relief for the euro would likely follow some concrete action from the ECB, it will be no panacea. Bond-purchases will be tied to very strict conditions with respect to economic reforms. Mario Draghi has suggested that ECB bond-purchases would only occur once a country had requested help, but this request may not come if Germany is too strict with the conditions it attaches. At the very least, German demands may could easily delay progress. In any case, bond-purchases took place last year but we are back in panic mode once again, so we find it hard to believe that ECB action will provide anything more than a short-term lift for the single currency.

Despite the positive sentiment that has built towards the euro over the past few weeks, we continue to hold a distinctly bearish view of the single currency over the rest of 2012. While sterling has plenty of its own domestic issues, chief among which are ongoing weak growth and the threat of the UK losing its AAA credit rating, it should be able to climb higher towards €1.30 this year.

GBP/EUR is currently trading at €1.27 and another push higher may prove tricky in the short-term as GBP/USD is looking ripe for another downward correction. Despite ongoing debate within and outside the US Federal Reserve, the central bank is still resisting the urge to announce or even signal QE3. This case has been strengthened most recently by last month’s better than expected US labour market update. The dollar looks well-positioned for a return to strength this month then, which could bring the GBP/USD rate well down from the current $1.57 level.

End of week forecast

GBP / EUR 1.2750
GBP / USD 1.5550
EUR / USD 1.2250
GBP / AUD 1.5000

Richard Driver

Analyst – Caxton FX
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