Monday 25 November 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Report: Talks of looser monetary policy from the ECB keep the euro on the back foot


Super Sterling Returns

Despite a light calendar, it was an impressive performance for sterling last week as CBI Industrial Order Expectations smashed estimates and drove both the GBP/EUR and GBP/USD rates higher. Levels remain elevated and there is still a chance there are some bullish sterling investors waiting for the moment to push the rate further. The main release this week will be the second GDP estimate, and any upside surprise here will most likely trigger some more sterling momentum.

On Tuesday, The BoE governor and the monetary policy committee will appear before the Parliament’s Treasury Committee to discuss the central bank’s latest inflation report. This will present an opportunity for the market to move on the MPC’s comments, especially if they reveal more about the future of interest rates. Sterling should be well supported this week but it is unlikely the big moves will come from the British side of things.

Eurozone inflation figures on watch

Last week it was revealed that the ECB monetary policy committee had discussed negative deposit rates. Although President Draghi has managed to calm the markets, it may not take much to get the topic brewing again. The key release will be the eurozone inflation figure which is expected to rise to 0.8% y/y. If the actual figure comes out significantly higher than expected, we expect more of the euro bulls to come out of the woodwork and it would be another move lower for GBP/EUR. Despite the fact that the ECB expect inflation to remain low for a prolonged period, a lower CPI reading could easily reignite talk about the possibility of negative deposit rates. This morning, there have also been comments from ECB member Hansson claiming there is room for the ECB to cut rates further. There has been some slight euro weakness on the back of these words however the market seems to have adjusted to the prospect of lower interest rates.

Eurozone figures such as GFK German Consumer Climate and German unemployment change could provide some support the euro. Last week we witnessed strong German Ifo Business Climate figures drive the GBP/EUR rate towards 1.1950 and push EUR/USD through 1.35. The same can happen again this week provided these numbers beat estimates.

The market eyeballs US data

After showing some signs of recovery, the disappointing Philly Fed manufacturing Index has placed the dollar on the back foot once again. The positive flash manufacturing PMI and unemployment claims figures were not enough to limit dollar losses, and this suggests that US data is being watched even more closely after the last FOMC minutes. With the window slightly open for a December taper, economic figures from the US need impress in order for significant repositioning to take place, and increase demand for the dollar.

First up we have pending home sales due this afternoon, and this figure could get the ball rolling for a better week for the greenback. Building permits, CB consumer confidence, Core Durable Goods orders and unemployment claims are all due this week and will receive attention from the market. With the non-farm payrolls figure due next Friday, an extremely strong unemployment claims figure should help get some dollar optimism stirring ahead of the employment report next week.


End of week forecast

GBP / EUR
1.1950
GBP / USD
1.6140
EUR / USD
1.3450
GBP / AUD
1.7720



Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst