Showing posts with label CPI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CPI. Show all posts

Monday, 19 May 2014

A week of mixed data leaves Cable stalled in the 1.68’s, the Bank of England’s inflation report underlines the positives of the economic recovery but leaves room for improvement.

A stern warning from Mark Carney in a televised interview this last Sunday has emphasized the focus of the Bank of England on tackling the price increase in UK housing. “When we look at domestic risk, the biggest risk to financial stability and therefore to the durability of the expansion, those risks centre in the housing market and that’s why we are focused on that”. The focus was on the possibility of the Financial Policy Committee taking action at their June meeting to reduce the inflation of housing prices by reducing the Help to Buy programme which offers mortgage guarantees to borrowers with small deposits. This Help to Buy programme launched by the government was criticized by economists because it fuelled demand rather than tackling inadequate supply.

UK – The Bank of England released their quarterly inflation report last Wednesday in which they emphasized that interest rates need to stay low for a significant period of time, as an interest rate hike would be a last resort for dealing with the concern of rising housing prices. Carney taking a dovish tone during this meeting undermined the pound, and has helped keep an upward limit on the GBP/EUR and GBP/USD rates. Out of the UK this week, we will have the CPI y/y on Tuesday, votes on the MPC Asset Purchase Facility and the Official Bank Rate as well as retail sales on Wednesday, and a second estimate GDP q/q on Thursday. Positive data this week out of the UK could help to boost the pound across the board, as the pound has had a pullback in the last two weeks or so.

EUR – The Euro has suffered in the wake of the last ECB meeting, as the market is steadily pricing in potential ECB market intervention action at their June meeting. In the last two weeks, EUR/USD has fallen a percent and a half as the Dollar has had a rebound and the euro has suffered. Data from the Eurozone this week to watch out for will be French and German Flash Manufacturing PMI on Thursday and German Ifo Business Climate on Friday. European parliamentary elections will also take place this next Sunday, in which voters from 28 European Union countries will elect 751 members to the European Parliament. Elections can create volatility with a currency, and European Polls show that anti-EU extremist parties from the left as well as the right are expected to gain support as well as parties from Greece and Spain that are opposed to the current EU leadership.

USD – The USD has been holding its current levels and even improved against many currencies, as the Dollar Index is relatively flat from a week ago. The US economic outlook is improved after a disastrous first quarter GDP where there was barely any growth as a result of a harsh North American winter earlier this year. Analysts expect the FOMC meeting minutes on Wednesday evening to reflect the sentiment that the US recovery is underway, but any dovish sentiment from Janet Yellen could further derail the currency. Other US data this week will be Unemployment Claims and Existing Home sales on Thursday and New Home Sales on Friday.

End of Week Forecast:
GBP/EUR – 1.2175 
GBP/USD – 1.6750 
EUR/USD – 1.3650
GBP/AUD – 1.80

Nicholas Ebisch
Corporate Account Manager
Caxton FX

Monday, 28 April 2014

Weekly Analysis - Sterling holds strong, Euro proves resilient, but the US and Australian Dollars fall. This week will be heavy with US and UK data and should be relatively volatile. Sterling has the momentum, but positive US data could well reverse those gains.

GBP – In the UK, The last week brought relatively good news for the pound. The Bank of England meeting minutes revealed a positive revised growth estimate for the UK on Wednesday, and Retail Sales m/m figures on Friday beat estimates with at least a small sign of growth. The pound has held up against most other currencies and has the momentum to push higher next week. Data to watch for this week from the UK will be the Prelim GDP q/q on Tuesday, Manufacturing PMI on Thursday, and Construction PMI on Friday.

EUR – In the Eurozone, Manufacturing data from last week and an improved PMI figure confirmed that business activity has increased overall. However, with inflation at such low levels, the Eurozone is increasingly concerned with a stronger Euro, which would further destabilize growth. Data is limited this week, but with a CPI Flash Estimate y/y figure on Wednesday, there will be a more complete picture of how prices have increased when compared to economic growth in the region.

USD – Last week, the Dollar provided some resistance to the advancing pound and Euro with positive durable goods orders last Thursday, but much will depend on the preliminary US GDP figure this coming week. This week, the all-important day will be Wednesday, as markets prepare to digest the ADP Non-Farm Employment Change, Advance GDP q/q data on Wednesday out of the US, and the FOMC will make a statement at 7pm GMT. The FOMC is also scheduled to reduce its bond buying by another $10 billion down to $45 billion this week, and with a relatively stable market, it will be easy for the Fed to proceed with this. Also, let’s not forget Thursday, as Janet Yellen will be speaking at a policy summit meeting in Washington D.C.

Canada – Canadian data will also be heavy this week, as the loonie has proved that it has had some forward momentum with positive Core Retail Sales m/m last week. BOC Governor Poloz is speaking this week on Tuesday and Wednesday will bring Canadian GDP m/m figures. The Bank of Canada has been under increasing pressure to lower their benchmark interest rate of 1% since growth has been slower than expected in the past year and the Canadian Dollar has been sliding as a result. 

Australia – Last week, the Australian Dollar was weakened significantly when Australian CPI q/q and the HSBC Flash Manufacturing PMI both came in negatively and undermined the AUD. This week, we could see a similar phenomenon, as there will be CNY Manufacturing PMI on Thursday, expected to improve marginally from a month ago. Also, there will be Australian PPI q/q expected to improve from the last quarter. The Australian dollar has been strengthening from its 2013 devaluation slide, but it seems to have stalled with poor Australian and Chinese data. This week will be an additional focal point to determine the direction of this rate.

End of week forecast
GBP/EUR – 1.2200
GBP/USD – 1.6900
EUR/USD – 1.3930
GBP/AUD – 1.8200


Nicholas Ebisch
Corporate Account Manager
Caxton FX

Monday, 14 April 2014

Weekly Report - Sterling feeling the resistance after a mid-week boost, ECB lays out a clearer plan in the monthly bulletin, dollar takes a beating.

UK – Although the pound is performing very well this last week, there does seem to be resistance from other currencies against the pound, which is limiting its gains. Manufacturing Data on Tuesday gave Sterling a boost, but the question is how long can it stay in the spotlight with limited data in the next week to support it? UK data throughout the week will start off with CPI y/y figures on Tuesday, followed by the Claimant Count Change and Unemployment rate on Wednesday. The house view is that Cable will most-likely retreat from its relatively high levels, as the dollar continues to slowly but surely gain strength as the Federal Reserve winds down the QE programme.

Eurozone – The ECB monthly bulletin made it clear that there was not a change in the Minimum Bid Rate at the beginning of this month because “the moderate recovery of the euro area economy is proceeding in line with the Governing Council’s previous assessment”. However, the bulletin reiterated Draghi’s points from his press conference earlier this month that the ECB stands prepared to act swiftly with monetary accommodation and lower interest rates if required. This has helped to strengthen the Euro at the end of the week. In the next week, the only major event directly affecting the Euro will be German ZEW Economic Sentiment on Tuesday. The Euro ended the week on a high note, as the monthly bulletin last Thursday, combined with positive sentiment toward the Eurozone as the result of a highly-successful Greek bond sale, allowed it to gain strength near the end of the week. However, President Draghi blamed the strength of the Euro for the low rate of inflation in the Eurozone over the weekend, and made the statement that the “further strengthening of the Euro requires further monetary stimulus”, signalling that unconventional monetary policy may not be far away.

USA – FOMC meeting minutes which were released on Wednesday evening of this last week confirmed that there was discussion about the central bank’s collective concern over the low rate of inflation. The concern was not enough to warrant a clearer timeline of when we can expect the next interest rate rise, but the market has interpreted it as a sign that interest rates will stay low for longer, undermining the USD at week’s end. During this next week before the Easter holiday, the data to watch for which will affect the dollar will be Core Retail Sales m/m and Retail Sales m/m on Monday, Core CPI m/m and Janet Yellen speaking at a Federal Reserve conference in Atlanta on Tuesday, Building Permits data and Janet Yellen speaking again at the Economic Club of New York on Wednesday, and finally, Unemployment Claims and the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index data on Thursday. Cable does seem to be at the top of the range, and barring any big surprises in the market, we should see the dollar able to pare back some of the losses it sustained last week against other currency majors.

End of week forecast:

GBP / EUR
1.2100
GBP / USD
1.6650
EUR / USD
1.3750
GBP / AUD
1.7750



Nicholas Ebisch
Corporate Account Manager
Caxton FX

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

UK inflation provides an upside surprise

Data this morning has shown that the UK headline inflation figure has risen to 4.5%, but expectations of a higher figure had already been priced in over the morning. With the previous figure showing that prices had increased by 4.0% from the same point last year this latest monthly rise is in line with strong global price pressures. As the highest UK inflationary figure rise since 2008, the increase is well ahead of the forecasted 4.2% rise.

This indicates that last month’s ease in price pressures was due to temporary factors, with fuel prices and the VAT rise taking their toll on UK inflation. The market had a BoE rate rise priced in for December 2011, and I wouldn’t be surprised if today’s data brings some of those bets forward.

King recently indicated that UK headline inflation could hit 5.0% in the coming months – if he is right then it could well force the MPC to succumb to pressure and raise rates.

Sterling spiked in the build-up to the data release, but how far it will push on from here in light of the upside surprise remains to be seen. UK inflation is expected to climb quite aggressively, and despite today’s data there is still a need for much stronger UK growth before the BoE tightens policy. King’s open letter to George Osborne later today and tomorrow’s MPC minutes should clarify the level of genuine hawkishness within the BoE - a rate rise before December could be disastrous.

Monday, 7 March 2011

Inflation response: ECB vs MPC

With the eurozone’s headline inflation running at 2.4% (y/y), the surprisingly hawkish comments from ECB President Trichet shocked the market by indicating that the ECB is likely to raise interest rates by 0.25% (from 1%) in April. UK inflation sits at 4.0% and will in all likelihood have increased beyond this point when the latest figure is released next week. However, in contrast to the ECB the BoE remains reluctant to raise interest rates, with the market pricing in a move by May at the very earliest. Both central banks have an inflation target of 2.0%, so what can explain this divergent approach?

Well, as the 0.6% GDP contraction in the final quarter of 2010 showed, the UK’s recovery is by no means guaranteed, with the dangers of stagflation and a double dip recession never far from focus. UK unemployment remains very high (nearly 8%) and the effects of the UK government’s austerity measures are yet to be truly felt by already tight household budgets. An interest rate hike is only likely to exacerbate these issues and the dovish majority within the MPC take the view that temporary factors are responsible for high UK inflation (such as VAT, oil prices and past sterling weakness). These factors are expected to fade over the longer to leave inflation on target. In truth, the UK’s recovery is on somewhat shakier ground than the eurozone’s (when taken as a whole) but the BoE risks losing credibility on tackling inflation.

The ECB’s more hawkish response is due to a stricter commitment to price stability, rather than the MPC’s approach of balancing this remit with stimulating economic growth. This can perhaps be put down to a more optimistic outlook from the ECB on eurozone and indeed global economic growth.

However, whether or not the ECB’s impending rate rise is prudent, remains to be seen. The move is not without its serious risks to ongoing eurozone periphery debt levels and bond yields - unemployment rates and budget deficits in states like Greece and Portugal vastly overshadow the UK’s. Much faith is being placed on German economic growth to drag the periphery out of recession but the rate rise could yet prove to be self-harming for the eurozone.

And finally, what implications does the ECB’s April rate rise have on the likelihood of a similarly early move from the BoE? That the ECB is convinced of the need to tighten monetary policy may persuade some of the more dovish MPC members to join Sentance’s growing hawkish faction (currently out-numbered by 6:3). However, the eurozone is the UK’s biggest export partner, and if an ECB rate hike slows demand for UK products then this could take much of the heat out of the British economy, which in itself could ease inflationary pressures

Fundamentally, the deciding factor for the MPC is likely to be the UK’s GDP performance in the first quarter of 2011 and if it does bounce back strongly, the MPC will find it difficult to resist tightening policy.

Richard Driver

Analyst – Caxton FX


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