Showing posts with label Mark Carney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Carney. 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, 12 May 2014

ECB defers action most likely until the next meeting, Cable is stopped at 1.70 but remains elevated.

UK – The United Kingdom performed well over the last week, as Services PMI came in positively on Tuesday, the Bank of England kept the Asset Purchase Facility and the Official Bank Rate the same on Thursday, and Manufacturing Production m/m came in positively on Friday. The positive economic outlook has supported the pound against most currencies in the last week or so, but depending on the data this week, we could see further gains. The relevant data this week will be Mark Carney holding a press conference on Wednesday, followed by a Bank of England Inflation Report. This will provide the BoE’s projection for economic growth and inflation over the next 2 years. Aside from this data, there will not be any major data releases, so the strength of the pound will largely be determined by market trends and speculation until the press conference on Wednesday.

EUR – The European Central bank decided to keep rates on hold for the moment, which provided a momentary spike of strength for the Euro, until Mario Draghi made a comment at the end of the press conference which strongly hinted at ECB action at its June meeting. His comment was that “the governing council is comfortable with acting next time”. This helped to restore confidence in Draghi’s pledge from June 2012 to do “whatever it takes” to save the Eurozone. However, this undermined the value of the Euro, which dropped around a percent against the Pound and the Dollar. The Euro has started the week out on the back foot, and with little data on the week to change this momentum against the Euro, we could see further losses. The only high-impact event coming out of the Eurozone this week will include German ZEW Economic Sentiment on Tuesday. Aside from this, we expect the rate this week to be driven very much by market sentiment.

USD – In the past week, the dollar index has made a significant gain of around one percent due to some positive data over the last week. There has been a reversal of the downward trend of dollar devaluation since the middle of April, as short positions are beginning to unwind and market sentiment is helping to reverse the losses that the dollar suffered. Data from the US this week could help to support the dollar, as it is forecast to come in more positively. The data will start with Core Retail Sales m/m and Retail Sales m/m on Tuesday, PPI m/m on Wednesday, Core CPI m/m, Unemployment Claims, and the Philly Fed manufacturing Index on Thursday, and finally, Building Permits data and Preliminary University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment data on Friday. With this busy week of US data, we could see the dollar go either way, but the dollar is on the front foot for now.

AUD – The Australian dollar gained against sterling and most other currencies last week, as there was much action from the Australian Central bank. The market has speculated that the RBA will soon cut interest rates, but the central bank kept interest rates at 2.50% at the last meeting, lending strength to the AUD. The Unemployment rate also dropped last Thursday in Australia, and the Monetary Policy report came out suggesting a more hawkish tone than expected, that indicators of the economic outlook are “consistent with the pace of growth”. This was a big week for the Australian dollar and it comes into this week with momentum in its favour.

End of week forecast:
GBP/EUR – 1.2275
GBP/USD – 1.68
EUR/USD – 1.37
GBP/AUD – 1.7980

Nicholas Ebisch
Corporate Account Manager
Caxton FX

Monday, 7 October 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Report: Investors unwind sterling long positions


Investors profit-take as rate hike speculation eases
Sterling ended the week experiencing sharp declines as investors realise they may have gotten ahead of themselves on UK optimism. Bank of England Governor Mark Carney stated that the central bank will not consider “raising rates or tightening monetary policy until we see the conditions in the economy where the economy is really growing”. This, alongside economic figures that have come in below expectations, have highlighted the fact the UK still has a long way to go before the economy is perceived as “really growing”. The Bank of England is likely to maintain their dovish bias when they meet to discuss monetary policy this week, and we expect both the base rate and asset purchase programme to remain on hold for another month. After weeks of being the frontrunner sterling begins the week in a more vulnerable position and we doubt much is going to boost the GBP/EUR and GBP/USD rate back to the highs we have seen recently. Manufacturing Production figures could provide sterling with some support, however with a more euro-focused week sterling gains will be limited for a while yet.

Stellar performance from the euro, but can it continue?
The euro definitely made a strong comeback towards the end of last week, and with a more euro-focused week the single currency could possibly extend these gains further. Sentiment has improved towards the eurozone after Italian Prime Minister Letta won the confidence vote and ECB President Draghi stressed the bank’s commitment to use all policy tools available if the recovery falters. The central bank didn’t signal any concern about the current strength of the euro but did emphasize the exchange rate’s significance to the recovery of the euro area. President Draghi is due to speak on Wednesday and Thursday and it is unlikely that rhetoric will differ much from what we heard last week. German factory orders, industrial production figures and German trade balance will all be numbers to watch, and considering the ECB doesn’t view a strong euro as a threat just yet, we doubt investors will hesitate if data provides upside surprise.

How close will we get to a US default?
The dollar has suffered the consequences of a US government clash, and it will most likely get worse before it gets better for the currency. Last week we witnessed some good US economic figures provide the currency with some relief, but with the shutdown preventing the all-important US jobs release, there is only so much US data can do. The FOMC meeting minutes on Thursday will be of some interest, however with Fed tapering talk on hold for now it is unlikely to have a big influence with the partial shutdown still in place. Last week’s unemployment claims provided upside surprise and if this week follows suit it could support dollar weakness in the short term. For now the market is just playing the waiting game, and investors are not yet convinced the US government will risk a US default. As the days left to reach a decision diminish and risk aversion increases, we may see the dollar return as the safe haven once again. We believe the dollar could remain on the back foot for most of the week and don’t expect to see the risk aversion play for a few sessions yet.


End of week forecast

GBP / EUR
1.1850
GBP / USD
1.61
EUR / USD
1.3610
GBP / AUD
1.71


Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst