Richard Driver, Analyst The euro suffered another slide yesterday, which took EUR/USD to new lows and dragged GBP/USD with it. Today’s session sees the European Central Bank make their monthly interest rate decision, and whilst there is a chance of a rate cut, a rate hold at the current 1.00% level looks more likely. Also today are bond auctions by Italy and Spain, which is bound to keep the market very much on edge. From the UK, we have some UK manufacturing and industrial production data to look forward to. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling actually lost a little ground against the euro (which remains weak itself), ahead of today’s key ECB meeting.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: Dollar strength has taken this pair to its lowest level in a year and a half, with a key Fed policymaker even indicating an interest rate rise (though a long way away).
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: Rumours of a French ratings downgrade triggered some euro to dollar flows, and this pair is looking vulnerable.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling continues its downtrend against the aussie dollar, despite some higher than expected Chinese inflation data.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: The kiwi dollar continues to outperform sterling, though eurozone bond auctions will test this.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: Sterling has had a poor few sessions of late, having lost three cents against the Canadian dollar.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Thursday, 12 January 2012
Morning Report
Wednesday, 11 January 2012
Morning Report
Richard Driver, Analyst The markets are lacking much stimulation at present and we are seeing plenty of range-bound trading. Rumours suggest that investors may have to accept a 60% write-down (haircut) on their Greek bondholdings, up from the 50% originally agreed towards the end of last year. Today’s session is another quiet one in terms of scheduled releases. We may have to wait until events tomorrow to kick the market into action; the ECB’s press conference should throw up some volatility. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling traded within a pretty tight range yesterday, but continues to look well supported at these multi-month highs.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: Trading for this pair has been particularly flat this week but the bleak outlook for the EUR/USD pairing should see GBP lose out to the dollar.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: This pair is also struggling for direction, but reports that hedge funds may resist a Greek restructuring plan will concern the market.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling continued to trade positively yesterday in the wake of the positive Chinese trade balance headline.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Sterling’s brief bounce against the kiwi dollar was short-lived, and it is on the defensive once again.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: The Canadian dollar continued to rally against the pound, probably trading off Chinese positivity.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Tuesday, 10 January 2012
Weekly Analysis: Euro still looking vulnerable
Early year optimism disappears very quickly
There were signs of a rally in confidence and risk appetite in the session or so of 2012 but sentiment quickly deteriorated due to all the familiar eurozone-related concerns. Poor demand at eurozone bond auctions (including that of Germany, much to the market’s concern) and widening yield spreads saw the euro resume its downtrend almost across the board. Linked to this are ongoing concerns of blanket downgrades throughout the eurozone when Standard & Poor’s decides to take action. There are plenty of bond auctions this week to keep the euro under pressure; Greece will look to the market on Tuesday, while Italy and Spain will do so on Thursday.
Also in the headlines in recent sessions has been the worsening economic picture in the eurozone. EU leaders finally appear to be willing to address the issue of eurozone growth. The debt crisis is having such as impact on confidence that the region is spiralling into recession and EU leaders have earmarked the Jan 30th meeting as an opportunity to look at eurozone growth and the region’s soaring unemployment levels (10.3% for the eurozone).
Figures last week revealed a eurozone services sector contraction, as well as negative monthly growth in both German and eurozone retail sales. Forward looking data such as German factory and eurozone industrial orders also undershot expectations last week. It seems businesses on the continent are preparing for the worst and sitting on their capital. With the lack of leadership we have seen on the debt issue, it is difficult to question why.
Merkel and Sarkozy’s meeting produced little of real note; they remain committed to the progress made on introducing greater budgetary discipline in the eurozone and continue to urge Greece to reach an agreement with private bondholders on haircuts before the country is given its 2nd bailout.
The ECB will have its monthly meeting and press conference on Thursday, which will surely overshadow the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting. We think there is a greater chance of another ECB rate cut than the market is currently appreciating. Eurozone data is only going one way and with inflation also beginning to ease, Draghi could well pull the trigger for the third consecutive month. That said, we are still betting that the ECB will keep its powder dry for this month, though another cut in Q1 is almost a dead cert.
UK growth takes a more positive turn, but for how long?
Last week’s monthly set of UK growth data take a turn for the better, with each of the services, manufacturing and construction sector figures beating expectations. The services sector was particularly impressive in December.
The outlook for the UK recovery remains highly uncertain and risks are firmly fixed to the downside. Sterling should benefit nonetheless, with hopes being raised that the Bank of England may be convinced that further quantitative easing may not be necessary after all. High demand for UK debt continues to support the pound; gilts were the top performing government bond for 2011 and are starting 2012 where they spent the last.
Sterling is trading up at a sixteen month high of 1.21 against the euro and the outlook is looking very strong for GBP/EUR. Less so against the dollar, the US recovery is gathering pace at an impressive rate, which is only adding to the safe-haven appeal of the greenback. GBP/USD is trading just above a four month low of $1.54.
End of week forecast:
GBP / EUR 1.2150
GBP / USD 1.54
EUR / USD 1.27
GBP / AUD 1.51
Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.
There were signs of a rally in confidence and risk appetite in the session or so of 2012 but sentiment quickly deteriorated due to all the familiar eurozone-related concerns. Poor demand at eurozone bond auctions (including that of Germany, much to the market’s concern) and widening yield spreads saw the euro resume its downtrend almost across the board. Linked to this are ongoing concerns of blanket downgrades throughout the eurozone when Standard & Poor’s decides to take action. There are plenty of bond auctions this week to keep the euro under pressure; Greece will look to the market on Tuesday, while Italy and Spain will do so on Thursday.
Also in the headlines in recent sessions has been the worsening economic picture in the eurozone. EU leaders finally appear to be willing to address the issue of eurozone growth. The debt crisis is having such as impact on confidence that the region is spiralling into recession and EU leaders have earmarked the Jan 30th meeting as an opportunity to look at eurozone growth and the region’s soaring unemployment levels (10.3% for the eurozone).
Figures last week revealed a eurozone services sector contraction, as well as negative monthly growth in both German and eurozone retail sales. Forward looking data such as German factory and eurozone industrial orders also undershot expectations last week. It seems businesses on the continent are preparing for the worst and sitting on their capital. With the lack of leadership we have seen on the debt issue, it is difficult to question why.
Merkel and Sarkozy’s meeting produced little of real note; they remain committed to the progress made on introducing greater budgetary discipline in the eurozone and continue to urge Greece to reach an agreement with private bondholders on haircuts before the country is given its 2nd bailout.
The ECB will have its monthly meeting and press conference on Thursday, which will surely overshadow the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting. We think there is a greater chance of another ECB rate cut than the market is currently appreciating. Eurozone data is only going one way and with inflation also beginning to ease, Draghi could well pull the trigger for the third consecutive month. That said, we are still betting that the ECB will keep its powder dry for this month, though another cut in Q1 is almost a dead cert.
UK growth takes a more positive turn, but for how long?
Last week’s monthly set of UK growth data take a turn for the better, with each of the services, manufacturing and construction sector figures beating expectations. The services sector was particularly impressive in December.
The outlook for the UK recovery remains highly uncertain and risks are firmly fixed to the downside. Sterling should benefit nonetheless, with hopes being raised that the Bank of England may be convinced that further quantitative easing may not be necessary after all. High demand for UK debt continues to support the pound; gilts were the top performing government bond for 2011 and are starting 2012 where they spent the last.
Sterling is trading up at a sixteen month high of 1.21 against the euro and the outlook is looking very strong for GBP/EUR. Less so against the dollar, the US recovery is gathering pace at an impressive rate, which is only adding to the safe-haven appeal of the greenback. GBP/USD is trading just above a four month low of $1.54.
End of week forecast:
GBP / EUR 1.2150
GBP / USD 1.54
EUR / USD 1.27
GBP / AUD 1.51
Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.
Morning Report
Richard Driver, Analyst Major headlines from yesterday’s session surrounded Merkel and Sarkzoy’s meeting, which indicated further commitment to last month’s pact on greater budgetary responsibility rules. Elsewhere, the scandal surrounding the private currency trading by the wife of the head of the Swiss National Bank has seen the central banker step down, though policy towards swiss franc pegging will remain unaffected. Today’s session is a very quiet one in terms scheduled data releases. This week’s next main event to which the market will begin casting their eye is Thursday’s ECB meeting. | |||
STERLING/EURO: This pair saw range-bound trading, regardless of Merkel and Sarkzoy’s show of unity.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: Sterling benefited from a minor bounce yesterday as support levels kicked in, but a move south will surely come.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: The euro enjoyed a little rebound but it will be nothing to concern those betting on downside for this pair.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Commodity currencies did well yesterday and this pair stooped to more than a five month low.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: The encouraging news from China also benefited the kiwi dollar, which sent this pair to almost a four month low.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: The Canadian dollar traded very positively yesterday and looks likely to re-test support levels down at 1.5750.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Monday, 9 January 2012
Caxton FX January Outlook: GBP/EUR/USD
December was an awful month for the single currency; the crucial EU Summit failed to satisfy market expectations and the euro was punished accordingly. Preceding the Summit, hopes for a holistic, assertive and credible plan to deal with the region’s debt profile were elevated higher than ever. Unfortunately the fiscal compact on budgetary discipline and various other commitments that were made did little to convince the market that EU leaders are on the right track. The region’s debt dynamics are finally taking their toll on the euro in a very material way.
Sentiment towards the UK economy has been at a particularly low ebb in recent weeks; growth figures have been disappointing and sights have been set very low for 2012 growth. Nonetheless, with the UK government remaining committed to its deficit reduction plan, there continues to be strong (and sterling-supportive) demand for UK gilts and there remains minimal scope for Bank of England intervention.
The focal points for this month are inevitably eurozone-related. Investors will be looking to the EU Summit on 30th of January with hopes for major decisions to deal with the debt situation. Growth will also be discussed and this has up until now remained a largely unaddressed problem. The eurozone looks likely to head back into a technical recession this year, and it goes without saying that the region cannot solve this crisis without economic growth.
Sterling/Euro
Slow progress and poor leadership are hurting the euro almost across the board at present. Sterling has climbed to a sixteen-month high of €1.2150 against the euro, which says far more about waning confidence levels towards the single currency than it does about the UK’s economic growth prospects.
Out of last month’s EU Summit came an agreement to top up the eurozone’s bailout resources by €200bn in IMF loans. Typically, and almost symbolic of EU leaders’ inability to take action, this figure was later revised down to €150bn. Agreements to bring forward the introduction of the European Stability Mechanism (the permanent bailout fund) by a year to the middle of 2012 and to enforce stricter budget discipline are valuable long-term developments, but they do little to deal with the region’s very pressing short-term issues. The market is short-termist by nature; investors are far less concerned with avoiding future crises, they are preoccupied with the threat that the current crisis poses to the very existence of the euro.
Rating agency action (or the threat of it) is worrying the market at present. The bodies responded to the latest EU Summit inaction by downgrading the ratings of eurozone states such as Belgium and put several key nations such as Spain and Italy on ‘negative watch.’ Fitch’s even came to the damning conclusion that a comprehensive solution to the debt problem is “technically and politically beyond reach.” Standard & Poor’s are yet to wield their axe but are likely to do so in coming weeks, and this represents a major threat to the euro and risk appetite more generally.
Bond auctions in the eurozone are also in sharp contrast. Debt sales have been attracting diminishing demand and, alarmingly, this even applies to the core countries of France and Germany. Bond spreads are widening throughout the eurozone (Germany excepted) and further bond auctions this month will keep the pressure on the euro.
Greece remains the first head on the chopping block and its government has already stated this week that they will be forced to exit the euro in the event that they do not receive a second bailout by March. We can expect nerves to build steadily ahead of this deadline.
The prospects for the UK economy, despite a couple of encouraging growth figures from the UK services and construction sectors this week, are distinctly gloomy. Flat to minimal (around 0.5%) growth seems likely this year, and the risks of a recession are very significant. However in truth, developments in the eurozone will have a greater say over the UK’s recovery prospects than domestic policy.
Risks for this pair are quite clearly to the upside from our standpoint; the uptrend may be stalled by bouts of profit-taking on sterling’s rallies, but we see this pair climbing a further cent towards €1.22.
Sterling/US dollar
Sterling has been trading within a three cent range of $1.54 - $1.57 since late November and although this pair has threatened a move to the downside several times, sterling has managed to maintain sufficient support.
The US recovery is finding some real transaction at present, we haven’t seen such consistently positive economic data flow in almost a year. US manufacturing, consumer confidence and employment gauges are all on the up. The labour market, which remains both the US government and the US Federal Reserve’s number one concern, in particular appears to be making some progress, with January’s key monthly employment change figure hitting an eight month high.
In comparison to slowdowns in economies such as the UK, the eurozone, China and many others, the upturn in the US is attracting plenty of investment besides safe-haven flows. Often strong US data will weaken the dollar but at present, the opposite is true. In addition, the upturn in the US is diminishing the case for further quantitative easing from the Fed, which again is a positive for the US dollar.
Safe-haven flows are still the number one driver of the greenback’s strength however. The eurozone situation continues to peg back risk appetite and we are confident it will do so for many months to come. With fears of central bank intervention hanging over the yen and particularly the swiss franc, demand for the US dollar is high.
With market confidence on a noticeable downtrend, we see this pair breaking its current range to the downside in coming weeks. A move towards $1.53 is our bet.
Caxton FX one month forecast:
GBP / EUR 1.22
GBP / USD 1.53
EUR / USD 1.26
Richard Driver
Senior Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.
Sentiment towards the UK economy has been at a particularly low ebb in recent weeks; growth figures have been disappointing and sights have been set very low for 2012 growth. Nonetheless, with the UK government remaining committed to its deficit reduction plan, there continues to be strong (and sterling-supportive) demand for UK gilts and there remains minimal scope for Bank of England intervention.
The focal points for this month are inevitably eurozone-related. Investors will be looking to the EU Summit on 30th of January with hopes for major decisions to deal with the debt situation. Growth will also be discussed and this has up until now remained a largely unaddressed problem. The eurozone looks likely to head back into a technical recession this year, and it goes without saying that the region cannot solve this crisis without economic growth.
Sterling/Euro
Slow progress and poor leadership are hurting the euro almost across the board at present. Sterling has climbed to a sixteen-month high of €1.2150 against the euro, which says far more about waning confidence levels towards the single currency than it does about the UK’s economic growth prospects.
Out of last month’s EU Summit came an agreement to top up the eurozone’s bailout resources by €200bn in IMF loans. Typically, and almost symbolic of EU leaders’ inability to take action, this figure was later revised down to €150bn. Agreements to bring forward the introduction of the European Stability Mechanism (the permanent bailout fund) by a year to the middle of 2012 and to enforce stricter budget discipline are valuable long-term developments, but they do little to deal with the region’s very pressing short-term issues. The market is short-termist by nature; investors are far less concerned with avoiding future crises, they are preoccupied with the threat that the current crisis poses to the very existence of the euro.
Rating agency action (or the threat of it) is worrying the market at present. The bodies responded to the latest EU Summit inaction by downgrading the ratings of eurozone states such as Belgium and put several key nations such as Spain and Italy on ‘negative watch.’ Fitch’s even came to the damning conclusion that a comprehensive solution to the debt problem is “technically and politically beyond reach.” Standard & Poor’s are yet to wield their axe but are likely to do so in coming weeks, and this represents a major threat to the euro and risk appetite more generally.
Bond auctions in the eurozone are also in sharp contrast. Debt sales have been attracting diminishing demand and, alarmingly, this even applies to the core countries of France and Germany. Bond spreads are widening throughout the eurozone (Germany excepted) and further bond auctions this month will keep the pressure on the euro.
Greece remains the first head on the chopping block and its government has already stated this week that they will be forced to exit the euro in the event that they do not receive a second bailout by March. We can expect nerves to build steadily ahead of this deadline.
The prospects for the UK economy, despite a couple of encouraging growth figures from the UK services and construction sectors this week, are distinctly gloomy. Flat to minimal (around 0.5%) growth seems likely this year, and the risks of a recession are very significant. However in truth, developments in the eurozone will have a greater say over the UK’s recovery prospects than domestic policy.
Risks for this pair are quite clearly to the upside from our standpoint; the uptrend may be stalled by bouts of profit-taking on sterling’s rallies, but we see this pair climbing a further cent towards €1.22.
Sterling/US dollar
Sterling has been trading within a three cent range of $1.54 - $1.57 since late November and although this pair has threatened a move to the downside several times, sterling has managed to maintain sufficient support.
The US recovery is finding some real transaction at present, we haven’t seen such consistently positive economic data flow in almost a year. US manufacturing, consumer confidence and employment gauges are all on the up. The labour market, which remains both the US government and the US Federal Reserve’s number one concern, in particular appears to be making some progress, with January’s key monthly employment change figure hitting an eight month high.
In comparison to slowdowns in economies such as the UK, the eurozone, China and many others, the upturn in the US is attracting plenty of investment besides safe-haven flows. Often strong US data will weaken the dollar but at present, the opposite is true. In addition, the upturn in the US is diminishing the case for further quantitative easing from the Fed, which again is a positive for the US dollar.
Safe-haven flows are still the number one driver of the greenback’s strength however. The eurozone situation continues to peg back risk appetite and we are confident it will do so for many months to come. With fears of central bank intervention hanging over the yen and particularly the swiss franc, demand for the US dollar is high.
With market confidence on a noticeable downtrend, we see this pair breaking its current range to the downside in coming weeks. A move towards $1.53 is our bet.
Caxton FX one month forecast:
GBP / EUR 1.22
GBP / USD 1.53
EUR / USD 1.26
Richard Driver
Senior Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.
Labels:
debt.,
euro,
eurozone,
Fed,
sterling,
UK economy,
US dollar,
US economy
Morning Report
Richard Driver, Analyst Last week finished with yet more positive US data, with the unemployment rate dipping to its lowest level since March 2009 and probably more significantly, 200k jobs were added to the payrolls. There was further poor eurozone data to ensure that the euro/US dollar pair headed yet lower. Today’s session will see Merkel and Sarkozy meet to iron out further details on the fiscal compact on budget discipline that was agreed at last month’s EU Summit. A press conference will also follow and will no doubt dominate the headlines. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Having climbed by over a cent last week, this pair continues to edge higher as the eurozone’s weak growth outlook heightens concerns.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: Sterling found it tough going against the USD last week, but is benefiting from support at these multi-month lows.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: Further lows are being posted by the pair, with strong US data triggering a rally in the greenback.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: This pair remains fairly range-bound; though a poor Australian retail sales figure may see sterling make some gains today.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Sterling is struggling rather more against the New Zealand dollar, despite losses in Asian stocks.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: Remarkably, the Canadian dollar failed to kick on after the excellent US jobs figure, not helped by a poorer domestic figure.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Friday, 6 January 2012
Morning Report
The euro came under further selling pressure yesterday and posted fresh lows against several currencies. For us, it is quite clear that the euro is going to depreciate, fundamentals have been pointing this way for some time now and market sentiment is worsening every month. The key obstacle to further euro downside is profit-taking, but this is only short-term by nature. Today’s session bring the all-important non-farm payroll data from the US, which could have a considerable impact on the mood in the market. The US growth story is the only real positive headline out there at the moment. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling climbed higher still against the euro, perhaps helped by some better than expected UK services data.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: Sterling came under further pressure against the safe-haven US dollar, amid some more positive US jobs data.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: The euro is suffering further declines ahead of some important eurozone confidence data and a meeting between Sarkozy and Monti.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling failed to kick on after some early gains, but remains off its lows against the aussie dollar.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Despite strong UK services data and weak Asian stocks, sterling failed to hang on to yesterday morning’s early gains.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: A third consecutive day in the green for US stocks was sufficient to keep the Canadian dollar in demand.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Thursday, 5 January 2012
Richard Driver, Analyst The early optimism that characterised Tuesday’s session has already run out of steam, and the euro is once again feeling the heat as you would expect. There was no major catalyst for the euro’s poor day, but mediocre demand at a German bond auction was unlikely to help. Accordingly, there will be nerves ahead of today’s French bond auction. UK gilts continue to benefit the pound but this morning’s growth figure from the UK services sector has the capacity weigh on sterling. This afternoon brings some key US services and unemployment data, but the market will probably hold off until after tomorrow’s US non-farm payrolls. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling is now trading at sixteen month high against the euro as familiar eurozone concerns take their toll.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: This pair is edging lower ahead of December’s UK services figure; safe-haven trades should also boost the US dollar.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: The euro suffered a major slide yesterday, not helped by concerns over a Spanish request for emergency loans.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling is edging up against the aussie dollar this morning, helped by poor Australian trade balance data.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Sterling is on the climb against the kiwi dollar, with the market nervy ahead of today’s French bond auction.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: This pair saw some fairly range-bound trading as some strong US factory orders data offset heightened eurozone concerns.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Morning Report 04.01.2012
With positive manufacturing data out of the US and the UK, confidence levels continued to rebound, as evidenced by major gains in global stocks. There was good news out of Germany too, with unemployment levels dropping to a staggering twenty-year low. UK construction data came in above expectations this morning, showing some pretty reasonable growth. However, the market is unlikely to respond until tomorrow’s key UK services sector growth figure is announced. | |||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling continues to trade close to the €1.20 level despite alarming warning from the Greek government.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/US DOLLAR: The US dollar continued to weaken off yesterday as strong US economic data spurred on riskier trades away.
| FORECAST | ||
EURO/US DOLLAR: The euro benefited from further dollar-weakness and risk appetite, but the threat of S&P downgrades continue to loom.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Despite risk-positive news from the US, support levels close to 1.50 kicked in for this pair.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: This pair remains at a two-month low but with so much uncertainty still remaining, these levels look due an upward correction.
| FORECAST | ||
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: Sterling benefited from some decent support levels yesterday, stopping the Canadian dollar from capitalising on such a strong US manufacturing figure.
| FORECAST | ||
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. | |||
Tuesday, 3 January 2012
Richard Driver, Analyst Happy New Year! The team here at Caxton FX would like to wish you the very best of luck for 2012, we hope the exchange rates go your way! The outlook for early 2012 remains unchanged as far as we are concerned, we continue to favour safer currencies in anticipation of further alarm bells from the eurozone. The week ahead brings the monthly growth updates from the UK construction and services sectors, in addition to this morning’s improved UK manufacturing figure. Expectations are not high, but sterling has been fairly resistant to poor data in recent weeks. | ||
STERLING/EURO: Sterling continues to trade at the lofty heights of €1.20, as investors turn the heads towards a tough start to the year for the euro.
| FORECAST | |
STERLING/US DOLLAR: The dollar has made a poor start to the week as some positive news emerged out of the global growth story.
| FORECAST | |
EURO/US DOLLAR: The euro is trading at a 12-month low against the US dollar and we are betting on further declines.
| FORECAST | |
STERLING/AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR: Sterling is posting losses against the aussie dollar amid strong gains in Asian stocks.
| FORECAST | |
STERLING/NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR: Sterling is suffering a downward correction against the kiwi dollar, but a return to levels well above 2.00 should come this month.
| FORECAST | |
STERLING/CANADIAN DOLLAR: This pair is still under pressure as sentiment towards the US economy continues to warm up to the benefit of the loonie.
| FORECAST | |
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