Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by DailyFX | Jul 24 08 06:10 GMT | | |
A deepening recession moved the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to cut interest rates for the first time since 2003, putting benchmark borrowing costs at 8.00%. The Kiwi dollar responded sharply, dropping 82 pips in the first 10 minutes following the release and continuing lower overnight. European trading promises volatility with a busy calendar in the day ahead. All eyes will be on the German IFO Survey as expectations call for the lowest reading since 2005. Key Overnight Developments
Critical Levels Having breached near-term support in US hours, the Euro retraced a bit towards the 1.57 mark overnight. DailyFX Technical Strategist Jaime Saettele favors a long-term bullish bias as long as price remains above 1.5611, aiming for a sustained break above the 1.60 mark to target 1.6325. Support is seen at 1.5611. Sterling remained largely range-bound having slipped back below the 2.00 level late in the New York session. Support is seen at 1.9875, while resistance stands at 2.0150. Asia Session Highlights A deepening recession moved the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to cut interest rates by 25 basis points, putting benchmark borrowing costs at 8.00%. This is the first RBNZ rate cut since 2003. The accompanying release cited greater-than-expected risks to growth and tightening international credit conditions as primary catalysts for the decision. Borrowing a page from Australia's playbook, Governor Alan Bollard said that monetary policy has been 'reasonably tight for some time, and is now restraining activity and medium-term inflation pressures.' Bollard added that although recent spikes in oil and food prices will bring inflation to a peak near 5% this year, the slowing economy will act to bring price pressure to target levels in the medium term. Shaping expectations in a typically candid fashion, Bollard concluded by saying that 'provided that the outlook for inflation continues to improve and there is no excessive exchange rate depreciation, we would expect to lower the OCR further.' The Kiwi dollar responded sharply, dropping 82 pips in the first 10 minutes following the release and continuing lower overnight. June's Japanese Merchandise Trade Balance dealt a crushing blow to the idea that countries will be able to decouple the US slowdown by replacing American demand with that from emerging markets. The metric saw the trade surplus shrink to just ¥138.6 billion versus expectations of ¥506.0 billion. The result owed to a -1.7% decline in exports, the first net loss since 2003. While there was no surprise that exports to the US eased for a tenth consecutive month (falling -15.4%), the data revealed sharp declines in shipments to Europe (-11.2%) and to Asia (1.5% in June vs. 8.1% in May). Exports to China slowed to 5.1% from 12.2% in the preceding month. Declines in demand from emerging markets seemed only a matter of time: commodity prices along with buoyant home-grown economies have bid up prices levels, bringing on a sweeping trend of monetary tightening. Higher interest rates have depressed consumption, including that of goods imported from Japan. Given its reliance on the export sector to drive economic growth, current trends suggest Japan will be in a slump for some time to come. Euro Session: What to Expect European trading promises volatility with a busy calendar in the day ahead. A slew of second-tier business confidence releases from the Euro-Zone's top three economies will culminate with July's edition of Germany's IFO Survey. June saw sentiment contract to the lowest in two years as rising oil prices erode disposable incomes all the while a stronger Euro crimps export demand. Expectations calling for more of the same this time around are likely to be validated as New Orders and Retail Sales from the 15-nation bloc has markedly deteriorated in recent weeks. A survey of analysts conducted by ZEW, a non-profit research institute, saw analysts' sentiment collapse to the lowest level since 1992 in July. The Euro-Zone Current Account is expected to improve a bit, with forecasts calling for a deficit of -€6.0 billion versus a sharp decline of -€9.2 billion in the preceding month. France was the only country in the EZ's top three to show improvement in the current account in May as a widening deficit in the trade component was offset by gains in revenues and services. On balance, both Germany and Italy saw their current account readings deteriorate in the same reference period, leaving the door open for a downside surprise. UK Retail Sales will likely decline further, with expectations calling for annualized growth to print at 4.4% June versus 8.1% in May. An economic slowdown led by the deepening housing slump coupled with rising oil and food costs brought June's Consumer Confidence to the lowest in four years. This makes it quite reasonable that consumers tightened their belts last month, taking retail activity readings lower. Disclaimer Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources. |
SaneBull Commodities and Futures
|
|
SaneBull World Market Watch
|
Economic Calendar
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Euro Open: Will IFO Push Euro Even Lower?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment