Weekly Market analysis | ||||||||||||
Following the drama surrounding the US fiscal cliff talks, monetary and currency policies will remain a very important focus. The Federal Reserve will maintain a very loose monetary policy for now, butt he latest Fed minutes have injected a greater mood of uncertainty and the possibility of a tightening. TheBank of Japan will also be under intense pressure to boost policy further. The ECB will also consider further action to underpin the economy which will ensure very loose monetary conditions and may serve to lessen the threat of a severe deterioration in risk appetite. Key events for the forthcoming week
Dollar: The US fiscal deal has eased immediate fears surrounding a disorderly policy tightening. Nevertheless, there will still be a significant policy tightening which will have some impact in curbing consumer spending growth. The deal was also only a stop-gap measure and there will be further political confrontation surrounding spending cuts and the debt ceiling. There will be uncertainties surrounding the growth outlook and risk conditions. There is a very dovish Federal Reserve committee for 2013, but the latest minutes will spark some speculation that there will be some tightening later in 2013. Net longer-term yields should be dollar supportive for the US currency. After initial weakness following the US budget deal, the dollar found support near 1.33 against the Euroand rallied strongly against European currencies Following the deal to avert the immediate US fiscal crisis, there was a renewed consideration of the longer-term outlook. There were further concerns that the spending issue would have to be tackled again before the end of February and Congress will also have to tackle the debt-ceiling issue with the potential for further tense negotiations. There was some reassessment of risk considerations which also curbed dollar selling. As far as the US data releases were concerned, there was an increase in the ISM manufacturing index to 50.7 from 49.5 which provided some degree of relief. The ADP employment data was stronger than expected with a gain of 215,000 private-sector jobs for December from a revised 118,000 previously. Although there was a higher than expected release for jobless claims, there was greater optimism surrounding the US payroll report. The latest FOMC minutes stated that some members were concerned surrounding risks associated with further quantitative easing, especially as it would make it more difficult to secure an eventual exit strategy. In this context, several members wanted to scale-back bond purchases well before the end of 2013. There was still some degree of caution surrounding the labour market, but there was shift in expectations on potential tightening this year as markets had been primed for a very dovish tone. |
Euro |
Structural fears surrounding the Euro-zone have eased for now which will lessen the potential for aggressive selling pressure. There will still be a high degree of unease surrounding the growth outlook and there will also be pressure for the ECB to relax monetary policy further. The bank will still be uneasy over the prospect of negative deposit rates and there will also be opposition from the Bundesbank. Any friction within the ECB will tend to undermine confidence in the Euro. There is also less scope for capital repatriation which will tend to lessen scope for Euro buying and a Spanish aid request would be likely to provide only initial currency relief. The Euro was unable to sustain an initial advance following the New Year break and retreated sharply towards the 1.30 level against the dollar. Italy’s lower house approved the 2013 budget in parliament and, as expected Prime Minister Monti submitted his resignation. There were some suggestions that he could stand for election in forthcoming elections, but uncertainty remained high. The final Euro-zone PMI data was slightly weaker than expected with a dip to 46.1 from 46.3 as there was a dip in the German index with an improvement in the Italian index offset by a weaker Italian outcome. The data maintained some degree of unease surrounding the Euro-zone outlook which dampened Euro demand. There was some speculation that capital repatriation associated with the year-end Euro demand to bolster balance sheets had eased. An easing of flows could be significant in triggering a wider loss of Euro support. There was further speculation that the ECB could consider a cut in interest rates at the January meeting, but a higher than expected German inflation reading increased speculation that there would be Bundesbank opposition to any rate cut and there would also be unease within the Council over any move to set a negative deposit rate. Although a surprise decline in Spanish unemployment, provided some relief, there were concerns that the fall reflected longer-term unemployed leaving the labour market rather than any real improvement in conditions. The German labour-market data was close to expectations with a 3,000 unemployment increase for December. The latest money-supply data recorded an eighth successive decline in private lending which maintained unease over the outlook, but there was a small increase in banking-sector deposits in Italy and Spain which provided some relief. Spain’s admission that it was using social security funds to buy government bonds also unsettled confidence and sparked expectations of a bailout soon. Yen: There will be intense pressure for the Bank of Japan to engage in further aggressive policy easing with the next policy meeting due in the third week of January. The government is also planning a further round of aggressive fiscal stimulus in an attempt to ease deflationary pressure. These factors combined will tend to have a negative impact on the yen, especially with a lack of confidence in the Japanese fundamentals. The Japanese currency will still gain some degree of support when risk appetite deteriorates and there will also be pressure for a limited correction after recent sharp losses. The yen remained extremely weak as it dipped to the lowest levels in more than two years against the dollar. Incoming Prime Minster Abe continued aggressive calls for deflation to be tackled and warned that he would look to change the central bank Act which ensures independence if the Bank of Japan fails to meet inflation targets. Expectations that there would be aggressive action to ease deflation risks through aggressive monetary and fiscal policies continued to have a negative impact on the yen. Weak underlying yen sentiment was offset by pressures for a technical correction following sharp losses and the dollar consolidated above the 87 level with Japanese markets still closed for a holiday. The dollar found strong support on dips and pushed back above 87 with initial support from the stronger than expected US ADP report. There was further buying support following the Fed minutes with a shift in expectations. Japanese markets re-opened following the new-year break which triggered a fresh round of yen selling, particularly with a widening in yield spreads to the highest level since April. The dollar pushed to a fresh 29-month high above 87.75 against the Japanese currency. |
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