Monetary policy will
remain a very important focus following the Federal Reserve decision to
sanction additional quantitative easing during 2013. There will be
further resistance to currency gains by Japanese and also potentially
the Euro-zone and this will increase the risk for further more
aggressive monetary policy action by the Bank of Japan and ECB. Overall,
the dollar will find it difficult to make much headway unless there is a
serious deterioration in international risk appetite.
Key events for the forthcoming week
Date |
Time (GMT) |
Data release/event |
Sunday December 16th |
|
Japan general election |
Wednesday December 19th |
09.00 |
Germany IFO index |
Wednesday December 19th |
09.30 |
Bank of England MPC minutes |
Thursday December 20th |
|
Bank of Japan interest rate decision |
Dollar:
The Federal Reserve
policies will remain an extremely important focus in the short-term.
The decision to expand quantitative easing will tend to have a negative
impact on the dollar. The Fed is also committed to maintaining a highly
expansionary monetary policy until there is a further marked
improvement in the unemployment rate with a decline to at least 6.5%.
In this context, the dollar will find it difficult to gain any strong
traction, but there will be some reward in terms of pro-growth policies
and likely US growth out-performance. This will be a particularly
significant factor if Euro-zone conditions deteriorate further.
The dollar weakened against European currencies during the week on additional Fed action, but did show some degree of resilience.
The headline US employment data was
stronger than expected with an increase of 146,000 for November from a
revised 138,000 gain the previous month while the unemployment rate
dipped to 7.7% from 7.9% the previous month. There was a downward
revision to October’s payroll gain while the participation rate fell.
The US trade deficit widened to US$42.2bn for October from US$40.3bn the
previous month as exports were slightly weaker, although there may have
been data distortions.
The Federal Reserve left interest
rates on hold at below 0.25% following the latest policy meeting. The
Fed announced that it would buy an additional US$45bn in Treasuries per
month to replace Operation Twist which was in line with market
expectations. As has been the case throughout the year, regional Fed
President Lacker dissented and voted against further quantitative
easing. The Fed downgraded its 2013 growth forecasts slightly.
There was an important shift in forward policy guidance as the FOMC dropped
the reference to a specific timeframe for keeping interest rates at
extremely low levels until 2015. Instead, the Fed announced that it
would introduce economic targets for keeping policy extremely
expansionary. In particular, the threshold for a policy change would be
an unemployment rate of 6.5% and policy would remain extremely
expansionary provided the inflation rate did not rise to above 2.5%.
There
were no significant progress in the US budget talks and concerns
surrounding the risk that no agreement would be reached before the
year-end deadline.
Euro
|
There will be further relief surrounding the ability to defuse the acute Euro-zone
crisis phase with agreement secured on the next Greek loan tranche
while peripheral bond yields have fallen. There will still be a high
degree of unease surrounding the underlying economic outlook, especially
with recession conditions persisting. Political tensions will also be
very important with unease surrounding Italian elections early in 2013.
The underlying peripheral situation also remains extremely fragile and
longer-term fears will continue. There will also be speculation over a
cut in ECB interest rates which will sap Euro support.
The Euro recovered
some ground although this primarily reflected general dollar weakness
rather than any great enthusiasm for the currency.
Interest rate
remained an important focus following Thursday’s ECB press conference
where Draghi indicated that a rate cut had been discussed. There were
unofficial briefings from ECB officials during the day, an unusual event
in itself. There were suggestions that a majority of Council members
had either proposed a rate cut or not been opposed and that a decision
to cut rates had been blocked by Draghi and the German representatives.
The overall impression was that rates could well be cut during the first
quarter of 2013 which also had a negative Euro impact.
Italian political
tensions remained an important focus following Prime Minster Monti’s
announcement that he would resign once the 2013 budget has been
approved. The most likely outcome is that elections will be held in
February which fuelled the mood of uncertainty. There were concerns that
reforms could be in doubt with former Prime Minister Berlusconi’s
intention to stand contributing to the mood of uncertainty. Stock
markets fell sharply and there was a surge in bond yields with Spanish
yields also rising sharply. Tensions did subside later in the day as
Monti looked to offer reassurance over reforms.
The German ZEW
index was stronger than expected with a rise to 6.9 for November from
-15.7 previously which was the strongest reading for seven months. The
ZEW also stated that it considered the recent Bundesbank and ECB
forecasts to be on the pessimistic end of the spectrum.
There
was some positive sentiment surrounding the Greek debt buyback, although
the Greek government did have to pay more than expected which means
that the decline in debt/GDP ratio will be slightly below target. There
was a slightly more cautious outlook on the potential for a cut in ECB
interest rates and there was some speculation that former Prime Minister
Berlusconi would not stand in forthcoming elections. The Euro-zone
agreed on a framework for the new banking supervisor.
Yen:
The
LDP, continues to hold a comfortable opinion-poll lead ahead of the
December 16th General Election, maintaining expectations that there will
be a much more aggressive monetary policy and potential changes to the
Bank of Japan mandate next year. These expectations will undermine the
yen, but there will still be the possibility of political deadlock which
could delay additional policy measures. The yen will also gain
defensive support at times when risk appetite deteriorates, but the
underlying fundamentals will remain weak.
The yen was
firmly on the defensive during the week and weakened to fresh nine-month
lows near 84 against the US currency while the Japanese currency also
weakened sharply against the Euro. There were media reports that the
Bank of Japan would sanction a further JPY5-10trn in quantitative easing
at next week’s policy meeting which contributed to a negative yen tone
There
were further expectations that the LDP would win the forthcoming
election and would also put additional pressure on the central bank to
take more aggressive action. A slightly weaker than expected monthly
increase of 2.6% for core machinery orders did not have a major market
impact while the Tankan index was weaker than expected. A North Korean
missile launch had some negative impact on the yen.
|
Sterling
|
There will be further doubts surrounding the UK economic outlook,
especially with evidence that industrial output weakened sharply at the
beginning of the fourth quarter. The weak outlook will increase
concerns surrounding the underlying fiscal outlook and also maintain
pressure for the Bank of England to boost quantitative easing further. Sterling will
gain some degree of support on relative grounds given the aggressive
Federal Reserve policy and the prospect of further ECB action.
Nevertheless, Sterling is likely to be generally vulnerable given the UK
fundamentals and credit-rating downgrade fears.
Sterling was resilient against the US currency during the week, but struggled to break above the 1.6150 area and edged weaker against the Euro.
The latest industrial data
was sharply weaker than expected with a 0.8% decline in industrial
production for October compared with expectations of a monthly rebound
following the 2.1% drop seen in September. The data increased unease
surrounding the fourth-quarter outlook and reinforced fears surrounding
the economy as a whole. The NIESR estimated a growth rate
of 0.1% in the three months to November with the October reading revised
down sharply to 0.1% from 0.5%.
The latest labour-market
report was stronger than expected as the jobless claimant count fell by
3,000 compared with a revised gain of 6,000 the previous month. The unemployment rate also
held steady at 7.8% for October, in contrast to expectations of a small
increase. Earnings growth was capped below 2.0% which maintained
concerns surrounding the outlook for consumer spending.
The prospect of further quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve, allied with speculation that the ECB would
relax monetary policy further, had an impact in underpinning Sterling
despite unease surrounding the growth outlook. There will be additional
pressure on the Bank of England to take additional action.
There was a warning from Standard & Poor’s that it was revising the AAA credit
rating to negative from stable, reinforcing fears that one or more of
the main rating agencies would downgrade the UK sometime during 2013.
Swiss franc:
The National Bank
will remain strongly committed to maintaining the 1.20 minimum Euro
level in the short-term. There will be further concerns surrounding the
build-up of reserves, but there will also be a very strong determination
to resist franc appreciation, especially with competitiveness still a
key issue. Aggressive policy relaxation elsewhere will maintain the risk
that upward pressure on the franc will intensify again.
The dollar was
on the defensive against the franc and retreated to lows below 0.9250.
There were no surprises from the Swiss National Bank policy meeting with
interest rates left on hold below 0.25% while the minimum 1.20 Euro
level was also maintained. The central bank continued to insist that
franc gains would be resisted with all necessary force.
The latest producer prices data recorded
no change in prices with a 1.2% annual increase which may ease
deflationary pressure slightly. The Euro retreated to lows in the
1.2080 area with disappointment that there was no suggestions of
additional measures to weaken the franc and the dollar dipped to lows
below 0.9250. There was a small recovery in the Swiss ZEW index to -15.5 the previous month
|
Australian dollar
|
The Australian dollar
pushed higher with a move above the 1.05 level against the US currency.
There were expectations that the Australian currency would gain support
from international reserves diversification although there was also
pressure for the central bank to act to restrain the currency as it
remains substantially overvalued.
The domestic data
releases did not provide any support for the currency with a sharp
decline in business confidence and consumer sentiment according to the
latest surveys. A decline in gold prices was also a negative factor for
the currency.
The Australian dollar will gain support from
reserve diversification, but there will still be resistance to gains
with the Reserve Bank under pressure to intervene.
Canadian dollar:
The Canadian dollar was able to resist any significant weakness and strengthened to highs near the 0.9820 region against the US currency.
The trade account was slightly stronger than expected, although the
overall impact was very limited and there was some decline in gold
prices which took the edge of the currency performance.
Even with
near-term resilience and optimism surrounding the fundamentals, the
Canadian dollar will find it difficult to advance from current levels.
====================================================================
Disclaimer: The information and opinions in this report
are for general information use only and are not intended as an offer
or solicitation with respect to the purchase or sale of any currency or
CFD contract. All opinions and information contained in this report are
subject to change without notice. This report has been prepared without
regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and
needs of any particular recipient. Any references to historical price
movements or levels is informational based on our analysis and we do not
represent or warranty that any such movements or levels are likely to
reoccur in the future. While the information contained herein was
obtained from sources believed to be reliable, author does not guarantee
its accuracy or completeness, nor does author assume any liability for
any direct, indirect or consequential loss that may result from the
reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions.
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