Weekly Analysis of the Majors - Can Dollar Rally Continue?
Talking Points
The US Dollar $ - Can Dollar Rally Continue?
Housing continued to be a problem as Existing Homes plunged -2.6% versus -0.1% projected and LEI data printed negative for 7th out of the past 9 months. However by Friday US economic data actually proved supportive with U of M survey jumping back to the 60 level and Durable Goods registering a surprise increase 0.8% versus forecasts of a -0.3% decline. Furthermore as we noted in our Friday note, 'with markets already so preconditioned to bad economic news from the U.S., the greenback may not weaken much further unless the data shows substantial deterioration from the prior month.'
With the greenback clearly stabilized for now, the question forward is can the rally continue? The answer as is so often the case may depend on the NFPs'. The front of the week may actually prove dollar positive as flash GDP for Q2 could show surprising strength of 2% versus only 1% the quarter prior. However, the labor data holds the key. If NFPs surprise to the downside, most importantly breaking the -100K barrier, dollar longs will be hard pressed to rally the unit as expectations of a severe slowdown in the second half of the year will only harden the view of the bears that the worst lies ahead. -BS
The Euro € - No Tumble Despite Trouble
Germany has been the primary driver of growth in the EZ and tonight's data bodes badly for the region as a whole. Earlier in the night markets saw a big plunge in French business confidence and a much larger uptick in Spanish unemployment to 10.4% indicating that the environment in the rest of the 15 member union is even worse. Given such rapidly deteriorating economic conditions its is difficult to imagine that the ECB would be willing to tighten further and risk tipping the worlds largest economic zone into a full blown recession.'
Surprisingly enough however, the EURUSD held up relatively well as the unit continues to attract safe haven flows. This appears to be the single currency's only source of strength, but for the being that may be enough to maintain the 1.55-1.60 range. The European economic calendar is relatively subdued next week with German Retail Sales and CPI estimates the only two events of note. The consumer in the region's largest economy is likely to show further weakening, but the key report may be the inflation numbers. If they jump above 4% as projected, expect more hawkish rhetoric from the ECB which could lend support to the pair. - BS
The Japanese Yen ¥ - After Yield Forecasts Curb A Carry Breakout Can USDJPY Push 108.50?
Elsewhere, the economic docket was dotted by a few notable indicators that have set the tone for the health of the Japanese economy. For the first half of the week, the May All Industry Activity Index and physical trade balance for the following month added a fundamental edge to price action. The activity gauge rose for a third consecutive month, but the market's reaction was modest as most of the indicator's components were known well in advance. The smallest trade surplus in five months was a little more influential though as exports actually fell for the first time in four years - suggesting the export dependent economy could be in significant trouble with the global slowdown. Top scheduled event risk was read in the national CPI numbers for June though. Headline inflation jumped to a decade high 2.0 percent clip while even the core figure (excluding food and energy prices) was just off a 10-year high after finally crossing back above 0.0 percent.
As the coming days burn on, we will once again see little interest in the fundamental direction of the Japanese economy, though employment, household spending, consumer wages, housing and retail sales data makes for a good mix. Instead, the greatest potential for finding direction will once again fall to the meanderings of general risk sentiment and the carry trade. Second quarter earnings is essentially behind us and the Fannie/Freddie issue has more or less faded into the background. This week, the real driver for risk trends is the US data (2Q GDP, NFPs) which will act as a benchmark for global growth and thereby a barometer for monetary policy. - JK
The British Pound ₤ - Cable Keeps its Cool
Yet the key reason that cable displayed relative strength last week was precisely because the MPC minutes revealed a much more hawkish slat than most market participants expected. Instead of voting 8-1 to keep rates steady, the actual vote turned out to be 7-1-1 with one member voting to hike the. According to Ifrmarkets, ''Tim Besley unexpectedly voted for a 25bps hike on the grounds the BOE credibility is suffering a great deal due to overshooting inflation, and a rate hike now would help restore its reputation.'
The BoE therefore remains surprisingly stubborn in its attitude towards monetary policy but if as expected next week's data shows a continuing contraction in economic activity, the pressure on Mr. King and company to ease before the year end is likely to rise. We remain convinced that cable's 5% yield is vulnerable to a cut and therefore the 2.0000 level continues to form a relatively stiff resistance in the pair.- BS
The Swiss Franc ₣ - Inflation May Decide The Fate Of The Franc Next Week
The Swiss economic docket provided very little impact on the currency's price action despite a trade report showing weakening domestic demand. The Swiss trade balance surplus widened to a record high of 2.141 billion, as demand from Asian markets offset slumping orders from the U.S. and Europe. However, declining demand fro imports demonstrates the weakening demand from consumers, who continue to see their purchasing power diminish as inflation has risen to 2.9%- the highest in 15 years. Producer and import prices rose to the highest level in 19 years rising to 4.5% following 3.9% in May, signaling that consumer prices may continue to accelerate.
Next week's calendar will provide insight into the level of inflationary pressures and its affect on consumer consumption. Indeed, Swiss consumer prices are expected to rise to 3.0% from 2.9%, as producers pass on the costs of increasing energy and raw materials. Despite , rising costs consumers have remained resilient with retail sales rebounding in May, the UBS consumption indicator will signal if demand will continue to remain firm or succumb to increasing costs. The KOF leading indicator is expected to show that the economic outlook I dimming as producers contend with slowing demand from their main trading partners. The Swiss Franc will be subject the prevailing risk sentiment which has been generating momentum with several U.S. banks reporting smaller write-downs than expected. However, many industry insiders are still expecting further fallout from the subprime crisis, which would send the pair lower. Technically the USDCHF is expected to see significant resistance until the 200 Day SMA at 104.06, which it may take aim at with continued positive earnings and the absence of credit concerns - JR
The CAD - Canadian Dollar Eyes Make-or-Break Week Ahead
Energy price gains likewise made their way into the most recent Consumer Price Index figures, as the headline domestic inflation rate surged to its highest in 3 years at 3.1 percent. Yet the more important Bank of Canada Core CPI figure actually remained nearly unchanged at 1.5 percent and reinforced opinions that the BoC would leave rates unchanged through the medium term. The central bank explicitly targets a Core CPI rate between 1 and 3 percent, and an inflation rate towards the lower end of its band leaves officials in a somewhat-comfortable position to leave rates as-is. It will be important to watch whether such strong headline price gains seep into the typically stable Core CPI number; the future of Canadian interest rates will depend on inflation expectations.
The week ahead will do little to clarify inflation outlook for the world's eighth largest economy, but monthly Gross Domestic Product figures will combine with an incredibly packed US economic calendar to force major volatility out of the USDCAD. Highly-anticipated US Consumer Confidence, 2nd Quarter GDP, and Nonfarm Payrolls reports are all due within a three day span-virtually guaranteeing sharp moves in US dollar pairs. Traders will clearly monitor any surprises out of forthcoming North American economic data releases; such a confluence of major news could be just what traders need to force the USDCAD out of its multi-month trading channel. - DR
The AUD - US Dollar Sentiment to Drive the Aussie Once Again
Looking ahead, Australian data appears destined to follow a predictable pattern this week. June's New Home Sales figures will likely decline again having dropped -5.0% in May as deteriorating growth prospects and high borrowing costs deter consumers from committing to big-ticket purchases. Building Approvals will follow suit, with forecasts calling for an annualized decline of -4.1%. The Trade Balance may offer the single piece of silver lining to the week's otherwise dismal showing as the deficit is expected to contract to -A$100 million in June versus -A$965 million in the preceding period. May's reading was heavily skewed by a 17% rise in fuel imports as oil prices continued to soar. Imports may have eased a bit in June as consumers take stock of deteriorating economic conditions and pare back on expenses. Indeed, Westpac's measure of consumer confidence dropped -5.7% in June versus 2.7% in May. While this likely spells improvement for the trade deficit, it will mean decline for June's Retail Sales result: the headline figure is to print flat at 0.0% having grown 0.7% in May. All told, we do not expect the macro picture to deviate from established themes, meaning AUDUSD will yield to US dollar sentiment again. - IS
The NZD - Kiwi Selling To Continue As Data Heads Further South
The undisputable center-piece of the week was a surprise from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. The deepening recession moved policymakers 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 and continuing lower for the remainder of the week.
This week is unlikely offer anything to curtail the vigor of Kiwi bears. The Trade Balance will likely deteriorate: Oil prices continued higher in June, inflating the cost of imports while a drought likely cut into farm production to depress export volumes. Expectations call for a deficit of -NZ$350 million versus -NZ$195.8 million in May. July's edition of NBNZ Business Confidence is will almost certainly continue lower as an end to New Zealand's economic malaise is far from near. - IS
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