Tuesday, February 26, 2008

EUR/USD strongly testing 1.4890

The euro has been persistently testing the 1.4890 level versus the dollar for most of this morning. With the major U.S. macroeconomic indicators behind us for today, we could expect the current bullish Euro trend to continue and we could easily approach an all-time high before the day is over.

The PPI data released today showed increasing inflationary pressures, which should have been bullish for the dollar but the move was limited. The currency pair was very quick to return to the 1.4890 level to test it once again.

Alert: Beware of the all-time high of 1.4967 by the end of today's session and going into tomorrow!!!!

The U.S. has already used up its main catalysts which leads us to consider that the strong two week bullish trend will continue until it approaches the all-time high.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

The ECB spoiled the USD recovery efforts

Nothing much came out of the ECB keeping interest rates unchanged. It was widely expected after all.

However, great insight was given in the posterior Trichet conference. Trichet took such an aggressive stance on inflation that the EUR/USD would quickly return to its usual levels. The market learned that the ECB is leaning more on the side of raising interest rates than lowering them. In fact, today's interest rate decision was not unanimous as some members argued for an interest rate hike!

Very bullish news for the Euro.

Some statements from Trichet Conferece

The ECB decided to keep interest rates unchanged at 4%. This was mostly expected, however Trichet took a very aggressive stance on inflation.


Below are some statements coming from this conference...


-Recent data confirmed upside risk to inflation pressure


-Economic fundamentals remain sound


-Will continue to pay close attention to developments in financial markets


Q3 07 GDP at .7% GDP, inline: domestic demand remained main force in euro zone , sustained nature of economic expansion, robust employment growth, annual gdp growth expected 2.4 to 2.8% in 2007; 1.5 – 2.5% in 2008; 1.6 – 2.6% in 2009.


-sustained GDP growth, US weakness will be offset by emerging economies


-annual inflation rate increased strongly


-energy prices having strong upward impact on inflation


-inflation rate expected to remain well above 2% in coming months and expected to moderate in 2008

Dollar is Staging a Recovery

The Dollar is staging a recovery in a day when the Bank of England lowers its interest rate to 5.50%. This is a surprise move by the bank as most analysts were still expecting the money price to remain unchanged. Some, however, were starting to consider a cut.

The GBP/USD has lowered to 2.02 while the EUR/USD is testing significant trendline at 1.4520.

With minutes to go for the European Central Bank to makes its interest rate decision, another surprise could provoke some greater volatility to the forex market. It is expected to remain unchanged.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Speech from Bernanke on Nov. 29

We see a fairly neutral stance from the Fed president. A close eye will be kept on future macroeconomic references until December 11 meeting.

Excerpt from Bernanke's speech...


With respect to household spending, the data received over the past month have been on the soft side. The Committee will have considerable additional information on consumer purchases and sentiment to digest before its next meeting. I expect household income and spending to continue to grow, but the combination of higher gas prices, the weak housing market, tighter credit conditions, and declines in stock prices seem likely to create some headwinds for the consumer in the months ahead.

Core inflation--that is, inflation excluding the relatively more volatile prices of food and energy--has remained moderate. However, the price of crude oil has continued its rise over the past month, a rise that will be reflected in gasoline and heating oil prices and, of course, in the overall inflation rate in the near term. Moreover, increases in food prices and in the prices of some imported goods have the potential to put additional pressures on inflation and inflation expectations. The effectiveness of monetary policy depends critically on maintaining the public’s confidence that inflation will be well controlled. We are accordingly monitoring inflation developments closely.

The incoming data on economic activity and prices will help to shape the Committee’s outlook for the economy; however, the outlook has also been importantly affected over the past month by renewed turbulence in financial markets, which has partially reversed the improvement that occurred in September and October. Investors have focused on continued credit losses and write-downs across a number of financial institutions, prompted in many cases by credit-rating agencies’ downgrades of securities backed by residential mortgages. The fresh wave of investor concern has contributed in recent weeks to a decline in equity values, a widening of risk spreads for many credit products (not only those related to housing), and increased short-term funding pressures. These developments have resulted in a further tightening in financial conditions, which has the potential to impose additional restraint on activity in housing markets and in other credit-sensitive sectors. Needless to say, the Federal Reserve is following the evolution of financial conditions carefully, with particular attention to the question of how strains in financial markets might affect the broader economy.

full speech

Why the pressure is all on the FED

The fact is that the evolution of the global markets is mostly relying on the shoulders of the Federal Reserve. This is not really a good thing as any decision to be taken by the Fed will have negative consequences. It does not really have as much wiggle room as other central banks.

Take the ECB (European Central Bank) for example. Its decision is actually helped by the Fed's activity. The ECB has to balance price stability with economic growth. With Europe suffering increasing inflationary pressures at the same time as a slowdown in economic growth, the decision on whether to tighten monetary policy becomes difficult. If it lowers interest rates to boost the economy it could get a real inflation risk. Raise interest rates and the economy could take a further hit.

However, general market forces will help the ECB to make its decision as well. Although the strong euro has been strongly criticized, the fact is that it is not really hurting exports as much as economists feared. With exports sustained, the ECB does not have to greatly worry about it hurting economic growth. Why are exports sustained?, because the Euro mostly revalued against the dollar. Therefore, exports are simply moving away from the U.S. towards China and other emerging countries. On the other hand, Europeans are seeing an increasing buying power. This helps imports increase as foreign products are getting relatively cheaper. Furthermore, cheaper products help control inflation. For example, with oil priced in dollars, the high euro makes up for part of the higher oil prices.

SO, the higher euro is helping Europe fight inflation. However, the latest indicators show that inflation might be starting to increase in Europe. Therefore, increasing interest rates is not out of the question just yet.

Although economic growth is slowing down in Europe and the credit crisis is being felt, boosting the economy is not as urgent for ECB since the FED is already lowering their interest rates. After all, the credit crisis originated in the United States and more dire measures will have to be taken in that country.

In other words, the FED cutting interest rates is helping the ECB with its objectives. Lower interest rates for the dollar is helping to ease the credit crisis and will help mitigate the spill-over effects to other countries. At the same time, it drives a weaker dollar which in turns helps Europe control inflation, especially on dollar-denominated commodity prices.

U.S. inflation could head into real danger. Consumer prices have been remarkably resilient so far as it remains very close to the 2% level. However, with the Fed passing more cuts, it sets up a real inflationary risk with a steeply declining dollar.

US Data..Just Released

US GDP revised to 4.9%... meets estimates.

Weekly Initial Claims = 352K vs expected 330K.... continuous claims highest in 2 years


No major reactions to currency markets

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Thanksgiving & Black Friday, A Transitory Period

Thanksgiving is a big enough holiday to have the markets close in the United States. As investors and everyday traders we should probably take the time to reflect and be thankful that the crisis has not extended much deeper into the economy...at least not yet! The strong Q3 GDP was something to be thankful for; it had put aside fears of recession although now they start to show up again.

With our thanks expressed, "Black Friday" will be time to move on and look ahead. We should place plenty of emphasis on this weekend. On Monday we will get the first result from retailers and this should set the tone on whether we will have an end of year rally. Some analysts estimate that this will be the worst Christmas season in five years. This weekend will probably indicate how resilient U.S consumers are. Strong retail numbers will give the stock market a chance for an end of year rally. It could also mean that the crisis remains constrained to the housing and credit markets.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Record for the EUR/USD !!

The EUR/USD has set a new all-time high at 1.4793.

It has drifted back a bit to 1.4785 but everything seems to indicate that there could be another attempt today at 1.48. We will stay tuned.

Also coming up today, the minutes from the FED's latest meeting. This could provide some helpful insight to what Fed members were considering about future interest rates.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Crude inventories are up, decline was expected

Crude oil inventories are up -> Crude oil prices are down

U.S. CPI: Meets Consensus Estimate But Inflation Is Getting High

Inflationary pressures are finally being felt by consumers. Investors have been wondering how long it would take for the high energy and food prices to filter through to other sectors.

High inflation is a bullish indicator for a currency. As such, we saw a correction on the EUR/SD to 1.4620 after the release of this data.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

USD/CAD - 250 pips in yesterday session

The USD/CAD made more than a 250 pip moving during yesterday's session to go from 0.9452 to 0.9704. During this same session we must note that the crude oil prices also saw a significant drop. This serves as a good reminder of the high Canadian Dollar correlation with crude oil as Canada is a big crude oil exporter and actually the number one exporter to the US!

Note, you want to trade crude in the currency market?, try the USD/CAD!
AddThis Social Bookmark Button