Monday, September 26, 2016

Weekly Report

Highlights:

  • EUR/USD : drops to one-week low
  • GBP/USD : slips as BoE holds, hints at another rate cut
  • USD/JPY : Edges up, mood still shaky after bond sell-off
  • USD/CAD : Rises to 8-week highs after U.S., Canadian data
  • Gold : Slumped to a more than two-week low
  • Crude Oil : Jump on chatter of output freeze deal

EUR/USD

Keeps the neutral outlook ahead of ECB meeting.
The EUR/USD declined 0.68% to 1.1149, the lowest since September 6 as dollar extended gains to two-and-a-half week highs against the other major currencies, despite a disappointing U.S. consumer sentiment report as investors turned their attention to the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting scheduled next week. Euro's current drop comes following strong improvement in inflation prices in the U.S. in August, which bolstered the greenback and bashed the euro down. Euro wavered following weak U.S. data which forced the dollar into sideways trading and relieved the pressure on the euro. Downbeat U.S. retail sales data raised doubts in the markets over whether the Federal Reserve will hike rates in its next meeting, which relieved some pressure on the common currency.
EUR/USD

GBP/USD

slips as BoE holds, hints at another rate cut
Pound slid lower against the dollar after the Bank of England kept monetary policy on hold, but indicated that it could cut interest rates again unless the economy picks up. The central banks meeting minutes showed that it is less pessimistic about the outlook for the U.K. economy. “A number of indicators of near-term economic activity have been somewhat stronger than expected” since August’s rate cut, the minutes said, and the committee now expects less of a slowdown in growth in the second half of 2016. Earlier Thursday data showed that U.K. retail sales edged down just 0.2% in August decline and were 6.2% higher on a year-over-year basis. Sterling dipped having hit a two-week low as investors awaited a Bank of England policy decision. An appearance by Mark Carney and colleagues in parliament last week suggested the Bank would look through an improvement in some economic data which has given the pound support since it cut interest rates to record lows and reintroduced an asset-purchase program in August.
GBP/USD

USD/JPY

Edges up, mood still shaky after bond sell-off
The USD/JPY inched higher as investors' sought safe havens in the face of a shaky atmosphere on stock markets, though major currency pairs were otherwise little changed ahead of a round of central bank meetings. The yen move came despite an easing of the tensions on bond markets which have dominated the past week. Traders said sales of emerging market currencies by CTAs - largely model-based quantitative funds - continued to dominate trading by the bigger desks. Jobs data from Australia showed a surprise drop of 3,900 jobs in August for the employment change figures, compared to an expected 15,000 increase. Still, the unemployment rate dipped to 5.6%, below the 5.7% figure seen as the participation rate eased to 64.7% from 64.9%.
USD/JPY

USD/CAD

Rises to 8-week highs after U.S., Canadian data
The USD/CAD rose to eight-week highs against its Canadian counterpart, helped by the release of upbeat U.S. inflation data, while declining oil prices and a disappointing report on Canadian manufacturing sales weighed on the local currency. The commodity-related Canadian dollar was also hit by tumbling oil prices on Friday due to reports that Iran's August crude oil exports jumped 15% to a five-year high of more than 2 million barrels per day, sparking fresh concerns over a global supply glut. A separate report showed that Canada’s foreign securities purchases rose by C$5.23 billion in July, compared to expectations for an increase of C$10.12 billion and after a C$9.02 billion the previous month.
USD/CAD

Gold

Slumped to a more than two-week low
Gold prices slumped to a more than two-week low, as a broadly stronger U.S. dollar and jitters ahead of next week's highly anticipated Federal Reserve policy meeting weighed. The Labor Department said the consumer price index rose 0.2% in August, compared to expectations for a 0.1% gain. Year-over-year, consumer prices increased 1.1%. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, so-called core consumer prices climbed 0.3%. The core CPI increased 2.3% in the 12 months through August. Investors are currently pricing in just a 12% chance of a rate hike next week, according to Investing. Com’s Fed Rate Monitor Tool. For December, odds stood at around 55%.
GOLD

Crude Oil

Jump on chatter of output freeze deal
Oil prices rose sharply during European hours on Monday, recovering from last week's steep declines, as traders continued to monitor developments before the informal meeting of major oil producing countries later this month. According to market experts, chances that the meeting would yield any action to reduce the global glut appeared minimal. Instead, most believe that oil producers will continue to monitor the market and possibly postpone freeze talks to the official OPEC meeting in Vienna on November 30.
London-traded Brent futures sank 82 cents, or 1.76%. Prices lost $2.04, or 4.67%, last week amid growing concerns over the possibility of returning crude supplies from Libya and Nigeria.

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Major News

Market analysis

Highlights:

  • EUR/USD : Higher after ECB holds back on stimulus
  • GBP/USD : Fall from 1-month highs on weak U.K. data
  • USD/JPY : Stronger as data supports Fed rate views uncertain
  • USD/CAD : Climbs after Canadian employment data
  • Gold : Fall After China CPI comes in lower
  • Crude Oil : Fall more than 2 percent

MAJOR DATA COMING OUT THIS WEEK (Time zone GMT)

DateTimeEventForecastPrevious
9/12/2016 5:00pmUSDFOMC Member Brainard Speaks
9/12/201610:30pmAUDRBA Assist Gov Kent Speaks
9/12/201611:50pmJPYBSI Manufacturing Index-6.5-11.1
9/13/20161:30amAUDNAB Business Confidence4
9/13/20162:00amCNYIndustrial Production y/y0.0620.06
9/13/20162:00amCNYFixed Asset Investment ytd/y0.0790.081
9/13/20167:15amCHFPPI m/m-0.002-0.001
9/13/20168:30amGBPCPI y/y0.0070.006
9/13/20168:30amGBPPPI Input m/m0.0060.033
9/13/20168:30amGBPRPI y/y0.0180.019
9/13/20169:00amEURECB President Draghi Speaks
9/13/20169:00amEURGerman ZEW Economic Sentiment2.80.5
9/13/20169:00amEURZEW Economic Sentiment6.74.6
9/13/201610:45pmNZDCurrent Account-0.30B1.31B
9/14/20168:30amGBPAverage Earnings Index 3m/y0.0210.024
9/14/20168:30amGBPClaimant Count Change1.7K-8.6K
9/14/20168:30amGBPUnemployment Rate0.0490.049
9/14/20169:50amAUDRBA Assist Gov Debelle Speaks
9/14/201610:30amCADGov Council Member Wilkins Speaks
9/14/201612:30pmUSDImport Prices m/m-0.0010.001
9/14/20162:30pmUSDCrude Oil Inventories-14.5M
9/14/201610:45pmNZDGDP q/q0.0110.007
9/15/2016All DayCNYBank Holiday
9/15/20161:30amAUDEmployment Change15.2K26.2K
9/15/20161:30amAUDUnemployment Rate0.0570.057
9/15/20167:30amCHFLibor Rate-0.0075-0.0075
9/15/20167:30amCHFSNB Monetary Policy Assessment
9/15/20168:30amGBPRetail Sales m/m-0.0040.014
9/15/20169:00amEURFinal CPI y/y0.0020.002
9/15/201611:00amGBPMPC Official Bank Rate Votes0-0-90-9-0
9/15/201611:00amGBPMonetary Policy Summary
9/15/201611:00amGBPOfficial Bank Rate0.00250.0025
9/15/201611:00amGBPAsset Purchase Facility435B435B
9/15/201611:00amGBPMPC Asset Purchase Facility Votes0-0-96-0-3
9/15/201612:30pmUSDCore Retail Sales m/m0.003-0.003
9/15/201612:30pmUSDPPI m/m0.001-0.004
9/15/201612:30pmUSDPhilly Fed Manufacturing Index1.12
9/15/201612:30pmUSDRetail Sales m/m-0.0010
9/15/201612:30pmUSDUnemployment Claims262K259K
9/15/201612:30pmUSDCore PPI m/m0.001-0.003
9/15/201612:30pmUSDCurrent Account-120B-125B
9/15/201612:30pmUSDEmpire State Manufacturing Index-0.9-4.2
9/15/20161:15pmUSDCapacity Utilization Rate0.7580.759
9/15/20161:15pmUSDIndustrial Production m/m-0.0020.007
9/16/2016All DayCNYBank Holiday
9/16/201612:30pmCADManufacturing Sales m/m0.0060.008
9/16/201612:30pmCADForeign Securities Purchases10.12B9.02B
9/16/201612:30pmUSDCPI m/m0.0010
9/16/201612:30pmUSDCore CPI m/m0.0020.001
9/16/20162:00pmUSDPrelim UoM Consumer Sentiment9189.8

Monday, September 5, 2016

Weekly Report

Market analysis

Highlights:

  • EUR/USD : Keeps the neutral outlook ahead of ECB meeting
  • GBP/USD : Rises to 1-month highs on strong U.K. data
  • USD/JPY : Gives up gains after U.S. jobs data
  • USD/CAD : Drops to 6-day low as oil extends recovery
  • Gold : Holds near 1-week high amid reduced chances of Sept. rate hike
  • Crude Oil : Bounces off three-week lows on hopes for OPEC action

Crude Oil

Bounces off three-week lows on hopes for OPEC action
Oil futures snapped a four-day losing streak on Friday, amid Russian comments favoring a production freeze, but still suffered a hefty decline for the week amid ongoing concerns over a global supply glut. Traders also assessed the likelihood of an interest rate hike at this month's Federal Reserve meeting, following weaker than expected nonfarm payrolls data. For the week, the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude oil for delivery in October ended Friday's session at $44.44 a barrel, up $1.28, or 2.97%, on the day.
Futures slumped to a three-week low of $43.00 on Thursday after weekly supply data showed a surprisingly large build in U.S. crude and distillate stockpiles and a smaller-than-expected drawdown in gasoline. Despite Friday's gains, New York-traded oil futures dropped $3.20, or 6.7%, for the week, the worst weekly loss since early July. Oil prices strengthened on Friday after Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an interview with Bloomberg that an agreement between major oil exporters to freeze output would be the right decision to support the market. Meanwhile, market players continued to focus on U.S. drilling prospects, amid indications of a recent recovery in drilling activity. Oilfield services provider Baker Hughes said late Friday that the number of rigs drilling for oil in the U.S. last week rose by 1 to 407, marking the ninth increase in 10 weeks. In the week ahead, oil traders will be focusing on U.S. stockpile data on Wednesday and Thursday for fresh supply-and-demand signals. The reports come out one day later than usual due to Monday's Labor Day holiday.