This Halloween is turning out to be more trick than treat as the
market digests the events of the past week, particularly the Euro
debt resolution. This week is starting out in risk aversion mode
with US dollar strength and stock market and commodities
weakness.
One of the “tricks” from over the weekend was the
unilateral currency intervention by the Ministry of Finance in
Japan, who took action to weaken the Yen citing excessive
speculation and one-sided moves that don’t reflect the
underlying economic fundamentals. This has caused the Yen to fall
some 4% vs. USD and is the third intervention this year undertaken
by the Japanese. It must be noted, however, that this intervention
was taken by the government itself and not the Bank of Japan.
So this week has started out with a bang in what is going to be a
heavy week for economic data around the globe. A G-20 meeting,
Central bank decisions, GDP figures, and employment numbers all can
move markets so this week is likely to see some volatility which is
great for the shorter-term traders. Let’s start with the
highlights region by region from around the globe and discuss the
potential data moving events taking place this week.
In Australia, tomorrow’s RBA rate policy decision will be
significant if they lower rates by 25bp as some are expecting,
though the overall consensus is still for no change. This means
that the statement will likely be dovish as inflation concerns are
less important than the global growth story. This announcement will
be preceded by Chinese PMI manufacturing figures which may be more
impactful as it gives a gauge of Chinese growth which ultimately is
a proxy for the Australian economy.
In New Zealand, building permits plunged by some 17% although gains
of 2% were expected and Wednesday’s unemployment rate is
expected to improve to 6.4%.
In the Euro zone, there are still many questions to be answered
with regard to the details of the resolution and now it looks like
banks want to use accounting gimmicks to re-capitalize rather than
raise private funding. CPI data came in slightly higher than
expected, showing inflation at 3% vs. the 2.9% expectation. This is
unlikely to impact Thursday’s rate decision, though the ECB
may attempt to come off hawkish to prove they are sticking with
their mandate. German retail sales figures came in lower than
expected and their unemployment figures are due out on
Wednesday.
The Pound is lower as home price figures came in lower than
expected and tomorrow’s GDP figures are expected to showing
slow growth, though it must be noted that the decline in government
spending may be responsible. Various PMI figures are spread out
along the week so these may be better barometers of the health of
UK business and industry.
In Canada, GDP figures came in better than expected this morning,
showing a YoY figure of 2.4% vs. the expectation of 2.2% with the
quarterly figure higher by .1%. Raw materials and producer prices
were also higher so there may be signs that inflation is starting
to pick up. Friday’s employment report is expected to show
15K jobs added and the unemployment rate to remain steady at
7.1%.
And finally here in the US, this Friday’s NFP is expected to
show a gain of 95K jobs and the unemployment rate to remain steady
at 9.1%, though those estimates can change in the ensuing days.
Wednesday’s FOMC meeting may be significant if Bernanke hints
at further monetary easing or QE3. While corporate earnings have
been good, unemployment has been stubbornly high and the Fed chief
just can’t help himself and see the need to tinker with
policy as if it makes a difference. At this point he is likely
pushing on a string and money can’t get much
cheaper—its up to fiscal policy now to determine the fate of
the economy and whether or not confidence will be instilled.
The deficit super-committee is charged with finding an answer and
at this point the prospects don’t look good. Add in a G-20
meeting this week which may show how much IMF involvement (read US
taxpayer) is included in the Euro debt deal and we will see some
volatility.
By Mike Conlon, ForexNews.com
Forex Market Outlook 10/31/11
November 2nd, 2011 in Currency Trading, by Michael Conlon
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