June 15, 2008

Can the USD Maintain its Recent Strength in a Busy Week?

The main topic of conversation this week will be if the USD can maintain its recent firm stance against the EUR, CAD, CHF and JPY amongst others.

The main contributing factor to the Dollar’s strength was increased speculation that the Fed will raise interest rates at the August FOMC Meeting. According to interest rate futures there is now a 60% chance of at least a 0.25% hike.

 

The Dollar closed higher on the week against the world’s majors in the face of better than expected retail sales and consumer inflation numbers. However, the data continues to be mixed with Initial Jobless Claims and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment both coming in worse than expected.

 

The US economic schedule for the coming week is a busy one. We begin on Monday with three high volatility events: Empire State Business Conditions Index, TIC Net Long-Term Transactions and Fed Chairman Bernanke’s speech at the Senate Finance Committee Health Reform Summit.

 

On Tuesday we will see the release of Housing Starts and the Producer Price Index. Both of these events promise to come with a high level of interest attached to them. At the same time we will also see the slightly less important Core PPI, Building Permits and US Current Account data.

 

Wednesday and Friday promise to be slightly quieter from the point of view of US economic releases. However, high volatility is likely when Fed Governor Kohn testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance and Investment. As usual we will also see Initial Jobless Claims. Traders will be keenly watching this data after last week’s 384K, with figures expected to fall slightly to 375K this week.

 

It is not just the US economic calendar that can set the tone for the trading week. We are due several high volatility events from other sources too.

 

On Monday we will see the highly anticipated release of the Eurozone Core CPI YoY. This is the benchmark figure that the ECB uses to set interest rates. There is speculation that the ECB will raise rates in the near future in the face of higher inflation. Core CPI is expected to climb to 1.8% and any surprises to the downside could open the door for further EUR shorting.

 

Further high volatility events this week are as follows:

 

Tuesday:
RBA Meeting Minutes - 02:30
UK CPI YoY - 09:30
German ZEW Economic Sentiment - 10:00

 

Wednesday:
BOE MPC Meeting Minutes - 09:30
BOE Governor King Speaks - 19:30

 

Thursday:
SNB Libor Interest Rate Announcement - 08:30
SNB Monetary Policy Assessment - 09:00
UK Retail Sales - 09:30
Canadian Core CPI - 12:00

 

Friday:
Canadian Core Retail Sales - 13:30

 

Visual Analysis

 

This week the visual analysis tool will be in use for the US PPI, BOE Meeting Minutes and the Canadian Core CPI.

 

Check out the full economic calendar and economic speeches.

 

Filed under Content Updates, Economic Calendar by ptsupport

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