September 14, 2008

Updates to Economic Calendar and Weekly Preview Posted

Once again we have another busy week is store for us. The Economic Calendar is absolutely packed this week. In particular traders will be watching Consumer Price Index (CPI) releases from the UK, Eurozone and US along with the FOMC Interest Rate Statement.

To add to the excitement we also have RBA and BOE Meeting Minutes, ZEW Economic Sentiment, TIC data, BOJ Interest Rate Announcement and the SNB Interest Rate Statement to keep us occupied.

To help keep you informed we have posted a full weekly preview, ‘CPI and FOMC Will Hold the Key This Week’ to our Market News Blog and you will find our economic calendar fully updated.

In addition to this we have the Visual Analysis and Historical Data tool in play for the US Core CPI release on Tuesday.

We hope that you find all of this information useful. Have a successful week and good trading to you all!

Filed under Content Updates, Economic Calendar, Market News by ptsupport

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July 14, 2008

Dollar Looks to Recover From Mortgage Market Worries, Record Oil Prices

This week the US Dollar will look to recover from losses sustained on Friday due to mortgage market worries and new record high oil prices.

The Dollar was sold off because of concerns that losses at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may spiral out of control and see the lenders nationalized. The big winner from the news was the Australian Dollar, hitting fresh 25-year highs against the Greenback.

Oil was driven higher (above $147 a barrel) on speculation that Israel may attack Iran. This helped the Canadian Dollar recover from much worse than expected employment data. The Canadian Labor market shed 5K jobs in June while it was expected to create 10K. This contributed to an increase in the Unemployment Rate from 6.1% to 6.2%.

This week we have a jam packed economic calendar with high volatility events right from the off. We begin the week on Sunday night with Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales from New Zealand. The Core number is expected to increase by 0.5% MoM while Retail Sales are expected to moderate by 0.1% on a monthly basis.

Monday: On Monday morning the main focus will be UK PPI Input MoM. The monthly rate is expected to come in at 2.5%, less than last month's 3.8%. However, this will still see the YoY number climb to 28.9%.

The rest of the London and New York sessions will be fairly quiet with Industrial Production from the Eurozone and the Fed Governors open meeting and vote on mortgage rule changes.

At 23:45 Monday night we will see further high impact data from New Zealand. This time it is the CPI QoQ. Growth in the Consumer Price Index is expected to climb to 1.4% QoQ.

Tuesday: Tuesday promises to be a busy day with high volatility events from the UK, Australia, Japan, Eurozone, US and Canada. We begin the day at 00:01 with the UK's RICS House Price Balance.  This survey measures the percentage of chartered surveyors reporting a reduction in house prices in their area. The market is anticipating that 93.8% of respondents will register a price drop. At 09:30 we will see the UK CPI with the YoY rate expected to climb to 3.6% pushing the data further above the BOE's 2.0% threshold. Not surprisingly Core CPI is expected to remain at 1.5% indicating that food and energy costs remain the main driving factors of consumer inflation.

At 02:30 the RBA will release the minutes from their last Interest Rate Meeting. Traders will be interested to see the RBA's views on slowing economic growth and the chances of any more interest rate hikes in the near future. The Australian Dollar has been trading at or near 25-year highs against the US Dollar for some time now in the face of strong commodity prices and a favourable interest rate gap.

Japanese Yen traders will be focussed on the Interest Rate Announcement and the accompanying BOJ Press Conference. With interest rates expected to remain steady at 0.50% more focus will fall on the press conference. Traders will be keen to see if the BOJ expects economic growth to remain relatively flat. It is expected that interest rates will remain at 0.50% for the foreseeable future.

Although the Euro is likely to react more to data from the US than its own economic data there is one high volatility release due. The German ZEW Economic Sentiment  will probably fall again to -55.5.

It will be a busy day in the US with Core Retail Sales, Retail Sales and PPI at 13:30 followed by Bernanke's Testimony to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs at 15:00. Retail Sales are expected to moderate slightly from May's impressive growth with the Core figure expected at 0.9% and Retail Sales at 0.4%. Elsewhere PPI is expected at 1.3% MoM, down from the 1.4% growth in May.

Canada will join Japan in making its latest Interest Rate Statement. Rates are expected to remain on hold at 3.00% but with the BOC's bias towards cutting rates traders will be on the lookout for any surprise cuts. The rate statement will also be closely scrutinised for changes in the language that may indicate rate moves in the months to come.

Further high volatility events for the week are as follows:

Wednesday:
04:05 RBA Governor Stevens Speaks
09:30 UK Claimant Count Change
10:00 Eurozone CPI YoY
13:30 US Core CPI MoM
14:00 TIC Net Long-Term Transactions
15:00 Bernanke Testifies before the House Committee on Financial Services
19:00 FOMC Meeting Minutes

Thursday:
BOC Monetary Policy Report
BOC Governor Carney Speaks

Visual Analysis and Historical Data
This week the visual analysis and historical data tool will support the US PPI and US Core CPI data releases.

Filed under Content Updates, Economic Calendar by ptsupport

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May 18, 2008

RBA, BOE and FOMC Meeting Minutes in the Spotlight

Although this week will be slightly quieter than last, RBA, BOE and FOMC Meeting Minutes promise to take the economic centre stage.

The RBA Meeting Minutes will be the first high volatility event of the week, 02:30 BST on Tuesday 20th. Australian Interest Rates currently stand at 7.25% with no speculation of any immanent cuts.

Both the BOE Monetary Policy Committee and the Federal Open Market Committee Meeting Minutes will be released this Wednesday, May 21st. The BOE will come first, at 09:30 London time with the Fed following at 19:00 BST. As you might expect, these events will draw heavy interest from traders and economists with high market volatility expected. The markets are firmly focused on whether either central bank sees the need for further near term interest rate cuts.

Specifically, traders will watch the MPC Member vote split from the last meeting. The decision was taken to keep the rate on hold at 5.00% and the weight of the majority decision will be watched very closely for clues to the pace and direction of future rate moves.

While the FOMC does not reveal any vote casting it does publish a detailed summary of the interest rate meeting. Traders will closely scrutinize this commentary for clues to future rate moves. At present the popular market opinion is that the US will leave rates on hold in the near term.

Prior to the data landing on Wednesday we will see US PPI and Core PPI. They will hit the wire on Tuesday at 13:30 London time, 08:30 EST. The raw Producer Price Index carries more weight than the Core release. Economists are expecting 0.4% MoM for the PPI and 0.2% for the Core reading.

Later in the week we will see more high-volatility events from the US and UK. On Friday we will see the UK GDP Second Estimate which is expected to come in unchanged at 0.4%. This will be followed at 15:00 BST by US Existing Home Sales. Following a modest but unexpected increase to 5.03 million units in the March announcement, economists are expecting a second straight monthly decline to 4.86 million.

Further high volatility events this week are as follows:

BOJ Press Conference following the BOJ Interest Announcement - Tuesday am
Swiss PPI MoM - Tuesday 08:15
German ZEW Economic Sentimant - Tuesday 10:00
German Ifo Business Climate Index - Wednesday 09:00
Canadian Core CPI - Wednesday 12:00
UK Retail Sales - Thursday 09:30
Canadian Core Retail Sales - Thursday 13:30

The trading week is slightly shorter than normal in Canada (Victoria Day, Monday 19th) and Germany (Corpus Christi, Thursday 22nd) with lighter volume and volatility expected during these trading sessions. For more info please see our 2008 market holiday calendar.

The Passion-Trading visual analysis and historical data tool will support the following releases this week:

US PPI MoM
BOE MPC Meeting Minutes
Canadian Core CPI MoM
US Existing Home Sales

For details on the scheduled economic speeches you can check out this week’s economic comment calendar.

Filed under Content Updates, Economic Calendar by ptsupport

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