December 7, 2008

Are Financial Markets Immune to Poor Data?

The question on traders’ minds is whether the financial markets will continue to ignore poor economic data. Following the lack of decisive action on the back of Friday’s shockingly poor Non-Farm Employment report, it remains to be seen whether this week’s economic announcements will provide anything more than a knee-jerk price reaction seen at the time of release.

This Week
The first high volatility event of the week will be the UK’s PPI Input at 09:30 on Monday. Expectations are for a MoM decline in wholesale inflation by 2.9% in November after the -5.6% seen in October.

At 13:15 we are due to see Canadian Housing Starts for the month of November. Expectations are for an annualized number of 194K, down from the 212K reported for October.

At 14:00 (15:00 CET) ECB President Trichet is due to testify before the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs of the European Parliament. The Quarterly Hearing usually takes the form of an introductory statement followed by a Q&A session.

On Tuesday morning we will see further high volatility from RBA Governor Glenn Stevens' speech at the Australian Business Economists Annual Dinner in Sydney. The event is scheduled to begin at 09:00 UK time.

This will be closely followed by the UK’s Manufacturing Production at 09:30. Expectations are for a 0.6% contraction in output in October after a 0.8% contraction in September.

At 10:00 the German ZEW Economic Sentiment number will be released. The index improved slightly last month to -53.5. However, economists are expecting a reading of -56.5 this time around.

Tuesday will also host the first of this week’s central bank interest rate announcements. The BOC Interest Rate Statement is likely to see the Overnight Rate slashed by 0.50 percent to 1.75%.

At 15:00 the first high volatility event of the week from the US is due. Pending Home Sales for October likely fell by 3.2% after Septembers 4.6% drop.

There is only one high volatility event scheduled for Wednesday and it comes during the overnight session. Australian Home Loans data for October likely saw an increase of 1.0 percent in the number of loans granted after the 2.7% fall in September.

Thursday will be a very busy day with the high volatility beginning in the overnight session. Australian Employment Change and Unemployment Rate are due for release at 00:30. Employment Change for November likely saw a fall of 15K jobs after the Australian economy added 34.3K in October. The Unemployment Rate, as of November, is likely to have increased to 4.4% from 4.3% in the previous month.

At 08:30 the SNB will be in focus as it announces the Libor Rate, releases its quarterly Monetary Policy Assessment and the Governing Board Members hold a press conference. High volatility can be expected for each one of these events with Libor midpoint likely to be shifted to 0.50% from 1.00%.

Focus will shift to North America at 13:30 with three high volatility events scheduled. The US Trade Balance will be released with a slight moderation to $53.5B in the trade deficit expected. At the same time Initial Jobless Claims will also be released. Economists expect 530K individuals to have filed for unemployment insurance for the first time during the past week.

At the same time, slightly overshadowed by the release from the US, the Canadian Trade Balance will also be released. The Canadian trade surplus is expected to have narrowed to CAD 3.2B from 4.5B in September.

Thursday will be rounded off by Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales from New Zealand. Core Retail Sales for October are expected to have increased by 0.8% MoM after a 0.5% decrease in September. For the same period Retail Sales were likely flat at 0.0% following on from a slight 0.1% increase a month earlier.

Friday will play host to a busy US session with some key data releases. At 13:30 Core Retail Sales, Retail Sales and the Producer Price Index will be hitting news wires. Core Retail Sales are expected to have fallen by 1.7% in November, with the headline Retail Sales number thought to have dropped by 1.9% in the same period. US PPI is also expected to fallen in November. Expectations are for a 2.0% fall in prices at the wholesale level after a similar 2.8% drop in October.

To round off the week we will see important consumer confidence data in the shape of the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment number. Traders are expecting a reading of 55, relatively unchanged from last month’s final reading of 55.3.

Filed under Australia, Canada, Economic Indicators, Eurozone, New Zealand, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States, Weekly Preview by admin

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September 14, 2008

CPI and FOMC Will Hold the Key This Week

Last Week
The most interesting price action last week came on Friday with the US Dollar giving back some of its recent gains. The Dollar sell-off was triggered by weaker than expected PPI and Retail Sales news and speculation that the Fed may have to cut interest rates further in order to stimulate the economy.

However, it is unlikely that the Greenback has formed anything more than a short-term top on healthy profit taking activity. The Fed may very well have to cut interest rates further; interest rate futures are currently pricing in a 40% chance of a cut by December, up from 0% a month ago. But the medium term outlook remains the same.

There is still no change in the view that other country’s economies (Eurozone and UK in particular) are slowing faster than in the US. This will lead to interest rate cuts from the respective central banks. Due to the fact that their rates are currently much higher than the Fed’s the Dollar will be supported by the theory that ECB and BOE interest rate cuts will be much more aggressive than any more from the Fed.

This Week
We begin the week on Monday with traders keen to see how Friday’s profit taking has been digested over the weekend. With no high volatility events planned it could be a quiet session, especially with the Japanese national holiday ‘Respect for the Aged Day’.

Monday’s highlights are likely to be the Swiss double header at 08:15 with PPI MoM and Retail Sales YoY due for release. The Producer Price Index is likely to come in at -0.2% after last month’s 0.5% increase. Retail Sales are expected to show a sharp increase with expectations at 2.3% compared to the yearly figure released last month of 0.7%.

Later in the day we are also likely to see some volatility from the US with the Empire State Manufacturing Survey, Capacity Utilization Rate and Industrial Production set for release. All three indicators are likely to show evidence of a waning US economy. The Manufacturing Survey will probably come in at 1.5 vs 2.8 last month, Capacity Utilization will fall to 79.6% from 79.9% and Industrial Production probably contracted by 0.3% last month.

In the early hours of Tuesday morning we will have our first high volatility event of the week. The RBA Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes will be released with traders keen to see how September 2nd’s meeting unfolded. The decision was taken at the time to leave the cash rate unchanged at 7.00%.

Tuesday will play host to four very big announcements with no less than 3 CPI numbers and the FOMC Interest Rate Statement all due. First up is UK CPI with consumer inflation expected to smash the BOE’s 2.0% target once again. Economists are predicting year-over-year inflation at 4.6%, up from the 4.4% in July.

Half an hour later, at 10:00 UK time, the Eurozone CPI will be released. The Consumer Price Index is expected to remain at 3.8% YoY. It should also be noted that the Eurozone ZEW Economic Sentiment is due for release at the same time. It is unlikely that this data will conflict significantly with the CPI but traders should be alert non the less. ZEW Sentiment is expected at -55.0 vs -55.7 last month.

The next high volatility event will be the US Core CPI MoM. The data came in at 0.3% last month with 0.2% expected this time.

Half an hour later at 14:00 we can expect the Treasury International Capital (TIC) Net Long-Term Transactions. The data, which measures the inflow of capital from abroad, is expected to show a surplus of $55.0B compared to $53.4B last month.

At 19:15 the FOMC Interest Rate Statement is due. The Federal Funds Rate is expected to remain at 2.00% with traders watching the language in the accompanying statement very closely. The focus will be on any change in the language that may allude to a rate cut before the end of the year.

Wednesday will see the release of the BOJ Interest Rate Announcement. Although it is not considered a high volatility event in itself with the Overnight Call Rate expected to remain at 0.50%, the BOJ Press Conference due before 08:00 will draw high volatility.

The next round of high volatility on Wednesday is due from the UK. The BOE MPC Meeting Minutes and Claimant Count Change will hit the wire at 09:30. Claimant Count Change is expected to increase slightly with 22.2K expected vs 20.1K reported previously. The MPC Meeting Minutes are likely to show a 1-1-7 vote split in favour of keeping rates unchanged at 5.00%.

Next up for the US is the release of Building Permits. Economists are expecting a figure of 925K residential permits issued compared to 937K last month.

On Thursday the first high volatility event will come from the UK at 09:30. Retail Sales MoM are due with a figure of -0.4% expected compared to a 0.8% increase last month. UK Retail Sales have been exceptionally volatile of late with numbers ranging from 3.6% to -4.3% over the previous 3 months. It would be very wise for traders to exercise caution around the time of this event; especially those focussed on short-term price swings.

At 13:00 the third central bank announcement is due. This time it comes in the shape of the SNB Interest Rate Statement. The Statement is comprised of the LIBOR Rate and the Monetary Policy Assessment. The general consensus is that the SNB will remain on hold at 2.75%.

The final high volatility event of the week will come at 23:45 on Thursday night from New Zealand. The Current Account balance is expected to have fallen further into negative territory to $ -3.4B from $ -2.2B last month.

Friday promises to be a quiet day, especially in the New York session. Early volatility will be seen when BOC Deputy Governor Murray speaks in Toronto and later on for the German PPI number. However, both of these events are only classified with a medium volatility rating.

Our Visual Analysis and Historical Data tool will come into use this week with the US Core CPI supported.

For all the latest numbers and updates please check our economic calendar and expect a breakdown of the US Core CPI right here on Tuesday.





Filed under Australia, Canada, Economic Indicators, Eurozone, Forex, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States, Weekly Preview by admin

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