January 25, 2009

FOMC, Home Sales and GDP - Key Data January 25-31 2009

This week’s most important economic events will come from the US in the shape of the FOMC Interest Rate Statement, Existing Home Sales, New Home Sales and Gross Domestic Product.

With the Federal Open Market Committee already committed to a Federal Funds Rate of 0.00-0.25% there is basically no room for manoeuvre on the downside. However, the Fed could surprise the market and reduce the range closer to the BOJs 0.10 percent Overnight Call Rate.

With the Fed having used almost all of its ‘interest rate cut toolkit’ to stimulate the US economy there may be a change of focus to the outright purchase of long-term Treasury securities. This would attempt to bring interest rates lower across the yield curve, reducing the cost of a mortgage, in an effort to stimulate the housing market. However, with uncertainty in the jobs market and weak consumer confidence there may be continued weakness in housing for some time to come.

This Week
The first high volatility event of the week will be US Existing Home Sales, due for release at 15:00 on Monday. Data for December 09 is likely to show that the annualized sales pace of Existing Homes fell to 4.40M from 4.49M in November.

Tuesday will begin with Australian PPI at 00:30. Wholesale inflation for the fourth quarter of 2009 is expected to slow to 0.4% from 2.0% in Q3.

German Ifo Business Climate is scheduled for release at 09:00. The German economy is seen as a leading indicator for  Eurozone economic health  as a whole so the index will be closely watched. The index is expected to decline slightly from 82.6 to 81.0 for the month of January.

High volatility is also due from the UK at 11:00 on Monday. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Realised Sales indicator is expected to improve slightly to -53 from the previous -55.

At 15:00 the Conference Board’s US Consumer Confidence reading is due. As a precursor for consumer spending and overall economic health, this consumer confidence reading will be closely watched. The index is expected to improve slightly to 38.0 from the 38.7 seen for the month of December.

On Wednesday anticipation will be building for the FOMC Interest Rate Statement however, prior to this event Australian CPI will be released at 00:30 in the overnight session. Expectations are for a first quarterly fall in CPI to -0.4% after the 1.2% seen in Q3 of 2009.

At 19:15 we will see the highly anticipated Federal Funds Rate announcement with no change expected. The accompanying FOMC Interest Rate Statement is expected to create high volatility with comments on further “support for the functioning of financial markets” to be closely scrutinized.

The Fed isn’t the only central bank due to release monetary policy decisions on Wednesday with the RBNZ Interest Rate Statement also due. The Official Cash rate is likely to be cut to 4.00% from the 5.00% seen previously with economic growth in New Zealand under threat.

New Zealand will also announce Trade Balance data for December with the deficit expected to fall to NZD 100M from the 520M seen in November.

Thursday is set to be typically busy with the Nationwide House Price Index (HPI) due at 07:00. Expectations are for a 1.8% fall in house prices for January, following on from December’s 2.5 percent decrease.

There are several high volatility events due in the US session with Core Durable Goods Orders and Initial Jobless Claims both expected at 13:30. Core Durable Goods Orders probably fell by 2.6% in December following on from a revised 0.6% increase in November. Initial Jobless Claims came extremely close to the 600K mark last week (589K) with that number expected to fall slightly to 580K this week.

In the evening session New Zealand Building Consents will be released at 21:45 GMT. Consents increased by 4.3% in November of 08 after a fall of 19.7% the month previous.

The very last piece of key economic data from the US will be released at 13:30 on Friday. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is expected to show a 5.4% decline in economic growth for Q4 2008. This is after a 0.5% decline in the third quarter.

Canadian monthly GDP will be released at the same time with a fall of 0.5% expected for November 08 after the -0.1 percent seen in October.

Please check our Economic Calendar for updates and actual releases as the week progresses.

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November 30, 2008

Markets Braced for Latest Round of Interest Rate Cuts and Employment Data

Financial markets are preparing themselves for a wealth of economic data this week with central bank interest rate cuts and employment data in focus.

This Week
With high volatility events expected everyday this week there will be no shortage of market action. We start on Monday with the UK’s Manufacturing PMI. The index is firmly set in a state of contraction with a reading of 41.5 for October likely to worsen to 39.8 in November.

At 13:30 Canadian monthly GDP will be released. This release will reference the month of September with 0.2% monthly growth expected after a 0.3% contraction in August.

Manufacturing data is also due from the US on Monday with the release of the ISM Manufacturing PMI. Similarly to the UK, US manufacturing is in a period of contraction. The reading for November is expected to come in at 37.2, worse than the 38.9 seen in October.

Ben Bernanke will speak at the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce on Monday with his speech expected to draw heavy interest and subsequent volatility. He will be the keynote speaker at the Annual Economic Forecast event organised by the Austin Chamber.

On Tuesday we will see high volatility concentrated in the overnight session with key data due from Australia. At 00:30 UK time the Retail Sales Trend figure for October is to be released. Economists are expecting 0.1% MoM growth after Septembers 0.2% increase.

We will be staying in Australia for the week’s first central bank interest rate announcement. The RBA Interest Rate Statement is expected to confirm expectations of a 0.75% cut in the Cash Rate from 5.25% to 4.50%.

On Wednesday we will see more high volatility from Australia with the quarterly GDP release. Data for the third quarter is expected to show a 0.2% growth in GDP after the 0.3% reported in Q2.

At 09:30 we will see information from another of the UK’s key industry sectors. The Services PMI for November is likely to have deteriorated to 41.2 from 42.4 in October.

This week’s key North American events are undoubtedly the employment data releases. The first of which comes from the US on Wednesday in the shape of ADP Non-Farm Employment Change. Traders are using this number as a guide to official Non-Farm Payrolls due later in the week so high volatility can be anticipated. It is expected that the US economy lost 200K jobs in November after losing 157K in October, according to ADP.

Next up for the US will be the ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI at 15:00. Like its manufacturing counterpart the index is inside the contraction zone with a reading of 42.5 expected after October’s 44.4.

Wednesday will play host to more monetary policy relaxation, this time from the RBNZ. The RBNZ Interest Rate Statement and the accompanying press conference are both regarded as high volatility events. The RBNZ is expected to reduce the Official Cash Rate from 6.50 to 5.00 percent, a full one and a half point cut.

Thursday will see economic data coming thick and fast beginning in Australia. At 00:30 Building Approvals and Trade Balance are due. Building Approvals likely recovered 0.2% in October after a 7.2% slump in September. Trade Surplus is likely to remain relatively unchanged at 1.45 AUD after 1.46 AUD in September.

The Halifax House Price Index is due at 08:00 on Thursday. This index is the first to be released from the UK on the latest month’s housing market with a reading of -1.0% expected for November. In October house prices fell by 2.2% according to the Halifax Bank of Scotland.

At 12:00 we will see the BOE Interest Rate Statement. The MPC is expected to vote for a 1.00% Official Bank Rate cut to 2.00% as they look to manage the UK’s economic downturn.

Speculation is rife that the ECB will cut rates heavily on Thursday after the Flash CPI Report showed that consumer inflation had fallen to just above the ECB’s 2.0% target. Expectations are for a 0.75% cut in the Minimum Bid Rate to 2.75% when the ECB Interest Rate Announcement hits news wires at 12:45.

At 13:30 we will see high volatility announcements from three different economies. The ECB Press Conference will be closely watched as traders look for clues to future monetary policy shifts from the ECB. At the same time traders will be watching Initial Jobless Claims as a figure above 500K is expected once again. Canadian Building Permits are also due with a 6 percent decline anticipated for October.

The Canadian Ivey PMI is due at 15:00 on Thursday. The Index has managed to hold its head above the expansion/ contraction line at 50.0 until this point with economists expecting a reading of 50 dead this time around.

Further high volatility is expected with Fed Chairman Bernanke’s involvement with the President’s Conference on Homeownership and Mortgage Initiative in Washington DC at 16:15.

Friday will be dominated by employment data from North America. At 12:00 Canada will release its Employment Change and Unemployment Rate numbers for November. Employment Change is expected to show -21.0K compared to 9.5K jobs added in October. The Unemployment Rate in Canada is likely to increase to 6.4% from 6.2% previous.

The US economy has been shedding jobs at a rapid rate recently and economists are expecting another bout of negative data for the month of November. Non-Farm Employment Change from the Bureau of Labor Statistics is likely to show that 320K jobs were lost in November to add to the 240K cut in October. The US Unemployment Rate, also due at 13:30, should increase to 6.8% from 6.5% seen one month previous.

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November 16, 2008

Sterling Tumbles, Yen and US Dollar are Firm as we Enter Global Recession

Last Week
Last week was characterised by further weakness in Sterling as BOE Governor King confirmed that more rate cuts are coming “if that proves to be necessary”. The BOE Inflation Report also confirmed that inflation will fall to “well below” the Bank’s target 2.0% in two years time. At the present time the market is expecting the UK Official Bank Rate to hit 2.00% by mid 2009.

On the other hand, Yen and the US Dollar were firm against the major currencies as economic data proved that the global economy is entering a recession. The GBP USD dove from an early week high of 1.5884 by over 1000 pips to a low of 1.4557. Based on closing prices this represents a weekly fall of 6.09%.

The GBP JPY was also very weak, falling by 7.43% on the week. This time last week one GBP would have bought you over 153 Yen, however the exchange rate currently stands at 143.02.

Other than the UK Inflation Report last week’s major news announcements were Initial Jobless Claims which hit a 7-year high of 516K and US Retail Sales which managed all-time YoY lows. Headline Retail Sales were down 2.8% YoY in October while Core Retail Sales were down by 2.2%. These numbers are even worse than 2001’s post September 11th data.

This Week
Once again the world’s major economies will be active this week with plenty to keep traders occupied. We begin at 23:50 on Sunday with Japanese preliminary GDP QoQ. The data is expected to show that the Japanese economy grew by 0.1% in the 3rd quarter after a 0.7% contraction in the previous period.

On Monday we have Real Retail Sales from Australia at 00:30. This indicator strips out the effects of inflation on Retail Sales. On a quarterly basis traders are expecting a 0.4% increase. In the last quarter Real Retail Sales fell by 0.6%.

Tuesday will be a busy day with Australian, UK, US and New Zealand data due. We begin at 00:30 with the RBA Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes which will offer an insight into the 0.75% rate cut on November 4th.

At 09:30 the UK’s YoY CPI is due. Economists are expecting inflation to fall from the 5.2% seen last month to 4.8%.

High volatility from the US begins with the Producer Price Index at 13:30. PPI is expected to post a -1.9% MoM for October after the 0.4% decline seen in September. This is followed by TIC Net Long-Term Transactions at 14:00. Foreign purchases of US securities have been in decline in recent months with a surplus of $18.0B expected in October.

At 14:30 Fed Chairman and US Treasury Secretary Paulson will testify before the US House of Representatives Financial Services Committee on the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). High volatility is expected while the pair are making their remarks.

The data from New Zealand will be in the form of PPI Input. This data measures the rate of inflation experienced by manufacturers when purchasing goods and raw materials. The index came in at 5.6% in September.

Wednesday continues where a busy Tuesday left off. RBA Governor Stevens will speak in Melbourne. His remarks are expected to generate high volatility.

At 09:30 the BOE’s MPC Meeting Minutes will be released. Traders are expecting the vote count to be unanimous in favour of November 6th’s 1.50% interest rate cut.

At 13:30 we will see two high volatility events from the US. Core CPI is expected to show a 0.1% MoM increase in October. This is in-line with September’s number. Building Permits are expected to show a slight decline in the annualized number of residential permits issued. A number of 770K is anticipated for October.

At 19:00 we will have yet more insight into recent central bank rate cuts with the FOMC Meeting Minutes. This release corresponds to the 0.50% rate cut seen on October 29th.

A busy week for the UK continues on Thursday with October’s Retail Sales number due. A MoM decline of 0.9% is expected, steeper than September’s 0.4% fall.

Particular interest will be paid to this week’s Initial Jobless Claims report from the US at 13:30. As we have already mentioned, claims hit a 7-year high last week at 516K with a slightly lower number of 508K likely this week.

On Friday morning the BOJ Interest Rate Statement will be released. Rates are expected to remain on hold at 0.30% with the BOJ Press Conference likely to be the high volatility event.

The final high volatility event of the week will come from Canada with the Core CPI release. September saw a 0.4% increase with October expected to be completely flat at 0.0%.

For further information and updates be sure to visit our economic calendar. This week US PPI, BOE MPC Meeting Minutes, US Core CPI and Canadian Core CPI will all be supported by our visual analysis and historical data tool.

 

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November 9, 2008

UK Interest Rates to Hit 0%? - US Economic Data Still Weak

Last Week
The BOE surprised traders last week when its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decided to cut interest rates by 150 basis points to 3.00%. The market had been expecting a much less aggressive cut to 4.00%. This move fuelled speculation that the BOE will need to cut rates at a faster pace than other central banks and heightened the likelihood that the Official Bank Rate will eventually reach 0.00%.

As you might expect, the GBP closed lower on the week against all other major currencies on the back of this speculation. Although the existing Sterling bearish trends remain in consolidation there are absolutely no signs of a reversal in the medium to long term. The Pound’s value over the coming months will depend on the pace at which the ECB, Federal Reserve and others slash rates. However, the ECB has demonstrated much more measured cuts and the Federal Funds Rate already sits at 1.00% with very little room to the downside.

In the US, Barack Obama became the first African-American President of the United States with 53% of the popular vote. One thing is for certain, he is unlikely to experience any honeymoon period when he is sworn in come January. He will be more than aware of the disappointing economic data coming out of the United States last week.

US Non-Farm Employment Change came in worse than expected at -240K compared to the -200K expected. To make matters worse, September’s data was revised down 125K to -284K. September and October’s data together make the worst two-month series since 2001. Unemployment also surged to the highest level since 1994. It now stands at 6.5%, much worse than the 6.3% expected and 6.1% seen in September.

This Week
The high volatility begins in the early hours of Monday morning this week with Australian Home Loans and the RBA Monetary Policy Statement. September’s Home Loans came in at -2.2% and a further MoM drop of 2.7% is expected to have occurred in October.

Also on Monday we have PPI Input from the UK. This data measures inflation in the prices paid by manufacturers for goods and raw materials. PPI Input is expected to come in at -2.6% MoM for October, compared to -1.2% the month previous.

High volatility from North America is also expected with Canadian Housing Starts expected at 13:15. In September construction on 218K new residential buildings began (annualized) with this number expected to fall to 202K in October.

Monday evening will play host to PPI Input from New Zealand. Prices in September increased by 5.6%.

Tuesday will be fairly quiet this week with French, US and Canadian bank holidays. Although some stock exchanges will remain open large banks will not. Low volatility is likely throughout the Forex market.

At 10:00 we will see high volatility from the German ZEW Economic Sentiment reading. A reading of -62.5 is expected, slightly higher than the -63.0 seen the month before but the index is fixed firmly in pessimistic territory.

At 20:00 the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will release its Financial Stability Report. The report is released twice per year and a press conference is usually held at the release time.

On Wednesday we will see employment data from the UK with Claimant Count Change regarded as most important. It is expected that 40K more UK workers are out of employment, and consequently claiming unemployment benefit when compared to a month earlier.

More high volatility will come from the UK at 10:30 with the BOE Inflation Report due for release. Of course traders will be watching this report closely because it explains the Bank’s view of inflation over the coming two years. However, further interest cuts in the UK may already be set in stone despite these inflation projections.

At 21:45 we will see Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales from New Zealand. The core number is expected to fall by 0.1% MoM compared to a 0.8% increase in September, while the headline number should grow by 0.1% on the month. Growth of 0.4% was seen in the month of September.

Thursday will see Germany deliver its second high volatility release of the week with preliminary quarterly GDP. The German economy is expected to have contracted by 0.2% over the last quarter.

At 13:30 we will see Trade Balance data from the US and Canada. The US trade deficit probably shrunk slightly in October from $59.1B to 56.5B. In Canada, trade surplus is expected to have fallen by CAD 700M to 5.1B.

After a fairly quiet week the US will finish with a flurry of high volatility with no less than 4 such events on Friday, although it does share one of these with the Eurozone.

At 13:30 we will see Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales releases. The core number likely fell by 1.1% on October when compared to -0.6% in September. Headline Retail Sales are expected to have fallen by 2.0% over the same period.

Also at 13:30 we have Fed Chairman Bernanke and ECB President Trichet taking part in a panel discussion at the 5th ECB Banking Conference in Frankfurt. The discussion will be on the topic of "International Interdependencies and Monetary Policy - a Policy Maker's View".

To round up the week we will see preliminary University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment with a reading of 56.0 expected.

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November 2, 2008

Who will be the Next US President? - Global Interest Rate Cuts Expected - Employment a Hot Topic

Without a shadow of a doubt next week’s major news story will be the election of the 44th President of the United States. Who will it be, McCain, Obama? We will have to wait until late Tuesday or the early hours of Wednesday to find out but the US Presidential Election is bound to dominate news wires this week.

So how will financial markets react? Generally speaking, domestic markets attempt an optimistic rally when new leaders are elected. Of course this relies on the premise that policies and conditions facilitating economic growth were bad/ worse under the previous management.

Taking this into account, are we seeing some “buy on rumour” type trading in the US stock market? Last week the S&P 500 and the DOW both had their largest rallies since 1974, up by more than 10%. There seems little doubt that the financial rescue plan is playing a huge part in this relief rally but the market also seems to be responding favourably to Obama’s 7-point lead in the polls.

Last Week
If traders were paying strict attention to last week’s economic releases they may have been forgiven for thinking a stock market rally lacked fundamental justification. This is because 4 out of the 5 high volatility economic indicators released last week pointed to economic slowdown. Consumer Confidence, Core Durable Goods Orders and GDP data all pointed towards contraction while the Federal Funds Rate was slashed by a further 0.50% to 1.00%. Only New Home Sales managed to post MoM growth. Worryingly however, median prices fell to a new four-year low.

This Week
This week’s first high volatility event will arrive on Sunday at 21:45 with New Zealand’s Labour Cost Index. On a quarterly basis the index is expect to increase by 0.8%, in line with that of the previous quarter.

In the early hours of Monday morning we will see Australian Retail Sales Trend. Monthly growth of 0.2% is expected after September’s 0.3% rise.

The rest of the day will be dominated by manufacturing data. The UK’s Manufacturing PMI is due at 09:30 with economists expecting a reading of 40.0. Anything below 50 represents industry contraction so Sterling traders will welcome surprises to the upside.

At 15:00 the US ISM Manufacturing PMI is due to be released. September’s reading was 43.5 and the contraction is expected to deepen in October with a 41.6 consensus estimate.

At 16:00 in the UK we will hear testimony from BOE Governor King, Chancellor of the Exchequer Darling and FSA Chairman Turner on the recent banking crisis. The trio are due to testify before Parliament’s Treasury Committee, in London.

Aside from the US Presidential Election, Tuesday will be fairly quiet on the economic front. In the early hours of the morning we are due to see further tightening of global interest rates as the RBA’s Interest Rate Statement is expected to reveal a further half point cut to 5.50%. This represents a fall of 1.75% since August this year.

Wednesday will be a much busier day beginning early with Australian Building Approvals and Trade Balance. Following on from a 3.7% MoM contraction in the number of permit approvals in September, October’s rate is also expected to fall, by 1.1%. Trade Balance will likely fall to 0.50B AUD from 1.36B previously.

At 09:30 the UK’s manufacturing Industry will come under further scrutiny courtesy of Manufacturing Production which is expected to fall by 0.4% MoM. At the same time Services PMI is expected to reflect further contraction, dropping from 46.0 to 44.5.

As a precursor to official data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics later in the week, ADP’s Non-Farm Employment Change will be closely watched at 13:15. Economists are expecting a reading of -100K in the number of employed people in October.

At 15:00 the ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI is expected to worsen from minor expansion in September to 47.3, a reading that would indicate contraction in October.

New Zealand employment data comes to the fore on Wednesday evening at 21:45. Employment Change and Unemployment Rate are both due to be released. Employment Change is expected to show 0.8% fewer people were in employment over the previous quarter. This data contributes to the expected sharp increase in the Unemployment Rate to 4.3% from 3.9%.

Hot on the heels of similar data from New Zealand, Australia will report Employment Change and Unemployment Rate at 00:30 on Thursday morning. It is expected that the Aussie economy shed 10K jobs in October with Unemployment duly up to 4.4% from 4.3% in September.

The BOE Interest Rate Statement is due at 12:00 with the MPC expected to cut the Official Bank Rate to 4.00% from 4.50%. The Global interest rate focus will remain intact at 12:45 with the ECB Minimum Bid Rate Announcement. The ECB is also expected to cut by half a point, down to 3.25% from 3.75%. Traders will be very interested in the ECB Press Conference at 13:30 for an insight into ECB sentiment and the possibilities of further rate cuts.

Also due at 13:30 is Canadian Building Permits data. September saw a huge 13.5% fall in the number of permits issued with another 1.3% fall expected in October. Also from Canada at 15:00 is they Ivey PMI. This indicator attempts to reflect the health of the economy as a whole and expansion is expected to slow to 56.0 from 61.0 previous.

Friday’s focus will be on data from North America with Canadian Employment Change and Unemployment Rate getting things started at 12:00. The Canadian economy impressively added 106.9K jobs in September with 10K less jobs expected for October. Unemployment Rate is expected to worsen slightly, up to 4.2% from 4.1%.

At 13:30 we will see one of the most highly anticipated releases in the economic calendar. Non-Farm Employment Change from the US is expected to show 200K fewer employed people in October after 159K less in September. Unemployment rate, due at the same time, is expected to worsen from 6.1% to 6.3%.

There will barely be time for the dust from Non-Farm Payrolls to settle before Pending Home Sales are released at 15:00. With September’s MoM increase of 7.4%, sales in October likely fell by 3.4%.

This week will be rounded off by the New Zealand Parliamentary Election on Saturday. Although the impact on global markets will be limited there should be some effect on the New Zealand Dollar early next week.

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October 19, 2008

Fear of a Global Market Collapse Eases, Global Recession Immanent?

Last Week
Global markets stabilised a little last week as fears of a worldwide market meltdown were eased. Words of support from world leaders began to transform into solid action plans and in some cases actual cash injections.

However, worries over global recession were remembered after a host of poor economic data, especially from the US. Traders were especially worried about US Core Retail Sales, Retail Sales, Building Permits and Housing Starts. All four economic indicators missed expectations and this was reflected by the Michigan Consumer Sentiment number which fell from 70.3 to a lowly 57.5.

This Week
The economic calendar is slightly lighter than normal this week which may keep both stock and forex markets in consolidation. Key events will be the RBNZ and BOC Interest Rate Statements, Bernanke testimony and the BOE Meeting Minutes.

The first high volatility event of the week come from Australia at 01:30 Monday morning. The Australian PPI is expected to come in at 0.9%, compared to 1.0% in the previous quarter.

Later the same day we will see probably the most highly anticipated US event of the week with Bernanke’s testimony before the House of Representatives Budget Committee at 15:00.

At 22:45 we will see QoQ CPI data from New Zealand. Inflationary pressures are expected to moderate slightly from 1.6% previously to 1.5%.

Tuesday will begin with more high volatility from Australia. The October 7th Interest Rate Meeting Minutes are expected. Traders will be very interested in the discussions that took place at a meeting where the RBA surprisingly by cutting a full 100 basis points to 6.00%.

At 03:10 RBA Governor Glenn Stevens is expected to bring more high volatility to the markets when he speaks about the international economy in Sydney.

The BOC Interest Rate Statement is due at 14:00 with a 0.50% cut expected. This will bring the Overnight Rate to 2.00% from 2.50%. This will mean that the BOC has cut the rate by a full one-percentage point in the last 14 days.

We will see some late volatility from the UK as BOE Governor Mervyn King speaks in Leeds. He is due to speak at 20:10 UK time.

The flurry of Australian data continues on Wednesday with the Australian CPI. Economists are expecting an AUD negative release with 1.0% consumer inflation compared to 1.5% in the previous quarter.

At 09:30 we will hear from the BOE Monetary Policy Committee with the BOE Meeting Minutes (visual analysis) release. It is expected that the MPC voted unanimously to cut rates by 0.50% on October 8th as part of the coordinated global move.

The USD/ CAD will be in focus at 13:30 with Canada’s Core Retail Sales expected to crate high volatility. Core sales are expected to moderate slightly down to 0.3% growth in September from 0.4% in August.

Wednesday is rounded off by the second central bank rate announcement of the week. The RBNZ Interest Rate Statement is due at 21:00 with the Official Cash Rate likely to be cut by 1.00% from 7.50% to 6.50%. This mirrors the actions of the RBA earlier in the month who also cut by 1.00%.

The first high volatility event of Thursday will be from the UK. Retail Sales is due at 09:30. This data has been highly volatile of late and this trend looks set to continue. Retail Sales for September are expected to have fallen by 0.8% in September when compared to a 1.2% increase in August.

The Bank of Canada will take the spotlight for the second time in a week on Thursday. The BOC Monetary Policy Report is due at 15:30 and BOC Governor Carney will hold a press conference on the same topic at 16:15.

On Friday morning we are due to see preliminary GDP data from the UK. Gross domestic product is expected to show negative growth of 0.2% after the previous quarter’s number of 0.0%.

Canada’s Core CPI (visual analysis) is due at 12:00 with growth in September expected to mirror that of August at 0.3%. Traders pay most attention the Core number and so does the BOC.

To round off the week we have Existing Home Sales (visual analysis) from the US. This release will also be supported by our visual analysis and historical data tool. The sale of existing residential homes is expected to have increased slightly in September with 4.95M units sold compared to 4.91M in August.

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September 21, 2008

How Will Markets React to Last Week’s Volatility?

Last Week
Traders will go into work on Monday morning still trying to digest last week’s events. Just how will the market react to one of the most volatile weeks seen in decades?

Markets were thrown into turmoil straight from the off with the announcement that Lehman Brothers had gone bankrupt and the acquisition of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America. This was followed by the Fed bailout of AIG.

Financial markets in the US responded accordingly with the DOW’s biggest fall since 2001 with strength was seen in Gold and the Japanese Yen on risk aversion.

However, coordinated action from the world’s central banks flooded the market with liquidity which sparked the sharpest rally in US stocks since 1987. The US Government alone announced a $700 billion bank rescue plan and announced a ban on shorting financial stocks. This move was mirrored by financial authorities in the UK, Ireland and Australia.

This Week
This week will undoubtedly be dominated by the talking heads with Bernanke, Paulson and SEC Chairman Cox testifying no less than 4 times at various times. There are also two important US Housing data releases to consider.

Monday will start fairly slowly with little volatility coming from UK, Japanese or Eurozone economic releases. The first high volatility event of the week will come at 13:30 in the shape of Canadian Core Retail Sales. There was a 1.4% MoM increase for July with the August figure expected to show 0.3% growth.

Canada will also give us our second high volatility event of the week. The Core CPI is due for release at 12:00 on Tuesday. Data for August is expected to replicate that of July with a modest 0.1% MoM increase.

At 15:00 we have the first of the big testimonies with Bernanke, Paulson and Cox talking about the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and recent market turmoil. They will testify in front of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee in Washington DC.

Wednesday gets underway with some economic volatility from the Eurozone with German Ifo Business Climate due for release. The index is likely to contract slightly to 94.2 from 94.8 last month.

Two hours later at 11:00 the UK’s Confederation of British Industry (CBI) index of Realised Sales will be released. This is a high volatility event with last month’s reading of -46 expected to improve slightly to -40. However, this number is still well below registering an increase in sales volume amongst the surveyed retailers and wholesalers.

At 15:00 we have a double header from the US. The first big housing data release of the week is due with Existing Home Sales likely to contract to 4.93M in August from 5.00M in July. At the same time Bernanke’s testimony before the Congressional Joint Economic Committee in Washington DC gets underway.

Bernanke is not finished there however. His second testimony of the day, this time with Paulson, before of the House Financial Services Committee gets underway at 19:30 BST.

Thursday will be dominated by high volatility from US sources. First of all we will see Core Durable Goods Orders. Last month offered a positive 0.7% increase with economists expecting that to be offset by -0.5% this time around.

At 15:00 we will see New Home Sales. Traders are expecting August’s sales to have softened to 510K from 515K in July.

Bernanke’s fourth and final outing of the week will come along with US Treasury Secretary Paulson once again. This time they will appear before the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services with regards to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and recent market turmoil.

Thursday is rounded off by New Zealand’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). QoQ the indicator is likely to show that the New Zealand economy contracted by 0.5%, more than the -0.3% seen in the previous quarter.

Friday promises to be a slightly quieter day, dominated by medium volatility events. The UK’s Nationwide House Price Index (HPI) is tentatively scheduled for a release although this could be put back to feature in the last week of the month. Economists expect a fall of 2.0% MoM to be reported.

A full schedule of this week’s testimonies can be found on our economic speeches calendar. The Existing Home Sales, New Home Sales and Canadian Core CPI releases will also be supported by our visual analysis and historical data tool. Full breakdown and evaluation of these data releases will be featured right here on our Market News blog.






















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

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