November 23, 2008

Obama to Name Economic Team

This Week
The working week will be slightly shorter than usual in the US and Japan thanks to bank/ market holidays. The Labour Thanksgiving Day holiday takes place in Japan on Monday, while Thanksgiving Day will be celebrated in the US on Thursday. There is also an early market close at some US exchanges on Friday.

On Monday there will be major news from the Eurozone and the US. At 09:00 the German Ifo Business Climate Index will be announced. The Index is expected to slip to 88.8 from 90.2 in the previous month.

High volatility will come from the US at 15:00 with Existing Home Sales. Traders are expecting the annualized number to fall to 5.02M for the month of October, down from 5.18M seen in September.

Later in the day, at a time yet to be specified, President-Elect Obama is set to hold a press conference to discuss his economic team appointments. Although this event isn’t expected to create high volatility a reaction is expected from traders. This will probably be more evident in the stock market as traders assess the qualifications and suitability of those appointed.

Tuesday will be fairly action packed beginning with quarterly Inflation Expectations from New Zealand. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand survey of business managers is due at 02:00 with a CPI prediction of 3.0% seen at the last release.

High volatility is also expected for the MPC Treasury Committee Hearings at 09:45 on Tuesday. MPC members will testify before the UK Parliament’s Treasury Committee on the latest Inflation Report.

At 13:30 we will see high volatility from the US and Canada. Preliminary US GDP is due with a -0.5% reading expected after -0.3% in the previous quarter.

Canada will be releasing Core Retail Sales with a MoM increase of 0.2% forecast after the -0.3% seen last month. Retail Sales are also due but the Core number is seen as more important.

Later in the day the Conference Board’s US Consumer Confidence Index will be released. High volatility is expected for the indicator which is likely to remain at 38.0 for the second month in succession.

Wednesday will produce the second bout of GDP data for the week. The UK will announce its revised GDP reading for the 3rd quarter. No revisions are anticipated for the final reading so it is likely that UK GDP contracted by 0.5% in Q3.

At 13:30 there will be a US double header with Core Durable Goods Orders and Initial Jobless Claims due for release. Core Durable Goods Orders probably fell by 1.4% on the month after a revised 1.0% decline seen in September. Initial Jobless Claims will be closely watched after the 542K 16-year high last week. A slightly lower number of 530K is anticipated this time around.

At 15:00 we will see US New Home Sales. If analyst expectations are correct the annualized pace of New Home Sales will fall to 443K from 464K in September.

Rounding off a busy Wednesday will be the New Zealand Trade Balance. Expectations are for a narrowing of the trade deficit to 1000M from 1183M New Zealand Dollars.

As we have already discussed, Thursday will be slightly quieter than usual with the US holiday but we will have several important releases. First up at 00:30 is Private New Capital Expenditure from Australia. Expectations are for a 0.5% quarterly growth in private business expenditure, down from growth of 5.7% in the previous quarter.

At 02:00 we will see the National Bank of New Zealand Business Outlook report. The survey of business confidence came in at -42.3 last month.

At 07:00 we will see the UK’s Nationwide House Price Index. Average home prices in the UK continue to decline with a monthly fall of 1.7% expected according to the high street mortgage lender. This comes after a 1.4% decline in September.

After a quiet afternoon session New Zealand’s Building Consents are due for release. A monthly increase of 8.4% was seen in September.

Friday will be a quiet end to the week with only one high volatility event scheduled. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Realised Sales index is expected to show further decline in sales volume throughout British Industry. The index is expected to read -35 after -27 seen last month.

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

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