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.

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

Permalink Print

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.

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

Permalink Print

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.

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

Permalink Print

September 7, 2008

US Unemployment Jumps to 6.1% - Dollar Remains Firm

Last week was a key week in terms of economic indicators. We saw central bank interest rate announcements from the RBA, BOC, BOE and ECB and key employment data from the US.

All interest rate announcements came in as expected but US employment data managed to surprise to the downside. Non-Farm Payrolls fell more than expected (-84K) for August and the Unemployment Rate jumped from 5.7 to 6.1%. This represents the highest rate since September 2003.

Despite this negative US economic news the Dollar remained firm, supported by carry trade unwinding and a further fall in oil prices. NYMEX crude oil posted a weekly low through the $110 level at $105.13.

This Week
Early market focus will be centred on a rumoured announcement from US Treasury Secretary Paulson due on Sunday evening. It is expected that he will announce a plan for the US Government to take control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for at least a year.

This week will also play host to a 3-day OPEC meeting that takes place in Vienna. Running from Monday through to Wednesday, the main body of the programme is scheduled for Tuesday. Traders will be watching for any unscheduled announcements made to the press throughout the 3 days.

Monday begins with an RBA testimony before the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics. Lead by Glenn Stevens, the RBA will testify on the latest semi-annual economic outlook.

At 09:30 the UK PPI Input number is due for release. The number is expected to fall by 1.2% after a -0.6% reading for July.

Later in the day we have a high volatility event from Canada. Building Permits will be released and further contraction is expected. July saw -5.3% and a further -1.0% is expected from August.

Tuesday will bring us more high volatility with Australian data first up. At 02:30 we will see both Home Loans and Retail Sales. Home Loans posted a -3.7% for July and a month-over-month 0.0% move is anticipated for the month of August. Retail sales, on the other hand, are expected to post a mild recovery. July figures were reported at -1.0% but numbers for August should show a 0.5% increase.

In the UK session traders will be focussed on Manufacturing Production. A number of -0.1% is anticipated after a -0.5% report in the previous month.

Further Canadian construction data is due on Tuesday at 13:15. It comes in the form of the Housing Starts report and is expected to show 194K new residential constructions getting underway. This would be an improvement from the 187K annualized reported in August.

The first high volatility economic indicator from the US is scheduled for release at 15:00 on Tuesday. Pending Home Sales MoM are likely to have fallen by 1.2% in August after a 5.3% increase in July.

On Wednesday we will see the first high volatility event from the Eurozone. ECB President Trichet will testify before the European Parliament Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs in Brussels.

Towards the end of the day (22:00) we have the RBNZ Interest Rate Announcement. It is expected that the RBNZ will cut interest rates for the second time in 2 meetings to 7.75%. This will be an interesting event because the last cut (happened back on the 23rd of July) surprised most market participants.

Thursday is often the busiest day in terms of economic releases and this week is no exception. For the second time in 3 days Australia leads the field with two high volatility events at 02:30. This time Employment Change and Unemployment Rate are to be reported. Employment Change is expected to come in at 5.5K jobs created while Unemployment Rate could increase from 4.3% to 4.4%.

Thursday will also play host to the third central bank testimony of the week. The BOE MPC, including Mervyn King, will testify on the August 2008 Inflation Report before the UK Treasury Committee at 09:45.

At 13:30 we have a high volatility announcement from Canada and the US. Both countries will be reporting their latest Trade Balance figures. Canada is expected to report a surplus of $5.6B from $5.8B in the previous month while the US deficit is likely to increase to $58B from $56.8B previously reported.

Finally for Thursday we have Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales from New Zealand. Last month’s Core number came in flat at 0.0% while the raw number posted a 0.9% gain. This month data is expected at 0.2% and -0.3% for Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales respectively.

Friday will be dominated by high volatility data from the United States. At 13:30 we will see Core Retail Sales, Retail Sales and PPI (supported by our Visual Analysis tool). Core Retail Sales are expected to contract by 0.2% MoM while Retail Sales should be up by 0.2%. The Producer Price Index is expected at -0.5% after last month’s 1.2% gain.

At 14:55 we have the final high volatility announcement from the US and for the week in the shape of the preliminary University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment. Sentiment is expected to increase to 64 from last month’s revised figure of 63.

For full details of this week’s economic news and daily updates please see our economic calendar and economic speeches pages.
 

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

Permalink Print