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