InstaForex

9.05.2013

Daily Insight - Better-than-expected print boosts Sterling

Thursday 05 September 2013 Can't read this email? Click Here


Read our great customer feedback.

Click Here

For the latest news read our currency blog.

Click Here

11:00 EUR German Factory Orders n.s.a. (YoY) (JUL)

12:00 GBP Bank of England Rate Decision (SEP 5)

12:00 GBP BoE Asset Purchase Target (SEP)

12:45 EUR European Central Bank Rate Decision (SEP 5)

12:45 EUR ECB Deposit Facility Rate (SEP 5)

13:15 USD ADP Employment Change (AUG)

13:30 USD Initial Jobless Claims (AUG 31)

Dear Subscriber,

Please find below today's update which gives you an insight into the current market conditions, enabling you to keep informed and up to date on the latest currency movements.

Headlines

UK Service Sector at 6-yr high - better-than-expected print boosts Sterling.
Eurozone private sector at 2-yr high - 17-nation bloc GDP confirmed at +0.3%.
US Trade deficit widens - GBP/USD rises to 2-week high.
RBA holds rates at 2.5% - BoC holds 1% benchmark rate.

Sterling

The Pound advanced further against some of the majors yesterday as traders reacted to another shamelessly high UK PMI figure. Completing the tripartite of outstanding data, the Service Sector PMI came in at a fresh 6-year high of 60.5 for August, beating expectations of 59.0 and improving slightly on July's score. The most optimistic Services report since December 2006, was littered with multi-year highs: New Business increased at its fastest rate since Tony Blair was voted into 10 Downing Street in May 1997, and the overall Composite PMI result - which measures private sector output across the whole economy - reached the highest score since records began in 1998.

Following three straight months of glittering Purchasing Managers Indexes all around, markets are now increasingly hopeful that interest rates will be raised at some point in 2015 - a year earlier than the Bank of England currently intends to act. It is now possible that British GDP will double the BoE's forecast in the third quarter, possibly registering growth above 1.0%.

Euro

Sterling bullied the Euro to a fresh 3.5-month high yesterday in reaction to the outperforming British Services Industry print. The Eurozone registered a robust PMI print of its own, but it was never going to compete with the stampeding UK figure. The 17-nation bloc Composite index advanced to a 2-year high of 51.5, slightly worse-than-expectations but still mightily encouraging, as three of the currency bloc's largest economies posted multi-month highs.

The single currency was also supported by news that Eurozone growth was confirmed at 0.3% for the second quarter, officially marking the end of its 1.5-year recession. However, sentiment towards the common currency was hampered by a disappointing Retail Sales print of -1.3% - even lower than expectations of -0.3%.

Political developments also worked against demand for the Euro yesterday, as new polling data showed that Angela Merkel's support in the run-up to this month's election is waning. The Italian government also ran into some trouble as colleagues of Silvio Berlusconi intimated that the former Prime Minister, who has recently been banned from office on tax fraud charges, is planning to pull-out of Enrico Letta's ruling coalition party.

US Dollar

The Pound to US Dollar exchange rate climbed higher by around 0.65 cents to a fortnightly high yesterday on the back of the latest in a long run of decent UK PMI data.

The US Dollar was mildly weakened by a below-par Trade Balance report. The US Commerce Department reported that the trade deficit widened from $34.5 billion in June to $39.1 billion as the gap between the US and its two largest export markets, China and the European Union, stretched to new all-time highs. Essentially, US exports are being overshadowed by imports, perhaps indicating that the recent Fed-taper-resultant US Dollar rallies have made American goods slightly more expensive, and therefore slightly less appealing, to international buyers.

Canadian Dollar

Sterling remained around a cent below August's 3-year high against the Canadian Dollar yesterday, barely registering any meaningful fluctuations as strong UK data was largely equalled out by the Bank of Canada's latest interest rate decision. The BoC held the current benchmark rate of 1.00%, the accompanying statement did little to pre-empt an imminent rise in rates, however, it did show that the Canadian Central Bank still intends to introduce an interest rate hike as soon as the domestic economy warrants it.

In twelve months time, if business investment has increased and Canadian exports have accelerated, then we could be looking at the first hike since 2010.

Australian Dollar

The Australian Dollar rallied to a 2-week high against the Pound yesterday as markets continued to express their delight at the Reserve Bank of Australia's slightly less-dovish-than-expected outlook for monetary policy. The RBA's mildly more upbeat stance was supported by a better-than-anticipated second quarter GDP report of 0.6%, lending weight to the Central Bank's decision to hold off on further easing at this juncture.

New Zealand Dollar

The New Zealand Dollar surged to a 2-cent gain against the Pound yesterday as both significant Chinese and Australian data reports came in optimistically in the Asian-Pacific region. With Western military intervention in Syria on hold, for the time being, the 'Kiwi' rose in time to the beat of yield-hungry risk-on traders hitting sell orders against the safe haven US Dollar.

If you need any further assistance, or require a live dealing quote - please do not hesitate to contact me on 01736 335250 or send an email to info@torfx.com

Regards,
TorFX

Any opinions expressed in this document are those of TorFX analysts. Any analysis and/or forecasts provided are aimed at helping clients understand market conditions and developing trends. Clients are wholly responsible for their own trading decisions.

Unauthorised copying or re-wording of this content is prohibited. The copyright of this content is owned by Tor Currency Exchange Ltd. Any unauthorised copying or re-wording will constitute an infringement of copyright.

Unsubscribe
From our Daily Updates
© Tor Currency Exchange Ltd | 0800 612 9625 | www.torfx.com
Registered Company Name: Tor Currency Exchange Limited. Registered in England & Wales, Number: 5193147. Tor Currency Exchange Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority under the Payment Service Regulations 2009 (FRN 517320) for the provision of payment services. HM Revenue & Customs Money Laundering Regulation Number: 12191606.

No comments:

Post a Comment