Market Drivers for August 29 2014

Japanese inflation stalls, consumption sinks
EZ core CPI stabilized at 0.9% vs. 0.8%
Nikkei -.23% Europe 0.39%
Oil $95/bbl
Gold $1289/oz.

Europe and Asia:
JPY Core CPI 2.7% vs. 2.7%
JPY Household Spending -5.9% vs. -2.7%
JPY IP 0.2% vs. 1.2%
EUR GE Retail Sales -1.4% vs. 0.1%
EUR CPI 0.9% vs. 0.8%

North America:
USD PI/PS 8:30 AM
CAD GDP 8:30
USD Chicago PMI 9:45 AM
USD U of M 10 AM

EZ core CPI data appears to have stabilized albeit at very low levels and that news helped to boost EUR/USD slightly in morning European trade today. The EUR/USD popped to 1.3195 after the data revealed that EZ core CPI rose to 0.9% from 0.8% forecast.

Although the inflation data in the EZ remains woefully low, tonight’s reading suggests that disinflationary pressures may have eased somewhat and that in turn could provide the ECB with some extra time before monetary authorities commit to any large QE program.
As we noted earlier this week, we do not anticipate any dramatic announcements from ECB at next week press conference, but we do expect that the central may prepare the market for the prospect of further monetary easing before the year end. Despite the fact that disinflationary pressures have abated – in no small part due to the lower exchange rate over the past few months – it is clear that ECB cannot rely on organic growth to pull the region out of its current economic slowdown. Price level remain at 5 year lows even with today’s better data readings.

With most EZ fiscal budgets still under the austerity regime and geopolitical problems with Russia continuing to dampen business demand and investment, the only stimulus available to the EZ must come from the monetary side. That is why many market participants expect Mr. Draghi to address these issue even if only obliquely at the meeting next week.
Elsewhere Japan saw its monthly a data deluge last night and the results were generally depressing. Inflation stalled, consumption sunk and Industrial Production missed its mark by a wide margin. Core inflation remained at 2.7% while household spending contracted markedly at -5.9% vs. -2.7% eyed and Industrial Production rose only 0.2% versus 1.2% forecast.

It is becoming clear that the hike in the national sales tax is having a very negative impact on consumer demand and may scuttle PM Abe attempts at reviving the Japanese economy. As some analysts have pointed out, Japanese corporations have too much money while Japanese consumers have too little and Mr. Abe’s reforms which have focused on tax cuts for corporates and tax increases for consumers may have only exacerbated the situation. This may leave the BOJ with no choice but to increase its QE commitments in order to maintain stimulus in the Japanese economy.

The net impact of all these developments is that while one liquidity spigot (the FED) may be on the verge of being turned off – two others (the ECB and the BOJ ) may soon increase their flow significantly. If that is indeed the case going into the end of the year, the added liquidity from the ECB and the BOJ should provide strong support for financial assets while keeping the dollar well bid.

In North American trade today the market will get a look at PI/PS from US as well as Chicago PMI data. The markets are looking for slight decline in the former and a slight increase in the later. However if personal income and spending surprise to the upside they could provide further support for USD/JPY and could push the pair towards the 104.00 figure as the day proceeds.


Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD fluctuates near 1.0700 after US data

EUR/USD fluctuates near 1.0700 after US data

EUR/USD stays in a consolidation phase at around 1.0700 in the American session on Wednesday. The data from the US showed a strong increase in Durable Goods Orders, supporting the USD and making it difficult for the pair to gain traction.

EUR/USD News

USD/JPY refreshes 34-year high, attacks 155.00 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY refreshes 34-year high, attacks 155.00 as intervention risks loom

USD/JPY is renewing a multi-decade high, closing in on 155.00. Traders turn cautious on heightened risks of Japan's FX intervention. Broad US Dollar rebound aids the upside in the major. US Durable Goods data are next on tap. 

USD/JPY News

Gold stays in consolidation above $2,300

Gold stays in consolidation above $2,300

Gold finds it difficult to stage a rebound midweek following Monday's sharp decline but manages to hold above $2,300. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays in the green above 4.6% after US data, not allowing the pair to turn north.

Gold News

Worldcoin looks set for comeback despite Nvidia’s 22% crash Premium

Worldcoin looks set for comeback despite Nvidia’s 22% crash

Worldcoin price is in a better position than last week's and shows signs of a potential comeback. This development occurs amid the sharp decline in the valuation of the popular GPU manufacturer Nvidia.

Read more

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out Premium

Three fundamentals for the week: US GDP, BoJ and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge stand out

While it is hard to predict when geopolitical news erupts, the level of tension is lower – allowing for key data to have its say. This week's US figures are set to shape the Federal Reserve's decision next week – and the Bank of Japan may struggle to halt the Yen's deterioration. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures