FXstreet.com

Morning Report

6

0

AUD/NZD made a 1.2550 low overnight, recovering to around 1.2600

Wed, Jun 17 2009, 05:07 GMT
by Westpac Institutional Bank Team

Westpac Institutional Bank


News and views

Better data. Mixed US data and consensus-beating numbers from the UK and Germany supported a London session rally in risk, although things turned around in NY. US housing starts were much stronger than expected, but PPI and IP were a touch weaker. The S&P500 closed down 1.3%, and commodities were mixed, copper falling 1.4%. US 10yr notes gained overall, down 6bp. The draft communiqué from the BRIC meeting made no specific mention of the US dollar’s reserve currency status, limiting the session’s dollar selloff to -0.5% (DXY).

EUR initially rallied from 1.3800 to 1.3934, before falling back to 1.3850 on weaker equities. Initial strength came from stronger German ZEW data, as well as EU comments the recession is bottoming and the ECB saying there will be no expansion in asset purchases for now. GBP rallied from 1.6259 to 1.6507 before heading back to around 1.6400. Positives here included the consensus-beating CPI, BoE talk of exit strategies, and solid demand for the new 25yr gilt. USD/JPY gyrated between 96.08 and 92.27, unchanged overall at around 96.50.

AUD reached 0.8068 during London, the Rio Tinto rights issue supporting the currency, as well as a McCrann article suggesting no rate cut is likely within the next 2 months, but the falloff in risk during NY dragged it back to 0.7950.

NZD almost touched 0.6400, but is now a cent lower. AUD/NZD made a 1.2550 low overnight, recovering to around 1.2600.

US housing starts jump 17.2% in May, boosted by a 62% jump in the volatile multiples component, after a similar sized cumulative fall in the previous two months. But even excluding multiples, single family house starts rose 7.5%, their fourth straight month without a decline, and single family permits posted a similar May rise. The level of activity remains very weak, at just 532k starts annualised, compared to 2.3mn annualised at the peak in early 2006, nevertheless the data are consistent with other evidence that the housing market is bottoming out. It remains to be seem how the recent sharp gain in mortgage rates impacts on this nascent recovery in coming months.

US industrial production down 1.1% in May, dragged lower by autos as the Chrysler plant shutdowns impacted. The other detail revealed broad-based weakness, including in business equipment which is a sign that capital spending remains in the doldrums. Capacity use fell to a new record low (data go back 40 years), which should help prevent production sector driven inflationary pressures from emerging any time soon.

US PPI up 0.2%, core down 0.1%, in May. The headline and core PPI measures were very subdued, and for once auto and light truck prices, both flat or close to it, were not a major influencing factor. But there was some evidence that higher materials costs were pushing up crude price pressures in May.

The Bank of Japan left the uncollateralised call rate at 0.10%. There was no word on unconventional policy measures, in line with expectations. The commentary offered nothing that new, with the basic point being that the maturity of the inventory cycle will leave future developments in output solely to final demand.

The German ZEW outlook jump from 31 to 45 indicates that the 350 or so German analysts and economists surveyed by the institute continue to think things can only get better, and in June, for the first month in nine, the current measure also posted a modest gain. In other news, inflationary pressures eased on two fronts: the May Euroland CPI was confirmed at 0.0% yr, while the core rate fell from April’s 1.8% yr to 1.5% yr in May. Euroland labour costs growth eased from 4.0% yr to 3.7% yr in Q1.

UK annual inflation eased slightly to 2.2% yr in May, holding above the 2.0% target for the 20th month running. Higher taxes on cigarettes and alcohol introduced in the April budget, and higher imported goods prices due to the weaker pound sterling earlier this year, were factors at play.


Outlook

Last night’s NZD rally to near 0.6400 did not breach the pivotal 0.6400 level, so our lower-NZD view remains intact.


Archive

Westpac Institutional Bank  | ABN 33 007 457 14
http://www.westpac.co.nz | natalie_denne@westpac.co.nz

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

No disclaimer available

Related reports

Technical Major Currencies Report - Technical Major Currencies Morning Report by ecPulse.com
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 09:48 GMT

Forex Daily Analysis - Forex Trading - Dollar Tumbles After Big Day on Wall Street by ForexYard
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 09:47 GMT

Timeframe Breakdowns - EURUSD / EURGBP / EURJPY / GBPUSD by Turtle Futures
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 09:19 GMT

London Bullion Report - Precious metals pause as concerns surface over economic recovery by The Bullion Desk
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 08:56 GMT

Daily World Market Update - Dollar's Day of Data; GDP, Consumer Confidence, Fed Minutes by World First UK Ltd
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 08:39 GMT

audusd, indicator, eurusd, boj, gbpusd, nzdusd, audnzd

View All

Related content


Interested in forex trading? forex brokerage firms!


FOREX.com
Contact the broker/FDM
Open a demo account
FX Solutions LLC
Contact the broker/FDM
Open a demo account
MF Global FXA Securities Ltd.
Contact the broker/FDM
Open a demo account
GFT
Contact the broker/FDM
Open a demo account
Capital Market Services, L.L.C.
Contact the broker/FDM
Open a demo account

GET CASH BACK FOR YOUR TRADES!   Learn more about the Pip Rebate Program

Note: All information on this page is subject to change. The use of this website constitutes acceptance of our user agreement. Please read our privacy policy and legal disclaimer.

Trading foreign exchange on margin carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade foreign exchange you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with foreign exchange trading and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

Opinions expressed at FXstreet.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of FXstreet.com or its management. FXstreet.com has not verified the accuracy or basis-in-fact of any claim or statement made by any independent author: errors and Omissions may occur.

Any opinions, news, research, analyses, prices or other information contained on this website, by FXstreet.com, its employees, partners or contributors, is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. FXstreet.com will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on such information.

©2009 "FXstreet.com. The Forex Market" All Rights Reserved.