|

Today's focus on Theresa May and Donald Trump meeting

Market movers today

  • The main event today is the meeting between UK PM Theresa May and US President Donald Trump. In our view, it is likely the two will say that the UK and US will ‘renew their special relationship' and ‘lead together again'.

  • On the data front, we get the first estimate of US GDP growth for Q4 16. We estimate GDP growth was 2.3% q/q AR driven mainly by private consumption. Business investments seem to have bottomed out when looking at core capex orders and we expect a positive contribution to growth in Q4. Capex orders for December are also released today and should have increased. Looking ahead, we expect capex orders to move higher on the back of higher oil prices, which supports oil investments and the rebound in manufacturing.

  • US PCE core inflation in Q4 will give us the December inflation rate implicitly. Based on the CPI data released last week, we estimate PCE core prices rose 0.2% m/m in December, corresponding to a quarterly print of 1.4 q/q AR in Q4, down from 1.7% in Q3.

  • In the euro area, money supply and loan growth figures for December are due for release. Loan growth to the private sector has improved to just below 2.0% y/y and the ECB's latest bank lending survey showed that demand for loans should continue to support growth in lending to both households and enterprises but credit standards for loans to enterprises tightened somewhat, driven by lower willingness to tolerate risk mainly in the Netherlands.

  • In Scandinavia, Swedish business, consumer confidence and retail sales figures are due for release. For more info, see Scandi markets on page 2.

 

Selected market news

With less than a week as US President, Trump is now in his first major foreign policy conflict after Mexico's President Nieto cancelled a meeting with him planned for next week. The cancellation followed President Trump's tweet that if Mexico was unwilling to pay for the ‘badly needed wall', then it would be better to cancel the upcoming meeting. The conflict threatens one of the largest bilateral trading relationships but Trump's spokesman Sean Spicer said ‘we will continue to co-ordinate', while Mexico's President Nieto said the door was not closed for a meeting. Later yesterday, the White House said Trump wanted to pay for the wall with a 20% tax on imports from Mexico as part of a tax reform package.

The positive risk sentiment continued with rising equity prices and fixed income sellingoff. Yesterday, USD followed suit and recovered following the resistance of the past few days. In fixed income markets, Italy and Portugal were under pressure and in the 10Y space spreads widened 12bp and 11bp to Germany, respectively, while Spain widened only slightly. In Italy, the headwind continued after the Constitutional Court rejected part of the ‘Italicum', creating market fears that a snap-election has moved closer, while Portugal was under pressure after Bloomberg reported that an EU official had said that ‘the Portugal situation is not good'.

Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann said yesterday that euro area inflation is heading towards the ECB's mandate indicating his view is that the ECB can soon start tapering. However, Weidmann also said ‘expansionary monetary policy path is currently appropriate' and that the ECB will exit the loose monetary policy only when inflation is sustained which is much less hawkish and in line with the stance of other ECB members.

Download The Full Daily FX Market Commentary

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research Team
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD trims losses and returns to the 1.1750 area

The US Dollar resumed its decline in the American afternoon, helping EUR/USD trim early losses. The pair trades around 1.1750 as market participants gear up for the European Central Bank monetary policy decision and the United States Consumer Price Index.

GBP/USD consolidates above mid-1.3300s as traders await BoE and US CPI report

The GBP/USD pair struggles to capitalize on the overnight bounce from the 1.3310 area, or a one-week low, and oscillates in a narrow band during the Asian session on Thursday. Spot prices currently trade around the 1.3370 region, down less than 0.10% for the day, as traders opt to wait on the sidelines ahead of the key central bank event risk and US consumer inflation data.

Gold declines on profit-taking, USD strength ahead of US CPI release

Gold price edges lower below $4,350 during the Asian trading hours on Thursday. The precious metal retreats from seven-week highs amid some profit-taking and a rebound in the US Dollar (USD). The potential downside for the yellow metal might be limited after the recent US jobs data reinforce market expectations of further interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve and drag the USD lower. 

Bitcoin, Ethereum whipsaw, sparks heavy liquidations amid accusations of market manipulation

The crypto market whipsawed on Wednesday as top cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), quickly reversed gains from the early American session.

Monetary policy: Three central banks, three decisions, the same caution

While the Fed eased its monetary policy on 10 December for the third consecutive FOMC meeting, without making any guarantees about future action, the BoE, the ECB and the BoJ are holding their respective meetings this week. 

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP slide further as risk-off sentiment deepens

Bitcoin faces extended pressure as institutional investors reduce their risk exposure. Ethereum’s upside capped at $3,000, weighed down by ETF outflows and bearish signals. XRP slides toward November’s support at $1.82 despite mild ETF inflows.