Monday 12 November 2012

Daily Foreign Exchange Market Update

Last week saw the Pound lose ground against the Euro and the US Dollar in the foreign exchange market. The GBPEUR rate opened the week at 1.2519, falling throughout the first half of the week before hitting a weekly low of 1.2453 on Wednesday morning. It then quickly gained ground to reach a weekly high on Thursday afternoon at 1.2561 before closing the week out slightly lower at 1.2514. The GBPUSD rate opened at a weekly high of 1.6013 before losing strength throughout the week and closing at a weekly low of 1.5906. Last week there were several pieces of data coming out of the UK, the most important being the Bank of England’s decision to keep the base rate and asset purchase target the same at 0.5% and £375B respectively. As well as this PMI for services was released which shows the level of business conditions in the services sector, it was worse than expected, coming out at 50.6 compared to the 52.0 predicted.

This week will see CPI (inflation) be released, showing the change in prices for retail goods, the Bank of England’s key measure on inflation and is expected to come out slightly higher than before at 2.4% Jobless claims will also be released showing the change in the number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits; the previous month’s figure was -4K and this month it is set to come out at -5.1K, a better result.

The Euro gained against the Pound but lost strength against the US Dollar during last week’s market session. The EURUSD rate opened the week at 1.2792 before moving to a weekly high of 1.2868 on Wednesday morning. It then weakened throughout the latter half of the week, dropping to a weekly low of 1.2689 on Friday afternoon, closing the week out slightly higher at 1.2715. Last week saw Spanish unemployment change be released, coming out at 128.2K, much higher then the 90.3K predicted, the highest since February, bad news for the Spanish job market. Mario Draghi spoke in a conference regarding the state of the Euro-zone economy. He stated that he expected inflation to fall below 2% in the next year even though unemployment is high and economic activity is week. He also said that the actions of the ECB should build confidence in the short term but only actions of the Government can build confidence in the long term. On Thursday it was announced that the ECB would keep their base interest rate at 0.75%.

This week will see most of the economic data come from Germany, with the German ZEW survey on economic sentiment, a good medium term forecast of the German economy being released on Tuesday, the result set to be -10, better then the previous result of -11.5. Thursday will see Germany release their third quarter GDP results, the figure set to be 0.1%, lower then the second quarter result of 0.3%. The Euro-zone third quarter GDP figure will also be released with the economy set to be seen to contract by 0.1% this quarter, slightly better then the second quarter where it contracted by 0.2%.

The US Dollar gained against both the Pound and the Euro in the foreign exchange market last week. Unemployment claims came out a lot better then expected, 355K compared to the 367K predicted, some good news for the US jobs market. The University of Michigan consumer confidence figure also came out higher then expected, 84.9 compared to 82.9, the highest figure we have seen since July 2007, very good news for the economy. The most significant figure coming out of the US this week is year on year CPI (inflation) which is set to fall slightly from 2.1% to 2%, not a great deal of change for inflation.

This Daily Market Update is brought to you by The Market Team @ KBRFXExchange Rate, Currency Conversion & Foreign Currency Transfer specialists.



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