Releases from Australia: Prior Current February Westpac Leading Index (YoY) +4.1% +3.3% The annualized growth rate of the Westpac leading index of economic activity slowed to 3.3% in February from 4.1% in January. This is the 3rd consecutive decline and brings it to below its longer-term trend rate of 4.1%. Westpac commented, “Growth in the index has slowed markedly in the last few months. After peaking at a solid 6.5% in November last year it has slowed to 3.3% - appreciably below long-run trend for the first time since October 2005. The leading index was consistent with the view that domestic demand will slow through 2008 as consumers and companies alike view falling global business sentiment and demand. “The outlook for a slowdown in domestic spending will give the bank sufficient comfort that inflation will return to the 2 percent to 3 percent target range by 2010," the report quoted. "However, at this stage Westpac does not expect that the economy will slow quickly enough for the bank to feel comfortable to reduce rates any time in 2008.” The following economic releases are due today:
February Italian Trade Balance (Total) EUR Italian Trade Balance (EU) EUR U.K. ILO Unemployment Rate 5.2% March Japan Machine Tool Orders (F) (YoY) +2.9% German CPI (F) (MoM) +0.5% German CPI (F) (YoY) +3.1% U.K. Jobless Claims Change - 1.8K U.K. Claimant Count Rate 2.5% Euro-zone CPI (MoM) +0.9% Euro-zone CPI (YoY) +3.5% U.S. CPI (MoM) +0.3% U.S. CPI (YoY) +4.0% U.S. CPI ex food & energy (MoM) +0.2% U.S. CPI ex food & energy (YoY) +2.4% U.S. Building Starts 1020K U.S. Building Permits 970K U.S. Industrial Production (MoM) - 0.1% April Bloomberg Global Confidence The Fed is due to publish its Beige Book The Dollar’s upside proved the correct direction yesterday and I’d still like to stick to this but there are some mild contra-indications in one or two currency pairs. Some appear to be short term conflicts within a modest Dollar bullish move while others are just contributing to a degree of confusion.
While the Dollar moved higher in general across the board the degree of the gains rather disappointed against the Euro. For example, Dollar-Yen reached and slightly breached the 101.80 target while the Swissie fell a little short at 1.0109. On the other hand the Pound exceeded its initial target. The problems raised with this is that the Dollar should now pullback against the Yen and Pound while it should still rally a little further against the Swissie and comparatively more against the Euro. Therefore the correlation breaks down. It could be that the Dollar’s initial move higher is not complete and could see more twists and turns or of course it could mean that it will simply resume its losses. So I’ll be erring on the Dollar bullish side but we should take good note of the levels that would reverse the picture once again. Note important support and resistance areas:
USDJPY EURUSD USDCHF GBPUSD Res: 102.54-93 1.5912-34 1.0217-49 1.9711-46 Res: 101.91-26 1.5810-45 1.0127-51 1.9637-57 Spt: 101.10-40 1.5720-50 1.0049-70 1.9554-90 Spt: 100.29-59 1.5668-99 0.9955-86 1.9405-36 |