EUR/USD Rallies on German Employment Data
The highlight overnight was the release of the minutes from the August 10th Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting.
Some Federal Reserve officials were concerned that a decision to keep securities holdings unchanged would inadvertently signal an intention to resume large-scale asset purchases.
Also, a few policy makers said the economic effects of the decision “would be quite small,” but at the same time, some officials saw “increased downside risks to the outlook for both growth and inflation” and voiced concern that further shocks would cause “significant slowing in growth”.
The debate shows the challenge Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may face in achieving consensus for any additional monetary stimulus to reverse a slowdown in growth and reduce joblessness more quickly. In a speech last week, Bernanke said “Policy makers haven’t agreed on specific criteria or triggers for further action”.
In other important US economic releases, we had the Conference Board’s confidence index yesterday afternoon which showed that confidence among U.S. consumers rose more than forecast in August; a sign the biggest part of the economy may avoid a slowdown that would derail the recovery.
The Conference Board’s confidence index increased to 53.5 from a five-month low of 51 in July, figures from the New York- based private research group showed. More confidence may help ease concern that consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, will falter.
As we approach the ECB meeting this Thursday, yesterdays Eurozone annual inflation reading fell from 1.7 in July to 1.6 in August, coming in well under the ECB’s target of 2%. Inflation looks set to remain muted for the rest of 2010 and into 2011 as European governments implement austerity packages to shore up their sovereign balance sheets.
Yesterday we also saw German unemployment continuing to fall, for the 14 month in a row, slightly better than expected sparking a rally in the Eur/Usd CFDs market which provided strong support going into the release of the Fed’s minutes. Investors had been keenly anticipating the release of these minutes but were somewhat disappointed as it lacked any new information triggering another move higher for Eur/Usd.
The UK spread trading market was largely subdued as the long bank holiday weekend took its toll. Sterling, although firm at opening, declined during the day on what appears to have been the regular end of month demand for Euro/Sterling. Today, we are scheduled to get PMI manufacturing data from Germany, the Eurozone, the UK and the ISM manufacturing numbers from the US giving us the first test of the relative performances West v East.
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