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الأحد، 1 ديسمبر 2013

Forex: Euro Pops on German Coalition Deal, Pound Eyeing GDP Data

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The Japanese Yen underperformed as Nikkei 225 futures advanced in overnight trade, sapping haven demand for the safety-linked currency. The move may have reflected a pickup in risk appetite on the back of ebbing concern about a near-term “tapering” of the Federal Reserve QE3 stimulus program after a disappointing set of US economic data. November’s Consumer Confidence reading fell short of economists’ forecasts (as we expected), dropping to the weakest level in seven months.

The Euro edged higher – touching a monthly high – as German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her CDU party reached a coalition agreement with rival SPD. This introduced a sense of political stability in the Eurozone’s largest economy. Key Eurozone initiatives delayed by the absence of an administration in Berlin – notably, a banking union that includes region-wide supervision and a uniform resolution mechanism for troubled lenders – may now continue to progress.
A revised set of third-quarter UK GDP figures headlines the economic calendar in European hours. Expectations call for confirmation of initial estimates that showed the economy added 0.8 percent in the three months through September, marking the strongest performance since mid-2010. The outcome may not offer much of a lift to the British Pound.
Indeed, firm economic data means relatively little for Sterling if it doesn’t translate into policy tightening expectations. This was precisely the message delivered to Parliament’s Treasury Committee by BOE Governor Mark Carney yesterday.The central bank chief stressed that the objective of the Bank’s forward-guidance regime – a scheme whereby it has pledged not to consider rate hikes at least until unemployment falls to 7 percent – was to disconnect improving economic data from rate rise speculation.
Later in the day, the spotlight turns to the US data docket anew, where October’s Durable Goods Orders report is on tap. Expectations point to a 2 percent decline from the prior month, marking the first drawdown in three months. That may further scatter near-term Fed QE reduction bets and compound downward pressure on the US Dollar after the benchmark currency pulled back having set a monthly high, as expected.

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