Sterling broke through the $1.95 level for the first time in two years nearing its December 2004 high of $1.9550, beyond which the way will be open for an assault on the $2.00 level, as a plunge in U.S. durable goods orders for October kept the dollar under heavy downard pressure.
Relatively high-yielding sterling was among the main winners amid the dollar’s broad selloff but was also supported by positive sentiment provided by merger and acquisition activity.
Spanish utility Iberdrola on Tuesday agreed to pay 12 billion pounds in cash and shares for Scottish Power. While the deal was clearly more EUR/GBP related, news of M&A flow that has been supportive over the last year helped GBP across the board yesterday. Even slightly dovish talk from the OECD over the
The OECD revised down its U.K. GDP forecast to 2.6% for 2007, from 2.9% in September and this year’s growth is seen at 2.6% as well (versus 2.8% earlier). 2008 GDP is estimated to hit a very robust 2.8%, but the organisation still claimed that no further rate hikes were necessary.
The FED’s hawkish stance has inverted the money market and the bond yield curve. With US economic data expected on the weak side, analysts at BNP Paribas see eroding
Yesterday’s data provided further evidence that the
Japanese industrial production surprised on the upside by rising 1.6% m/m in October (expectations were for a 0.4% m/m decline). The market took this as a sign that December’s Tankan survey (to be released December 15) would signal strong corporate sentiment and hence allow the BoJ to hike by end year. On the back of this, the JPY gained ground across the board especially with EUR/JPY nearly reversing all of its gains from yesterday. Although BNP Paribas analysts believe that USD/JPY should keep broad pressure on the downside, they are more doubtful of EUR/JPY and hence see downside to be limited for now. Investors are likely to see pullbacks as a good buying opportunity.
Note that European government and ECB officials have shown no concerted concern over the strength of the EUR and unless central banks decide to intervene or the ECB reduces its rate hike rhetoric, we see little in the way to stop EUR/JPY from rallying further.
Rebounds in the USD yesterday proved modest and the USD continues to trade on the back foot. Tough Fed talk failed to sway the market from its current negative view on the major currency. Fed Chairman Bernanke signalled that the housing market yet poses downside risks to economic growth, but he was reluctant to abandon references to further policy firming, calling inflation ‘uncomfortably high’ and recognising that failure of inflation to moderate would be ‘especially troublesome’. Fed’s Plosser said more hikes may be needed and
Finance Ministry sources say that
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Yaun gains
The yuan meanwhile rose to the highest since China ended its decade-old link to the dollar after U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said gains will help resolve “tension” in the trade relationship.
Some U.S. officials have blamed the undervalued yuan, which boosts Chinese exports, for the loss of American manufacturing jobs and their widening trade deficit.
The yuan gained 0.1 percent to 7.8358 against the dollar, the strongest since the end of the fixed exchange-rate in July 2005, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
A rising yuan helps to slow exports and prevent
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