British Pound to Look Past Bank of England Minutes, Trade on Risk Sentiment (Euro Open)
The British Pound is likely to look past minutes from the July meeting of the Bank of England with traders unlikely to be treated to anything that has not already been priced into the exchange rate, leaving the currency to continue taking cues from risk sentiment. Germany’s IFO survey of business sentiment is also on tap.
Key Overnight Developments
• Australian Inflation Falls to the Lowest in a Decade
• Euro, British Pound Turn Lower in Asian Trading
Critical Levels
The Euro traded lower in the overnight session, losing as much as -0.4% against the US Dollar. The British Pound followed suit, testing as low as 1.6391 against the greenback.
Asia Session Highlights
Australia’s Consumer Price Index printed in line with expectations with the annual pace of inflation falling to 1.5% in the second quarter, the lowest in a decade. Continued downward pressure on consumer prices looks likely as tumbling wholesale costs filter into the final price of products. Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan said “inflation is expected to remain subdued over the near term as the effects of the global recession continue to impact on the domestic economy.” This bolsters the case for additional rate cuts from the Reserve Bank of Australia in the months ahead. Indeed, RBA Governor Glenn Stevens said as much even as the bank kept rates unchanged in July, noting that “the outlook for inflation allows some scope for further easing of monetary policy.”
Euro Session: What to Expect
Germany’s IFO Survey of business sentiment is expected to rise for the seventh consecutive month in July, pointing to continued improvement in firms’ 6-month economic outlook. Still, the reading is expected at 90.1, a print below the 100 “boom-bust” threshold, suggesting conditions are still deteriorating albeit at a slower pace. Some recovery is to be expected as the government’s 82 billion euro fiscal boost filters into the broad economy, but the big question in Germany as well as most anywhere at this stage is whether growth is sustainable after stimulus cash dries up. As it stands, the latest economic forecast from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) reveals that the Euro Zone will stand apart from other industrialized economies in seeing economic growth continue to contract in 2010, pointing to a comparatively slower return to higher interest rates that will keep the Euro on the defensive against most major currencies.
Minutes from the July meeting of the Bank of England are unlikely to prove particularly market-moving this time around, with traders unlikely to be treated to anything that has not already been priced into the exchange rate. The bank made no changes to benchmark interest rates or the quantitative easing program, saying they will “review the scale” of their unconventional easing measures in August as they release their quarterly inflation report. From here, next week’s GDP report is likely to be the key to the market’s expectations on the future direction of monetary policy. Initial cues are favorable: London-based think tank NIESR has reported the economy probably shrank just -0.4% in the second quarter, the slowest pace of decline in a year. Still, the British Chamber of Commerce has urged policymakers to expand their asset-buying scheme by 25 billion pounds, saying a recovery is “not guaranteed”, a sentiment that has been echoed by the Shadow Monetary Policy Committee (a group of independent economists that meet at the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs). On balance, British Pound price action is likely to continue taking its cues from risk appetite, with the sterling’s trade-weighted average value now 87.8% correlated with the MSCI World Stock Index.
Written by Ilya Spivak, Currency Analyst
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