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Dollar-Bloc Currencies Turning, But Euro Downticks Limited

Published 08/03/2017, 06:27 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

The high-flying dollar-bloc currencies may be a preliminary sign market change. The US dollar is gaining on the Canadian dollar for the fourth consecutive session. It is probing resistance we identified in the $1.2620 area. The US dollar has not traded above its 20-day moving average since the Fed hiked rates on June 14. It is found today near CAD1.2625.

A smaller than expected trade surplus (A$856mln, half of what was anticipated) provided the fodder to extend the Australian dollar's fall to a third session. After spiking to $0.8065 last week, it has drifted lower. A break of $0.7875 (and the 20-day moving average is found near $0.7865) would suggest the consolidation is folding into an outright correction.

The focus today is on the Bank of England and its "Super Thursday" when the Quarterly Inflation Report is also released along side the MPC minutes. A rate hike is highly unlikely. The focus will be on the vote and whether Haldane votes to hike as he indicated he has considered. We suggest that if Haldane sticks with the majority, the quid pro quo may be a more hawkish inflation report. This could be expressed in part, for example, by lowering the growth forecast and lifting the inflation forecast. This means that a reaction to a 6-2 vote (rather than 5-3 as was the case previously) may be tempered by the forward guidance and Carney's press conference.

Separately, the UK reported the service and composite PMI. The former rose to 53.8 from 53.4, and this fed into a rise in the later to 54.1 from 53.8. The composite averaged 54.7 in Q2 and 54.6 in Q1. This would suggest the UK economy is seeing little improvement at the start of Q3. Nevertheless, sterling is firm ahead of the BOE meeting. It made a new high for the move, a little above $1.3265. It is an 11-month high. Some unwinding long euro-short sterling positions may have lent sterling support against the greenback.

The euro is trading in a less than a third of a cent range today around where North American dealers left it yesterday. It has pulled back a little more than three-quarters of a cent after poking through $1.1900 briefly yesterday. Support is seen near $1.1780.

For all practical purposes, the euro has shrugged off a disappointing PMI report. The composite for the region slipped to 55.7 from 56.3. It is the lowest since January. It averaged 56.6 in Q2. Germany was a downside surprise. With the service PMI fell more than the flash reading had suggested and the composite was revised to 54.7 from 55.1 and 56.4 in June. This is a 10-month low. Although we find that international comparisons of headline PMI readings are not very helpful, it is interesting that for the first time in a dozen years, Germany's composite is below that of France, Italy, and Spain. And Spain like Germany disappointed, with a larger than expected pullback from June. The service PMI fell to 57.6 from 58.5, and the composite eased to 56.7 from 57.1.

Italy offered a pleasant upside surprise. Its service PMI rose to 56.3 from 53.6, and the composite rose to 56.2 from 54.9. The French service PMI was a little better than the flash at 56.0 (vs. 55.9), but still lower than the 56.9 reading in June. The composite PMI fell to 55.6 from 56.6 in June.

The dollar is in about a quarter of a yen range against the Japanese currency. While the dollar found a bid under JPY110 earlier this week, it has found offers near JPY111.00. In Asia, the South Korean won stands out. It slid 0.4% and is off for the third consecutive session. Foreign investors have been selling Korean equities. They were net sellers every day this week and have been sellers this week except for yesterday. Over the nine sessions, foreign investors have sold an average of KRW234 mln a day. The KOSPI has held up this week, rising for the past three sessions (~1.1%), but giving it all up with today's 1.7% slide. The ostensible trigger was a report suggesting the government was considering corporate tax increases and macro-prudential measures to cool the property market.

Ahead of US jobs data tomorrow and after the first look at Q2 GDP, today's US data may pose little more than headline risk. The July PMI and ISM may be the most important, with the price and employment components the most interesting. June factory orders are likely to have been bolstered by Boeing (NYSE:BA) orders from the Paris Air Show. Reports that the US may launch another investigation into Chinese trade practices (intellectual property) has had little immediate impact. The effort to cut legal immigration by half may counter efforts to boost growth given the current demographic situation. On the other hand, there have been some reports suggesting that an optimistic case of Congress is passing next month some continuing resolution for spending in lieu of a new budget, and attaching a rise in the debt ceiling to that. The White House seeks a $2.5 trillion increase, while the conservative Freedom Caucus is more willing to concede to $1.5 trillion.

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