On Thursday, the Dow Jones and S&P jumped to an all time high and the technology heavy Nasdaq index reached the highest level since 2000, in the aftermath of the publishing of the U.S. FED minutes and new statements by Chairman Ben Bernanke. The EUR/USD, which fell to 1.3208 Thursday morning recovered during the day, but dipped back to 1.31 following Bernanke’s strong commitment to keep interest rates at the present low level.
Bernanke’s speech reiterated that the U.S. economy is volatile. The 7.6 % unemployment is far from FED’s 6.5 % target for the labour market. The jobless claim numbers for last week which were published on Thursday were higher than the previous week, and confirmed Bernanke’s soberness. The markets interpret his comments as a confirmation that a September tapering of monetary easing is not in the cards. As several FED members stressed in the June Minutes, the bond buying program will continue into 2014. This boosted stock markets and led to termination in stock short positions on Thursday.
In Asia, the Asian Pacific MSCI-index lost steam after three winning sessions, ending up only 0.2 % as markets brace for Chinese GDP data early next week. China’s weak foreign trade data for June provide a pessimistic edge to the second quarter estimates, which will probably show that GDP has slowed further. The government’s official forecast on 7.5 % economic growth set for 2013 might be too optimistic.
Currency markets were steadier into the last trading day of the week after a 24 hour heavy sell off in the Dollar as investors cut bullish positions on Bernanke’s pledge. The Dollar index, DXY, experienced its steepest fall in four years. Some analysts see the fall in the Dollar as a buying opportunity on expectations of a FED autumn tapering on the presumption of U.S. GDP growth in the third and fourth quarters. Oil lost momentum when traders took profit following a three week rally that lifted prices to a 15 month-high. U.S. crude, NYMEX, eased back to USD 105 a barrel, reaching 107.45.
Bernanke’s speech reiterated that the U.S. economy is volatile. The 7.6 % unemployment is far from FED’s 6.5 % target for the labour market. The jobless claim numbers for last week which were published on Thursday were higher than the previous week, and confirmed Bernanke’s soberness. The markets interpret his comments as a confirmation that a September tapering of monetary easing is not in the cards. As several FED members stressed in the June Minutes, the bond buying program will continue into 2014. This boosted stock markets and led to termination in stock short positions on Thursday.
In Asia, the Asian Pacific MSCI-index lost steam after three winning sessions, ending up only 0.2 % as markets brace for Chinese GDP data early next week. China’s weak foreign trade data for June provide a pessimistic edge to the second quarter estimates, which will probably show that GDP has slowed further. The government’s official forecast on 7.5 % economic growth set for 2013 might be too optimistic.
Currency markets were steadier into the last trading day of the week after a 24 hour heavy sell off in the Dollar as investors cut bullish positions on Bernanke’s pledge. The Dollar index, DXY, experienced its steepest fall in four years. Some analysts see the fall in the Dollar as a buying opportunity on expectations of a FED autumn tapering on the presumption of U.S. GDP growth in the third and fourth quarters. Oil lost momentum when traders took profit following a three week rally that lifted prices to a 15 month-high. U.S. crude, NYMEX, eased back to USD 105 a barrel, reaching 107.45.