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US Dollar Holds on to European Session Gains as Consumer Confidence Improves, Ahead of G8 Meeting• US Dollar Holds on to European Session Gains as Consumer Confidence Improves, Ahead of G8 Meeting US Dollar Holds on to European Session Gains as Consumer Confidence Improves, Ahead of G8 Meeting The Group of 8 (G8) will meet over the weekend, and while it may ultimately prove to be a non-event, traders should keep an eye out for the communiquأ© as indications that exit strategies for the stimulus measures enacted by members are being plotted could provide a boost to risk appetite when trading resumes on Sunday. Though highly unlikely, discussions about currencies would be sure to shake up the markets as well. Next Wednesday, the latest inflation figures for the US are forecasted to show slight increases on a monthly basis, but clear weakness on an annual basis. Indeed, headline CPI is projected to have risen 0.3 percent during May, while the core measure, which excludes food and energy, is anticipated to rise 0.1 percent. Meanwhile, headline CPI is expected to have fallen 0.9 percent in May from a year ago, the steepest drop since February 1950, compared to a decline of 0.7 percent in April. On the other hand, core CPI may have only eased to a 1.8 percent annual pace of growth from 1.9 percent, suggesting that volatile commodity prices are the sole reason for the contractions in headline inflation. Weaker than expected results have the potential to stoke deflation fears, but overall, the FX markets haven’t shown a strong reaction to past CPI reports, and this time around we may see more of the same. Euro Tumbles as Industrial Output Falls by Record, Swiss Franc Down Ahead of SNB Decision Meanwhile, the Swiss franc was one of the weakest major currencies on Friday, and it will face very high event risk next week. On Thursday, the Swiss National Bank is like to leave their 3-month LIBOR target range unchanged at 0.0 percent – 0.75 percent, but the thing to watch for in the SNB’s subsequent policy statement is talk of FX intervention. Indeed, the SNB’s last statement on March 12 indicated that the central bank wanted to “prevent any further appreciation of the Swiss franc against the euro†in an effort to “counter the risk of deflation and of a dramatic deterioration in the economy.†Similar comments have the potential to drive the Swiss franc lower upon this 3:30 ET release, while a neutral policy stance and no mention of currencies will likely lead the Swissie higher. British Pound Backs Down, BOE Minutes to Clarify Policy Bias Next Week Japanese Yen Remains Mixed as US Equities Consolidate Below Key Highs Next Monday evening, the Bank of Japan is anticipated to announce that they are leaving rates unchanged at 0.10 percent, but this is not the part of the central bank’s announcement that will garner the most attention. Instead, the FX markets may only respond to the sentiment reflected in their subsequent policy statement. After the BOJ’s last meeting, they raised their outlook on the economy for the first time in nearly 3 years, saying that “economic conditions have been deteriorating, but exports and production are beginning to level out.†There is speculation that the BOJ will upgrade their outlook once again, and if this is the case, the Japanese yen could gain on a very short-term basis. On a longer-term basis, though, risk trends have been driving price action and the impact of positive BOJ commentary may not go very far. آ ECONOMIC DATA آ by: Terri Belkas |
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