fbpx

Sterling Digest, April 18 2012: when fundies turn hawkish

£20,bank of England
Is sterling strength here to stay?

Sterling comes alive this week after core UK CPI ticked higher-than-expected yesterday and a known BoE dove turns hawkish today. While economic data is important and moves the currency, the 2 most important fundamental pieces to watch concerning sterling are inflation and the Bank of England’s reaction to it. This week, both turned hawkish. If this becomes a trend, we could see sterling strength remain with a $GBPUSD that is above 1.60 and a $EURGBP at 0.80.

Image credit

Sterling Digest, April 13, 2012: the China effect

China and the paradox of prosperity, The Economist
What effect will China have on sterling?

If there were any doubts to China’s ability to move the markets now, there shouldn’t be. China’s soft data release very early in the Friday session has plagued risk currencies like the commodity currencies and the euro. And $GBPUSD and $GBPJPY remain weak as risk aversion flows strengthen the USD and JPY across the board.

Image credit

Sterling Digest, April 11, 2012: central bank fodder

Central bank balance sheets versus the SP500
Central banks at work

The 2 most active central banks last year are still drawing lots of attention from market participants. Both the BoJ and SNB are major threats of more intervention in the forex markets in 2012. Personally, I am not a fan of trading directly with or against central banks so I stay away from CHF or JPY pairs. However, as so aptly put in Credit Writedowns (below), even investors without CHF exposure should still follow this story. With so much central bank rhetoric, when will the market finally take notice?

Image credit

Sterling Digest, April 10, 2012: accommodating growth

A new twist in Myanmar
Arm twisting has also forced the UK to forge new international relationships

Sterling has been mixed bag as European traders came back to the markets today after a long Easter weekend. Currency pairs should trade very technically during this relatively quiet news week out of the UK.

Image credit

 

 

Sterling Digest, April 6, 2012: the big miss

Lightning
Holiday markets

The one flash of life was NFP as the markets hardly ticked beyond that this Good Friday. While most traders deservedly enjoyed a much longer weekend, today’s thin markets set the perfect stage for a US NFP miss. Very unexpected given the string of positive US data this week but also very much aligned with what Bernanke & Co. having been saying long after those minutes were recorded. The big miss leaves markets gobsmacked for  traders’ return after Easter not far from their NFP-induced peaks.

Image credit

 

 

Sterling Digest: April 4, 2012

A Bank of England Old One Pound Banknote
Looking ahead to the BoE

UK PMI numbers continue to surprise to the upside this week. While this string of positive data is not enough to declare a robust recovery in the UK, it certainly can be enough to keep the Bank of England from moving on monetary policy tomorrow and allow them to wait-and-see. With ECB out of the way today, traders look ahead to tomorrow’s BoE interest rate announcement.

Image credit

Sterling Digest: April 3, 2012

US Dollars
Today was all about the greenback baby

The $FED completely changed the game. While Bernanke had been on the circuit implying more QE was on deck, the minutes revealed a much more hawkish Federal Reserve. And as a result, the USD rallied across the board. Now the question going forward is whether the USD is really gaining strength or are traders being given a USD-selling opportunity?

Image credit

Sterling Digest: March 30, 2012


If central banks allow gold to become money, how would they enact QE??

A choppy week has given away to sterling strength with $GBPUSD breaking above the major psychological level at 1.60. Traders say month end flows are to blame for sterling strength when its fundamentals hold a more ominous outlook for the currency. BoE next week will continue these breakouts and trigger some profit-taking as most pairs sit GBP bullish at key levels into the weekend …despite the headlines.

Image credit

Sterling Digest: March 28, 2012

Kal's Cartoon on The Economist
All eyes on oil

Sterling manages to stage a decent correction in today’s trading session. Yet, it is the AUD taking it on the chin today as it suffers from a double whammy of commodities weakness and USD strength. It was the only currency pair that sterling rallied higher against without much pullback. The timing with now confirmed Chinese softness (causing the commodities weakness) gives the $GBPAUD legs to run higher.

Image credit

Sterling Digest: March 27, 2012

Britain's budget for global business
Weak economy, strong sterling. Go figure.

Sterling refuses to weaken even as economic data slips and members of the BoE still look to add more QE. The $GBPUSD continues to make higher highs at 1.5999 though still remains capped by the major 1.60 level. Even the almighty commodity dollars (AUD, NZD, and CAD) are weak against the GBP. Are we seeing the beginnings of a bear trend reversal in sterling?

Image credit