Our Daily Brief provides insights into the news and views driving today’s foreign currency exchange rates.
Fed’s pickle The Federal Reserve is meeting next Wednesday for its latest monetary policy announcement. Focus upon the event has been immense. However, given the turmoil in the financial sector created by the forced sales of both Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank last week, speculation over the rate decision has been increasingly predicated upon […]
Is the US already in recession? Due to the mixed messages from recent economic releases on the state of the US economy with for example record low unemployment while at the same time there is increasing data on lay offs especially in the tech sector, it is worth asking the question: Is the US already […]
British Pound A better day for GBP as Sterling clawed back almost half of its losses from earlier in the week. Following Federal Reserve Chair Powell’s comments on higher for longer US interest rates on Tuesday, the USD strengthened sharply at the expense of all currencies and was then evidenced by a sickly looking GBP. […]
British Pound In itself not really a story but when a Member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee opines on the UK currency, the market reacts. Yesterday it was the statement that if investors had not fully priced in the likelihood of further interest rate rises from both the Federal Reserve and the […]
US Employment Fasten your seatbelts for a big week on the US jobs front. After 517,000 new jobs were created in January, the expectation is for February to reflect growth in jobs but much less-200,000 in fact. At present US unemployment is at its lowest level since 1969 so the argument that the Federal Reserve […]
US Treasury Bonds With the 10 Year now back over 4 at 4.07% and the 2 Year at 4.90%, the market has in the past week or so moved dramatically and is now anticipating the Federal Reserve to err on the side of caution and do what it has in fact been saying for the […]
Inflation Following on from Friday’s US inflation release which came as an unwelcome surprise to markets, there was further evidence of stubborn inflation data releases in both France and Spain yesterday. All this adds up to implied peak policy rates rising by 0.5% in February, the US to 5.4% and Europe to 3.9%. That compares […]
King Dollar Tired if not exhausted USD bears have begun to stir once again. The narrative is that with US interest rates having peaked and USD having enjoyed a long period of strength against all currencies including and especially Emerging Market Currencies, the USD’s time is up and the USD is now in long term […]
Oil Price Influences With NYMEX WTI trading at a lowly USD 74.75, it is a good opportunity to examine what is driving the oil price. In no particular order, in the overall climate of rising interest rates, US inventories increased by 9.9 million barrels last week-substantially more than expected. On the other side of the […]
Real US Interest Rates Cheer for investors in US markets with the weekend announcement in the US that real interest rates are at 1.8% the highest level in the US since 2007. Without wishing to rain on that particular parade, real interest rates are defined as being nominal rates less the expected rate of inflation. […]
UK Interest Rates With the expectation that the Bank of England will raise interest rates 25 BP in March to 4.25% and then pause, the wage price inflation data released yesterday underlined the fact that there does need to be some stronger medicine to dampen and reverse inflation from more than 5 times the target […]
US Federal Reserve In what investors in the US market are trusting will be the triumph of hope over history, the prevailing sentiment can be boiled down to being pinned on the following: pause-the Fed to hold off on further rate rises; peak-the hope that inflation and rates have indeed peaked; pivot-the hope that far […]
Never a dull non-farm Non-farm payrolls data almost always provides the observers an opportunity to witness and potentially trade with some volatility in the markets. More often than not the salience of the event and the mixed expectations moving into it leads to more price fallout from the noise generated from the event instead of […]