Forex: EUR/USD upside capped at 1.2850

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - The single currency has bounced off session lows in the 1.2825 region, although can’t gain extra traction to overcome the intraday resistance at 1.2850 so far, as the US dollar seems to be consolidating into the NA session.

Worrisome headlines out of the euro zone regarding the Greek political crisis are still weighting on the cross, with market participants now focusing on tomorrow’s meeting between F.Hollande and A.Merkel.

EUR/USD is losing 0.38% at 1.2844 as of writing.
Next support levels are located at 1.2825, ahead of 1.2810 then 1.2800 and 1.2720, while a break above 1.2875 would bring 1.2935 then 1.2958 and finally 1.2979
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By golearnforex
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U.S. futures sharply lower as Fed rally short-lived; Dow drops 1.5%

Forexpros – U.S. stock futures pointed to a broadly lower open on Wednesday, after rallying sharply the previous day on the Federal Reserve's pledge to keep rates at ultra-low levels “at least” through mid-2013.



Ahead of the open, the Dow Jones Industrial Average futures pointed to a loss of 1.5%, the S&P 500 futures fell 1.3%, while the Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 1.9%.



The Federal Reserve pledged on Tuesday to keep its benchmark interest rate at an all-time low, adding that it will maintain a loose monetary policy until “at least through mid-2013.”



In a statement, the Fed said growth was much slower than expected and the labor market had deteriorated, underlining concerns over the U.S. economic outlook.



The Fed also indicated that it “discussed the range of policy tools available to promote a strong economic outlook recovery in a context of price stability” and said it was prepared to employ the tools “as appropriate”.



Meanwhile, shares in Walt Disney tumbled 4.3% after the company reported restructuring and impairment charges totaling USD34 million in the third quarter.



On the upside, department store operator Macy’s saw shares climb 3% after reporting a 64% increase in second quarter profit. The upbeat results prompted the company to raise its full-year earnings forecast.



Clothing retailer Polo Ralph Lauren saw shares surge 10.2% after it said fiscal first quarter net income rose 52% to USD184.1 million. Revenue in the quarter rose 28% to USD1.49 billion, above expectations for revenue of USD1.43 billion.



Other notable earnings scheduled for Wednesday include, technology firm Cisco Systems and media giant News Corp., which were both slated to report results after the closing bell.



Meanwhile, shares in Bank of America could be active, as chief executive Brian Moynihan was scheduled to face an investor conference call later in the day with Fairholme Capital, which owns around 92 million shares in the bank.



Across the Atlantic, European stock markets posted sharp losses, as mounting fears over sovereign debt contagion weighed. The EURO STOXX 50 tumbled 1.7%, France’s CAC 40 fell 1.5%, Germany's DAX shed 0.5%, while Britain's FTSE 100 edged 0.25% lower.



During the Asian trading session, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index jumped 2.1%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index rose 0.9%.



A report from China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed that China’s trade surplus widened to USD31.5 billion in July, the highest level in more than two years. Analysts had expected China’s trade surplus to widen to USD27.4 billion.



Later in the day, the U.S. was to produce data on the federal budget balance as well as reports on crude oil stockpiles and wholesale inventories.
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U.S. federal budget balance falls less-than-expected

Forexpros - The U.S. federal budget balance fell less-than-expected last month, official data showed on Wednesday.



In a report, Department of the Treasury said that U.S. federal budget balance fell to a seasonally adjusted -129.4B, from -43.1B in the preceding month.



Analysts had expected U.S. federal budget balance to fall to -140.0B last month
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Forex - EUR/USD down on economic data

Forexpros - The Euro was lower against the U.S. Dollar on Wednesday after the release of U.S. data on Federal Budget Balance.



EUR/USD was trading at 1.4226, down 1.04% at time of writing.



The pair was likely to find support at 1.4070, Friday’s low, and resistance at 1.4426, Monday’s high.



Earlier in the day, official data showed that The U.S. federal budget balance fell less-than-expected to a seasonally adjusted -129.4B last month from -43.1B in the preceding month.



Analysts had expected U.S. federal budget balance to fall to -140.0B last month.



Meanwhile, the Euro was down against the British Pound and the Japanese Yen, with EUR/GBP shedding 0.14% to hit 0.8798 and EUR/JPY falling 1.26% to hit 109.24.



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Forex: Commodity currencies erased daily losses

FXstreet.com (Córdoba) – High-yield currencies moved considerably during the American session, as initially reached fresh highs against the Dollar but then turned lower, to new monthly lows to then bounced sharply back to the upside erasing losses. The Kiwi is outperforming the Loonie and the Aussie on Friday.

Commodity currencies are moving in line with Wall Street main stock indexes. The Dow Jones bottomed earlier at 11,140, the lowest level since early December but then jumped more than 300 points and currently is rising 97 points or 0.86%.

AUD/USD bottomed at 1.0375, fresh 4-month lows but then rebounded sharply to test daily highs at 1.0525. Currently it is struggling to close the week above 1.0500.

NZD/USD reached the lowest level on Asian hours at 0.8275 but currently is testing levels on top of 0.8420.

USD/CAD is trading at 0.9780/85, just a few pips below the price it had at the beginning of the day after peaking at 0.9852, the strongest level since June 29.

Market sentiment improved after reports suggested that the ECB was willing to buy Italian bond and following a press conference where Italian Premier, Silvio Berlusconi, announced a G-7 meeting of Finance ministers and also said that the budget will be balanced by 2013.
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S&P downgrades US credit rating to AA-plus

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - The United States lost its AAA debt rating, on late Friday, from Standard & Poor’s for the first time in history. The credit-rating agency said the political system of the world’s top economy has become less stable and is still concerned about the government's budget deficit and rising debt burden.

"The downgrade reflects our opinion that the fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the Administration recently agreed to falls short of what, in our view, would be necessary to stabilize the government's medium-term debt dynamics," S&P said in a statement.

The outlook on the new U.S. credit rating is "negative," S&P added, which means another downgrade is possible in the next 12 to 18 months.

US government says S&P is wrong

The White House reacted with indignation to Standard & Poor's credit rating downgrade from AAA to AA-plus. A government spokeswoman said to media that S&P was wrong in its calculation, the debt value was overestimated by 2 billion, she stated.
Republicans asked President Obama division.
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Global Trade Desk- Bull or Bear? It Does Not Matter

Daily Client Note

Global Markets Review


Bull or Bear? It Does Not Matter

The topsy-turvy world of global trade continues its path of one day up and one day down, in reaction to breaking news sentiment. The unique set of fundamental circumstances unfolding as a consequence of years of miss-directed fiscal policies and institutional investment faux pas is likely to continue throughout the summer.

Wall Street opened lower which dragged the USD higher, while bullion was bought in the daily tango of global trade. It will be a relief to get the push-me pull-you farcical debt issues out of the way so that focus can switch to mid-term momentum reads.

Patience is required as the mid-term global charts go through a sideways spiral. We have been here before, many times, but this period of trade does seem to be going on forever.

Whether equity bull or bear, bullion buyer or seller, or a bond investor on the long or short end of the curve, the outlook remains the same; intra-day volatility as fair value is sought in milliseconds rather than historically over a period of days and weeks.

There are near-term trade opportunities in all markets when buying at the low of the previous session and selling at the high. These trades are available as a strategy because of the lack of mid-term chart directional sentiment and momentum.

The USD/S&P 500 inverse correlation remains strong, with equity and bond markets dominating intra-day direction across all global asset classes. Gold and Oil have started to form a near-term inverse correlation, with gold buying being met with oil selling, and vice versa. Silver trade does not yet have the strength of upside momentum seen in gold, but that may be more to do with Exchange floor margin requirement threats more than anything else.

The trade desk has highlighted over the last four years the changes that have happened in regard to electronic trading dominance, and the increase in algorithm trade that tracks momentum, headlines, price action, and sentiment. Who would have thought that Buy-and-Hold would so quickly cover just few days as a strategy, rather than the previous connotation that buying-and-holding could last decades.

Traders and investors have not been in such reactive market arenas before, which is a pure reflection of the technical advancements globally that has all aspects of daily life impacted by the speed in which information now travels.

The relentless desire to get information quicker than yesterday, in an effort to respond sooner, has transposed itself into traded markets that are truly 24-hours and are so completely globalized now that regional 9-to-5 trading is virtually obsolete.

Those looking for a flowing bell curve effect on their investment portfolio will not get it by trading and investing in regional markets only; gaps in closing/opening prices due to global momentum swings are prevalent. The long-term investor will have to introduce a near-term mix of global exposure to their portfolio.

Global exposure can be achieved via futures trade, which most see as specialized market verging on the dark side of the moon, via overseas accounts, which the US administration is determined to end, or via currency trading which remain the most liquid of all global traded markets.

As a balance to equities and bonds held over the longer term, exposure to forex offers easy access, low margin requirements, and access to global momentum. Equity and bond sentiment leads, and historically forex follows, creating a tradable balance to the buy-and-hold swings and dips.

Whether equity markets go on a bull run that has S&P 500 breaking 1350 and 1370, or has a bearish reversal that tests 1295 and 1275 is literally a coin-flick in the current headline-dominated trading environment. The reaction to either move however is tradable, via the currency markets that will track both bull and bear equity trade with a high daily correlation.

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Forex Flash: EUR/USD looks set to recover lost ground – Commerzbank

FXstreet.com (Córdoba) - Greek insolvency has been averted for now, sparking relief in the FX markets, so the euro looks set to recover lost ground in the week ahead, according to the Commerzbank analyst team.

"With only a few days left to reach a breakthrough in the US debt limit stalemate, however, it is still too early to sound the all-clear, as a failure by Congress to hike the debt ceiling would result in default on the other side of the Atlantic", said the Commerzbank team. "Against this backdrop, the focus of the FX markets should shift towards the US dollar in the coming days, which will benefit the euro".

The Commerzbank team expects EUR/USD will trade higher in the week ahead. "The only risk to the euro's recovery could be particularly weak US data and a renewed sparking of recession fears – with regard to the USA in particular but also for the world as a whole. Ironically, the subsequent increase in global risk aversion and the resulting flight into safe-haven investments would then send the dollar higher", they added.
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Tug of War: Growth vs. Inflation

FXstreet.com's analyst Valeria Bednarik says in the article below that the UK "monetary independence is both a blessing and a curse", good point given the problems over the Eurozone periphery. It seems to be accepted by the market that the BoE is focused on inflation and not the recovery, as the BoE´s governor Mervyn King and Chancellor George Osborne have been busy these last six months.

Looking at the numbers, year-over-year inflation was up around 4.2% in June, leading to speculation of a rate hike which could threaten the economic recovery, as growth remains stagnant with the quarterly GDP at mere 0.5% in Q1.

What happened during the first half of 2011? Too much news and too many decisions from the market, What will happen in the second half? Valeria tell us in the article below “TUG OF WAR: Growth vs. Inflation”. This is the fifth issue of our FXstreet.com mid-year check up series, today delving into the situation in the UK with the Pound as the main character.

Tug of War: Growth vs. Inflation

By Valeria Bednarik, Forex Analyst for FXstreet.com

UK

With the crisis the world is living through right now, if there is something to say about the UK it is that their monetary independence is both a blessing and a curse. Back in 2008 when the financial world collapsed following the US housing mortgage crisis, that economic independence had let the UK act in proper manner, and the BOE quickly reacted by cutting rates, creating the assets purchase facility program, and in general favoring a re-balancing of the economy. Problem is, things haven´t gone according to the plan, despite the huge devaluation the UK is still struggling to recover.

And with growth still remaining mostly stagnant, the recovery path seems harder day after day with overwhelming negative fundamental data and rising inflation.

At one point, we may wonder whether the UK is actually advancing or at the verge of a another financial collapse. Especially if things remain unchanged and Chancellor George Osborne continues to insist that the government hold its nerve by not deviating from his plans to cut borrowing, despite the increasing evidence that this policy may be damaging growth.

Economic Growth Stagnant

euro

The United Kingdom GDP expanded just 0.50% over the first quarter of 2011, compared to the previous quarter. From 1955 until 2010 the UK´s average quarterly GDP Growth was 0.59% reaching a historical high of 5.30% in March of 1973 and a record low of -2.50% in March of 1974.
While among the worlds' most developed economies, it´s growth has never been close to outstanding, as we see from the previous figures, yet the main reason of the latest disappointing results may be found in a stalling manufacturing sector, a contraction in construction, and a sharp drop in oil and gas extraction. If something is giving support to the Pound these days, it is the strong oil near $100 a barrel. The bottom line is that when it comes to economic growth, the risk remains to the downside in the UK.

When it comes to the labor sector, the unemployment rate was 7.7% back in May. That's barely above the 7.22% average from 1971 to 2010, so despite it being not a positive figure, at least the sector is among one of the better all things relative. The latest reading in June showed the unemployment rate was down 0.1% over the quarter and 0.1% on the year. Still the report showed there where 1.52 million people claiming unemployment allowances which was an increase of 24,500 from May. In particular, the number of men claiming allowances increased by 15,000 to reach 1.03 million and the number of women claimants increased by 9,500 to reach 493,900, the highest figure since August 1996.

The Minister for Employment Chris Grayling said this month: "There continue to be some encouraging signs in the labor market figures, particularly with the continued rise in private sector employment. It's really important that we continue to support the economy and encourage businesses to invest and create jobs. However, we do not underestimate the scale of the challenge that we face to help people into employment.”

Inflationary Pressure on the Rise

euro

While the UK has cut down their interest rate benchmark to 0.50% where it has remained steady since March 2009, inflation keeps rising above the BOE´s tolerance limit and was last reported at 4.2% in June over the year. From 1989 until 2010, the average inflation rate in the United Kingdom was 2.72% reaching a historical high of 8.50% in April 1991 and a record low of 0.50% in May of 2000.

While back in May this year, the BOE's governor Mervyn King said that inflation was “uncomfortably high,” and officials signaled they may need to raise interest rates later this year even as the economy struggles to build momentum. Interestingly however, the fact is that just one month later the central bank turned back towards it´s prior dovish stance, with 7 out of 9 members voting to keep rates on hold. The flip from hawkish to dovish, has come after the committee lost its hawkish member, Andrew Sentance, in May this year.

And while the idea of keeping rates low to jump-start growth remains, inflationary pressure keeps rising. The thing is that the BOE would rather focus on containing inflation, rather than stimulating employment or growth. If inflation keeps rising towards 5.0% as Governor King expects, the BOE will may have no choice but to rise the benchmark in an attempt to control it. At the same time, economic growth will hardly gain traction without the help of the central bank, while the UK continues applying their assets purchase program, or QE, as they can't remove it but only extend it: the quantitative easing program is another inflation generator for the economy. Up to this point, the tug of war the bank is trapped in will not result in a positive outcome no matter which side wins.

The BOE will have no choice but to sacrifice growth to contain inflation. While a rate hike may be expected by the end of this year, and we usually understand rate hikes as positive for a currency, I won't be expecting too much strength for the Pound, not even after a rate hike. Unless some signs of recovery start improving the sentiment over the UK economy, the Pound is set to extend its losses over the second half of 2011.

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Repeat: China Offl PMI Seen Resilient Despite Weak HSBC

Repeat: China Offl PMI Seen Resilient Despite Weak HSBC

BEIJING (MNI) - A sub-50 reading for a China flash purchasing managers index released Thursday doesn't mean the government's index due for release on August 1 will also suggest that Chinese industry is in contraction.

While it wasn't a vote of confidence for the health of the Chinese economy, analysts said the weakness seen in the HSBC flash PMI today probably won't be reflected in the PMI that is issued by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing.

Risk currencies and equities sold off immediately after HSBC said its flash purchasing managers index for July fell to a 28-month low of 48.9 and points to a reading under 50 when the UK-based bank reports the final reading on August 1.

The official PMI, a collaboration between CFLP and the National Bureau of Statistics, dropped to 50.9 in June from 52.0. Its last sub-50 reading was in February 2009 and fell to as low as 38.8 in November 2008, at the height of the global financial crisis.

Markets would likely react negatively again on August 1 if CFLP announces the first reading below 50 in 28 months (the PMI is released at 0900 Beijing-time 0100 GMT.)

But analysts said that's unlikely to happen, arguing that the official PMI tends to survey larger state-owned firms, which are in better health than their smaller, often-privately held, peers captured by Markit, which compiles the PMI for HSBC.

"We don't believe that the official PMI would fall below 50 in July," said Ken Peng, a Beijing-based economist with BNP Paribas.

Even HSBC urged caution and dismissed concerns about a hard landing. Economist Qu Hongbin acknowledged that 70% of the HSBC survey panel comprises small and medium-sized firms and argued that the reading below 50 still points to industrial output growth of around 13%.

"Don't panic. Despite the slowing of manufacturing activity, resilient consumer spending and continued investment in thousands of infrastructure projects will continue to support GDP growth rate of almost 9% for the rest of this year," he told clients in a note.

At the same time that HSBC was releasing its survey, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology spokesman Zhu Hongren was telling reporters that industrial output will grow by 13% to 15% in the second half of this year, compared with 14.3% in the first six months.

He acknowledged that small enterprises faced "outstanding difficulties" owing to financing problems, but denied there were waves of closures in southern China.

Today's data revived concerns about a hard economic landing in China, just a week after the government said the economy grew by a stronger-than-expected 9.5% y/y in the second quarter, powered by 15.1% jump in industrial output in June.

Both HSBC's Qu and BNP's Peng said the June data reflected easing electricity supply after the government allowed tariffs to rise. Peng said slightly easier credit conditions and better trade numbers also helped quarterly growth.

"Both the power and the trade boost should fade in coming months and that could tighten business environment further," he said, arguing that data support selective policy easing.

Despite the industry ministry's bullish outlook, pressure is mounting on the central government to further relax at least some of the slew of measures it has introduced since October to battle inflation.

Today's PMI reading may reflect seasonality -- Societe Generale's Wei Yao noted that the PMI last July also fell below 50 -- but it is also evidence of the pain being felt in more vulnerable parts of the economy as liquidity dries up and financing becomes increasingly hard to come by.

The credit availability index in the Market News International China Business Sentiment Survey fell to 33.33 in June, the third lowest on record (the China Business Sentiment Flash Survey is scheduled for release at 0935 Beijing time, 0135 GMT on July 22 and the final survey on July 29.)

Analysts said that Beijing could be forced to respond if the CFLP reports a lower-than-expected reading on August 1.

"No doubt, the growth momentum continues to soften. We expect the official PMI to come in at 50," said SG's Yao. "If official PMI comes in below 50, PBOC will probably be very cautious in tightening further."

beijing@marketnews.com ** Market News International Beijing Newsroom: 86-10-5864-5274 **
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