Morning brief for December 23
12/23/2016
Financial markets seem to be neglected by their participants in the countdown to major holidays of the year. Today’s Asian session was drowsy. Zzzzzz…………..There is almost nothing to report.All the major macro events now behind us and a spike in volatility is unlikely. But for some traders, this end-year market lull can be very profitable.
After rising on the possibility of softer Brexit GBP/USD dropped below 1. 2280 overnight. The US data released yesterday was mixed. While US Q3 GDP data was revised up to an annualized 3.5% from 3.2% and core durable goods orders moved higher from 0.9% against consensus 0.4%. The November personal income, spending and PCE deflators release fell out of market’s expectations. Today’s focus will be on the UK current account data and final quarterly GDP.
EUR/USD didn’t experience significant moves on the Asian session. The Italian government allotted $21 bln to rescue Italy’s alerted banking sector with Monte dei Paschi being the first in line for help. At the present moment, the pair is trading near the 1.0450 level.
AUD/USD slid down to 0.7205 probably on the falling iron ore prices (were down $2.04 to $76.15) – the main export unit of Australia, and on the strengthening USD.
USD/JPY technical chart is flat. The quotes are moving along 117.40 level. On Tuesday following the BoJ meeting, governor Kuroda was asked about the yen precipitous decline in relation to the US dollar. Kuroda responded the USD/JPY’s current level is a reflection of the USD strength, not the yen’s softening. Japanese markets were closed for the Emperor's birthday holiday.
USD/CAD popped up to 1.3520. Canadian data was a mixed bag. The CPI declined 0.2% in November after rising 0.2% in October. Retail sales reports were upbeat. Brent oil futures edged up slightly, but the US dollar strength overshadowed the CAD’s vain attempts to growth.
More:
https://new.fxbazooka.com/analytics/11822
12/23/2016
Financial markets seem to be neglected by their participants in the countdown to major holidays of the year. Today’s Asian session was drowsy. Zzzzzz…………..There is almost nothing to report.All the major macro events now behind us and a spike in volatility is unlikely. But for some traders, this end-year market lull can be very profitable.
After rising on the possibility of softer Brexit GBP/USD dropped below 1. 2280 overnight. The US data released yesterday was mixed. While US Q3 GDP data was revised up to an annualized 3.5% from 3.2% and core durable goods orders moved higher from 0.9% against consensus 0.4%. The November personal income, spending and PCE deflators release fell out of market’s expectations. Today’s focus will be on the UK current account data and final quarterly GDP.
EUR/USD didn’t experience significant moves on the Asian session. The Italian government allotted $21 bln to rescue Italy’s alerted banking sector with Monte dei Paschi being the first in line for help. At the present moment, the pair is trading near the 1.0450 level.
AUD/USD slid down to 0.7205 probably on the falling iron ore prices (were down $2.04 to $76.15) – the main export unit of Australia, and on the strengthening USD.
USD/JPY technical chart is flat. The quotes are moving along 117.40 level. On Tuesday following the BoJ meeting, governor Kuroda was asked about the yen precipitous decline in relation to the US dollar. Kuroda responded the USD/JPY’s current level is a reflection of the USD strength, not the yen’s softening. Japanese markets were closed for the Emperor's birthday holiday.
USD/CAD popped up to 1.3520. Canadian data was a mixed bag. The CPI declined 0.2% in November after rising 0.2% in October. Retail sales reports were upbeat. Brent oil futures edged up slightly, but the US dollar strength overshadowed the CAD’s vain attempts to growth.
More:
https://new.fxbazooka.com/analytics/11822