» European Morning Update 1st May 2008

European Morning Update 1st May 2008

Dollar remains in a quiet range in Asian trading

Releases from Australia:
                                                      Prior           Current
March Building Approvals      (MoM)   - 0.5%          - 5.7%
March Building Approvals       (YoY)                      - 0.7%
April AiG Performance of Mfg Index      52.3 (prior)   52.7  

Building developers will be looking over their shoulders from now on in Australia after the dramatic –5.7% plunge in approvals over March that brought the YOY figure into negative territory at -0.7%. With mortgage rates having soared by 1.3% since August Australians appear to be throwing in the towel. The next question over the coming months may well be whether Australian property prices will follow the States and U.K. which will cause a sharply lower growth rate but with high inflation.

While manufacturing did see a mild upturn in March it is still suffering from higher interest rates, input costs and slowing global demand. Still the AiG index remains above the boom/bust 50 level which still suggests expansion but there still isn’t much confidence that it will remain there.

Releases from Japan:

                                                  Forecast   Actual
March Labor Cash Earnings  (YoY)    +1.2%    +1.2%

Japanese wage earnings came in smack on target though saw an easing from February’s 1.5% level. Interestingly however average overtime pay saw its largest jump since December 2004, gaining by 4.1% YoY. However, there have been revisions to promote hiring of permanent employees which is though to have caused this higher than expected rise.

The following economic releases are due today:

March
U.S. Personal Income         (MoM)    +0.4%
U.S. Personal Spending       (MoM)    +0.2%
U.S. PCE Core                    (MoM)    +0.1%
U.S. PCE Core                     (YoY)    +2.0%
U.S. Construction Spending  (MoM)    - 0.6%

April
Japan Vehicle Sales             (YoY)   
U.K. Manufacturing PMI                      50.8
U.S. Challenger Jobs Cuts    (YoY) 
U.S. Initial Jobless Claims   (26th)      360K
U.S. Continuing Claims       (19th) 
U.S. ISM Manufacturing                       48.0

It was almost an anti-climax yesterday. The figures promised much but the market has ended up no more aware of what to do than before. My first impression having looked across the currency pairs is that there is actually more upside Dollar risk than downside. The implication is actually for new highs to be made and tentatively this should imply a drop through the 1.5510 Euro low and more down towards the 1.5340 low.

Having said that, the initial reaction still appears to be for the current correction to extend just a little further with break levels to my preferred scenario being quite close.

This should cause retests of 1.5702-33 Euro, 1.0284-98 Swissie and 2.0025 Pound. The Yen has basically the same scenario but has two potential alternatives for the correction, the first moving back to 103.19 and the other a deeper move to 102.44.

Once again Euro-Yen could well provide the clue here. While the pullback yesterday was higher than I had anticipated I still find the bullish scenario very difficult to fit into the larger picture. In fact the downside looks more and more likely to reach the 160.20 area.

Needless to say the catalyst to watch for is probably the U.S. Manufacturing ISM while tomorrow’s non-farm payrolls may also provide some impact also.

Note important support and resistance areas:

         USDJPY        EURUSD       USDCHF       GBPUSD
Res:  104.86-17    1.5702-33    1.0442-70    2.0025-47
Res:  104.05-27    1.5647-77    1.0369-00    1.9947-64

Spt:   103.19-35    1.5580-04    1.0284-98    1.9815-50
Spt:   102.44-66    1.5497-15    1.0219-57    1.9770-80

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This entry was posted on Thursday, May 1st, 2008 at 6:38 and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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