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Currencies in Play Next Week
By: Kathy Lien   Friday, May 16, 2008 6:33 PM

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For the better part of this past week, the Euro, Japanese Yen and British pound have been trapped within a tight trading range against the US dollar. Even though the moves in all 3 of these currency pairs have been relatively significant, especially in the EUR/USD, they pale in comparison to the moves in the Australian and New Zealand dollars.

Currencies in Play Next Week:

Euro
Canadian Dollar
British Pound

Euro

The Euro staged a very strong rally against the US dollar after quietly selling off for the past 3 days. The move was due almost entirely to the US numbers as the Euro started to gain strength quickly following the University of Michigan Consumer Confidence report. Eurozone economic data was actually bearish for the currency with the trade surplus swinging into a deficit in the month of March. This provide evidence that the strong euro is finally weighing on the region’s economy. Fundamentals will be heating up for the Euro next week with German producer prices, the ZEW survey, IFO and PMI reports due for release. We actually expect most of the numbers except for the inflation reports to be Euro negative. With factory orders and industrial production turning negative, it would be a surprise if business sentiment managed to improve.

Canadian Dollar

The Canadian dollar will be a big focus with consumer prices and retail sales due for release. I expect CPI to be hot and retail sales to be weak, but that depends upon the level of wholesale sales.

British Pound

The recent strength of the British pound will be tested next week by the busy economic calendar. After hitting an intraday low of 1.9363 earlier this week, the currency has carved out a near term bottom against the US dollar. Like the rest of the world, the only reason why the central bank has stopped cutting rates is because of inflation. Even though the labor market deteriorated for the fourth straight month, the British pound gained strength because both consumer and producer prices increased more than the market expected last month. The minutes from the latest Bank of England meeting will be released next week. Although they left interest rates unchanged at 5 percent, the key will be their voting record. At the prior meeting 6 members supported the 25bp rate cut, one member called for a 50bp rate cut while another called for no easing at all. We suspect that more members would have favored the most recent pause. In addition to the BoE minutes, we are also expecting UK retail sales and the second release of first quarter GDP.

Australian Dollar Hit a 24 Year High

The Australian dollar hit a new 24 year high.


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