Global Time   New York 6:24 am  London 11:24 am  Zurich 12:24 pm  Dubai 2:24 pm  Shanghai 6:24 pm  Tokyo 7:24 pm  
Pair Menu
Select Pair
arr_blue
Global Interest Rates
Australia 7.25%
Canada 3.5%
EMU 4%
Japan 0.5%
Swiss 2.75%
England 5%
US 2.25%
Forex News
Subscribe Now
Advertisements

Forexperts

Brian Dolan

The Week Ahead updated May 16, 2008

Chief Currency Strategist at FOREX.com

Font Scale:
16 May 2008 @ 07:07 pm EST
  • Print
  • E-Mail

- Range conditions prevail

- Bank of England signals inflation concern

- USD hobbled by high oil, but

- Key data and events to watch next week

Range conditions prevail

The USD has remained largely confined to ranges over the past several weeks. In EUR/USD, that range has been roughly 1.53-56; in USD/JPY, 102.50-105.50; in GBP/USD, 1.94-97; and in USD/CAD 0.9950-1.0250. To a large extent, these range-bound trading conditions reflect the current inertia of monetary policy at key central banks, with most interest rate policy setters now seen to be on hold. Given the offsetting effects of slowing growth in major economies and high inflation rates, the stalemate looks set to continue in the weeks ahead. Other markets, such as US stocks and Treasuries, are similarly range-bound owing to ongoing uncertainty and the lack of a clear directional theme to trade on. Even oil, which has caught a great deal of attention in recent weeks, looks to have reached a plateau, closing last week just below $126/bbl, and looks set to finish out this week only slightly higher at $126.60/bbl.

With interest rates likely on hold at G-10 central banks for the foreseeable future, FX direction seems destined to come from other markets and individual data reports. We have just passed the mid-point of the month and that means US data ahead will focus most heavily on the housing market, a sector that remains exceptionally weak. (Higher-than-expected building permits and housing starts on Friday were skewed by multi-family dwellings and are not an indication of stabilization.) In addition, commodity prices continue to rally, with gold playing catch-up to oil in sharp rebound, even as oil appears to be stalling. Most of these developments (weak US housing data, higher commodities) tend to favor USD weakness and sure enough the dollar is finishing out this week toward the lows of recent ranges. To be certain, ranges are made to be broken, but it just doesnt feel like the situation on the ground has changed sufficiently to justify a breakout and a return to pronounced USD weakness.

To justify a breakout, I would look for sharply weaker US data or another series of sharp gains in commodities. Absent those indications, I prefer to fade the tests of USD-range lows and buy USD selectively. In particular, USD/JPY looks attractive to buy between 103.00-50 (stop below 102.50) and EUR/USD to sell between 1.5600-1.5700 Also, while range conditions continue to prevail, volatility declines and risk appetites improve. Barring major stock market volatility, range conditions will favor long JPY-cross positions, such as buying EUR/JPY or GBP/JPY on weakness. Should the USD recover from here and return to recent range highs, Ill look to fade those moves, too, and sell on strength.

Bank of England signals inflation concern

One currency I will not be selling on strength is Sterling (GBP/USD). This past week, the Bank of Englands quarterly inflation report indicated that MPC members see inflation rising sharply in the year ahead, likely eliminating anticipated interest rate cuts. Normally, GBP/USD would have vaulted 3 big figures or more on such news, but incoming data has been so alarmingly weak, Sterling couldnt stage a rally until Friday saw more widespread USD weakness. I have been negative on the UK and GBP since last fall, but this is the first time since then that I have recommended buying GBP (see The Weekly Strategy). The data that has been most dismal out of the UK involves housing, but the housing market declines are less likely to affect UK consumer spending since there has been less home equity withdrawn compared to US households. GBP/USD has also not fully adjusted to reflect the removal of between 75-100 bps of additional expected BOE easing, so I think Cable remains a buy on dips while recent lows at 1.9350/400 remain intact. Strength over 1.9700 opens up potential to further gains to 1.9875/00. I would also look for GBP to recover on the crosses, with a likely top in place in EUR/GBP while below 0.8000. Weakness below 0.7875 will be the trigger to a larger downside move to 0.7720/40.

Interact with this expert:
More FROM Forex.com
Currencies
arr_blue
07/09/2008
Last
Change
%change
Time
advertisement

Rpchost.com - Forex Trading Technical Analysis

Rpchost.com 2008/7/8 - 1:00 AM EST At 4:30 we have DCLG HPI y/y report release and at 8:00 we have Fed Chairman Bernanke Speaks, these reports w... rpchost

BRAND NEW BlackBerry Bold 9000,HTC Touch Pro & Xbox 360 FOR SALE.

BEST SOURCE LIMITED Deallers in all kinds of Telecommunication Products, Mobile Phones,Sidekicks, Laptops, Apple ipods, Pocket pc, Video Games and ... offer1

For Sale Brand New Nokia N95 8gb @ Just $250usd

We are legitimate and reputable company from Uk,London we have all brands of Mobile Phones,Ipods,xbox 360, Sidekicks,Nextels phone,Laptops for sell at... morganmobile

Advertisement
Latest Forex Research Reports

Find the most up to date research from leading investment firms to make the most informed investing decisions

 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2008 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives