The Wire > Blogs

By The Trading Desk on 5/16/2012 11:33 AM

   UK unemployment surprised to the upside with claimant count dropping by -13,700  versus forecasts of 4,900 gain. The unemployment rate dropped to 8.2% from 8.3% the month prior. This was the fastest pace of job growth in nine months indicating that UK labor markets remain relatively buoyant despite broader economic slowdown in UK. 

By The Trading Desk on 5/15/2012 9:05 AM
   German Q1 GDP surprised to the upside printing at 0.5% versus 0.1% eyed as it helped ot lift EUR/USD above the 1.2850 level in early morning European trade.   In calendar-adjusted terms, economic activity was up 1.2% on the year. In non-adjusted terms, GDP growth came to +1.7% y/y. 
By The Trading Desk on 5/15/2012 8:55 AM

   After plumbing fresh lows in Asian session trade risk FX bounced in midmorning European dealing on speculation that Greece may cobble together a working coalition government without resorting to another Parliamentary election. Earlier in the session weak Chinese economic data and a massive unexpected loss from JP Morgan kept risk FX under pressure with EUR/USD coming within a few points of the 1.2900 barrier while Aussie drifted lower towards parity. JP Morgan reported a trading loss of more than -2 Billion dollars in credit derivatives as a result of hedge gone wrong by its CIO office in London. 

By The Trading Desk on 5/11/2012 11:46 AM

   After plumbing fresh lows in Asian session trade risk FX bounced in midmorning European dealing on speculation that Greece may cobble together a working coalition government without resorting to another Parliamentary election. Earlier in the session weak Chinese economic data and a massive unexpected loss from JP Morgan kept risk FX under pressure with EUR/USD coming within a few points of the 1.2900 barrier while Aussie drifted lower towards parity. JP Morgan reported a trading loss of more than -2 Billion dollars in credit derivatives as a result of hedge gone wrong by its CIO office in London. 

By The Trading Desk on 5/11/2012 9:43 AM

  After obsessing about Greece for most of the week, there is finally some fresh and important data to draw our attention away from the country’s political drama. Even though this distraction will only be temporary, for the next few hours, investors will be holding their breath in anticipation of China’s latest economic reports. Last night’s larger than expected Chinese trade surplus sent most of the major currencies sharply higher despite concerns about the level of import and export growth. Their trade surplus nearly doubled in the month of April from $9.9 billion to $18.4 billion. However export and import growth slowed materially, raising widespread concerns about the growth in China. Tonight inflation, industrial production and retail sales numbers are scheduled for release. Like many other central banks, the People’s Bank of China keeps a close eye on CPI. After rising from 3.2 to 3.6 percent in March, inflationary pressures are expected to have eased in April. If industrial production and retail sales growth slow as well, the PBoC could react with another Reserve Requirement Ratio cut in May or June. For the currency market, weaker data could renew demand for safe haven currencies such as the Yen and U.S. dollar while at the same time pressure commodity currencies such as the Aussie and kiwi. Stronger data would help boost risk appetite and allow the AUD and NZD to continue to recover.

By The Trading Desk on 5/10/2012 9:03 AM
   Its been 8 days since the euro has rallied against the U.S. dollar. To put this into perspective, it is the longest stretch of weakness since October 2008, when we were knee deep in the global financial crisis. Comparatively however it is not the perfect analogy because the losses this month are small compared to the losses in 2008. In the 10 day period between Sept 23 and Oct 6, 2008, the EUR/USD fell from 1.4827 down to 1.3440. At the start of this month, the EUR/USD was touched a high of 1.3284 and earlier today dropped to a low of 1.2930. Although the political mess in Greece could end with the historic decision to leave the euro, such a decision should not yield as large of a move in the EUR/USD as the global financial crisis because the investors have had plenty of time to discount the move and have already set their contingency plans into motion. 
By The Trading Desk on 5/10/2012 8:59 AM

  After four failed attempts over the past 3 months to close below 1.30, the EUR/USD finally did it. Continued concerns about Greece and renewed fears of funding problems for Spain drove the currency pair to its lowest levels in 3 months. This is the eighth consecutive trading day that the euro has failed to rally against the U.S. dollar and when it broke below 1.2955, the selling pressure intensified quickly with the pair slipping to an intraday low of 1.2912. This psychologically significant level was once support and will now become resistance. Although U.S. stocks ended the day off their lows, the EUR/USD did not enjoy the same intraday recovery as some of its counterparts. 

By The Trading Desk on 5/7/2012 10:04 AM

Currencies and equities traded sharply lower today on the back of weaker non-farm payrolls. The U.S. dollar initially sold off against all of the major currencies but after the stock market opened for trading, risk aversion swept through the markets, forcing the euro to give up all of its earlier gains. The losses in commodity currencies intensified while USD/JPY broke below 80. The possibility of more stimulus was very negative for USD/JPY but softer U.S. growth hurts other countries too and for this reason, higher beta currencies sold off more aggressively than the greenback.

By The Trading Desk on 5/4/2012 2:44 PM

   Currencies were in their typical pre-NFP stall in quiet European trade with liquidity further hampered by the fact that today was the end of Golden Week holidays in Asia. Nevertheless mild risk aversion flows continued to weigh on the euro in the wake further evidence of deterioration of economic conditions in the Eurozone.  

By The Trading Desk on 5/4/2012 2:34 PM

  Final EZ PMI services printed even worse than the original flash estimate at 46.9 versus 47.9 putting further downward pressure on the euro at the start of morning European trade. The downturn in services was the largest drop since October of 2008 during the peak  of the credit crisis and suggests that economic conditions in the monetary union are deteriorating rapidly.