Finotec News Archive - March 11 2010
Sterling falls as manufacturing production comes out worse than expected
The GBP/USD is currently trading at $1.4960 as of 20:32pm, GMT, with a bearish trend| EUR/USD | USD/JPY | GBP/USD | USD/CHF | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Resistance | 1.3780(M) 1.3736(M) 1.3706(M) | 91.30(M) 90.98(M) 90.69(M) | 1.5085(M) 1.5064(M) 1.5017(W) | 1.4781(M) 1.0810(M) 1.0795(M) |
Support | 1.3605(M) 1.3595(M) 1.3530(M) | 89.40(M) 89.27(M) 88.96(M) | 1.4873(M) 1.4854(M) 1.4781(M) | 1.0676(M) 1.0665(M) 1.0648(M) |
The British pound fell against the greenback and euro on Wednesday and analysts expect further declines for the currency given the gloomy economic outlook for Britain and worries on the political front. Weighing on the pound were fears about a hung parliament as flagged by political opinion polls on Tuesday and the latest in a string of disappointing data on the economy. British manufacturing output numbers early in the session showed a 0.9 percent decline in January. Bank of England policymaker Adam Posen's comment that sterling's recent weakness did not suggest markets have lost confidence in Britain's inflation outlook offered the currency some support. "The reiteration of those comments provided a bit of support," said Jeremy Stretch, strategist at Rabobank."The fact that stocks are holding in quite well, that's seeing the risk appetite story provides a temporary respite for sterling. Also we haven't had any data since 9.30am, so that's the good news." The GBP/USD is currently trading at $1.4960 as of 20:32pm, GMT, with a bearish trend.
Sentiment toward the dollar climbed to 66.39 this month from 55.72 in February, according to the survey. The measure is a diffusion index, meaning a reading above 50 indicates Bloomberg users expect the dollar to strengthen. The fallout from the budget crisis in Greece has made German investors the most bearish on the 16-nation euro currency since the survey began in November 2007. Sentiment from German participants tumbled to 20 from 37.5, and dropped to 12.5 percent in France and 21.48 in Spain. “The Greece situation was definitely something that helped the dollar recover,” said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist in Toronto at Toronto-Dominion Bank and a survey participant. “It started to take on a life of its own. Now the markets are waiting to see where we go from here.” The EUR/USD is currently trading at $1.3640 as of 20:45pm, GMT, with a bearish trend.
Canada’s dollar traded near its strongest level in almost five months as investors bet the nation’s economy will be among the strongest during the global recovery. “The Canadian dollar has seen a monumental run in the last several weeks,” said Eric Lascelles, chief economics and rates strategist in Toronto at Toronto-Dominion Bank. “For once the motion is because of fundamental factors in the economy that has prompted the Canada-U.S. rates spread to look more attractive, with people piling on that trade.” The Canadian currency could reach parity with the greenback as the Bank of Canada moves to increase interest rates, according to Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. The USD/CAD is currently trading at 1.0260 as of 21:00pm, GMT, with a bullish trend.
Finotec Analysis Team
11 March 2010
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