It has been an interesting day
to say the least as one important headline after another caused shock waves
through the market. First, it looked as it appeared Greece had a deal in place
with the ECB – and then they didn’t. In the UK, the Bank of England
has raised GDP forecasts for 2016 and 2017 in a more hawkish quarterly inflation
report – but stated they would not hesitate to cut rates if warranted. And
finally, a ceasefire has been agreed upon in Eastern Ukraine beginningFebruary 15th – but who knows when Vladimir Putin is involved. When the
dust had settled, and North America slumped into their desks this
Thursday, global equities were all trading higher and for at least one
day, everything seemed sort of OK in the world – for now.
The
euro surged higher on
Wednesday just before the
close as CNBC reported a bailout extension had been agreed upon with Greece and
the ECB. Those rumors were short lived though as both ECB and Greek policy
makers stated no deal was in place and negotiations were on-going. It ended up
being a good day for “risk” though as it was confirmed a ceasefire has been
agreed between Ukraine and pro-Russian separatists in Eastern Ukraine.
Participants at the summit in Minsk, attended by the leaders of Germany,
France, Russia and Ukraine, said the ceasefire would begin on February 15th followed by a withdrawal of heavy
weapons from that region. The good news spread to the UK as Governor Carney at
the Bank of England said the economy was close to being back to running at full
capacity. Despite a fall in inflation on the back of oil’s price drop, Mr.
Carney said he did not anticipate deflation in 2015 and upgraded growth
forecasts for 2016 and 2017. Finally, in Sweden, the Riksbank cut rates below
zero and decided to embark on their own QE program, which caused a brief
sell-off in the krona.
It was
not all good news as Australia
released its jobs report for
the month of January. The economy lost 12k jobs last month and unemployment
jumped to 6.4%, which weighed heavily on the Aussie dollar. This news further
supports the argument for monetary easing from the Reserve Bank of Australia,
which just cuts as recently as last week. In Japan, core machinery orders for
December were higher 8.3% against expectations pinned closer to 2.4%. The yen
was trading higher as a result of this news, giving sellers another opportunity
to enter below the psychologically important 120 level.
In the US, weekly
jobless claims were
back above 300k for this week and retail sales for the month of January were
down 0.8%. The US dollar, which has been taking a hit to begin the session,
experienced another bout of selling on the disappointing data. The Canadian
dollar found a bid today, rising along with other risky currencies on the
Ukraine agreement. The USD/CAD rate continues to pivot around $1.25 as local
economic data remains scant. For right now, the loonie is being led by more
broad events in the marketplace. Going forward, markets will no doubt be
hanging on every Greece headline through negotiations being held until a
supposed decision on
Monday.
0 comments:
Post a Comment