Analytics, News, and Forecasts for CFD Markets: currency news — 22-11-2019.

ATTENTION: The content in the news and analytics feed is updated automatically, and reloading the page may slow down the process of new content appearing. We recommend that you keep your news feed open at all times to receive materials quickly.
Filter by currency
22.11.2019
18:01
U.S.: Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count, November 671
16:16
Canada's consumers bounced back during the third quarter – NBC

Krishen Rangasamy, a Senior Economist at National Bank of Canada (NBC), suggests that the rebound in consumption likely allowed Canada’s economic expansion to continue in the third quarter despite the drag from trade.

  • “Canada’s retail sales fell 0.1% in September, better than the -0.3% print expected by consensus. Moreover, the prior month was revised up to +0.1% (from -0.1%). Sales were down in 6 of the 11 subsectors in September, including a 1% drop for autos/parts dealers.
  • In real terms, Canada’s retail sales fell 0.1% in September. For Q3 as a whole, however, retail volumes were up 1.9% annualized.
  • September’s retail report was better than expected, more so considering the prior month’s upward revisions. While retail volumes were down slightly during the month, the quarterly picture is much more positive. Note that real retail spending grew 1.9% annualized in Q3, contrasting sharply with the prior quarter’s weakness.
  • The improved performance from consumers in Q3 was made possible by a resilient labour market (recall that 110K net new jobs were created in the quarter according to the Labour Force Survey), Canada Child Benefit payments to households (which were enhanced in July), and savings from belowseasonal pump prices.”
15:44
U.S. durable goods orders likely to retreat 1% in October - TD Securities

Analysts TD Securities are expecting the U.S. durable goods orders to retreat -1.0% m/m in October, stringing together its second consecutive decline".

  • "Further weakness in vehicle orders and a new drop in the ex-transportation segment are likely to keep orders subdued during the month. We also expect capex orders to register their third consecutive decline at -0.5% in October.
  • PPI and CPI data suggest core PCE inflation likely remained steady at 1.7% y/y in October, despite a notable m/m increase in healthcare prices.
  • On the other hand, headline PCE likely rose a tenth to 1.4% y/y. Separately, we expect personal spending to advance 0.2% m/m for a third consecutive month in October, with a firm increase in services spending leading the upside."

15:10
U.S. consumer sentiment improves more than initially estimated in November

The final reading for the November Reuters/Michigan index of consumer sentiment came in at 96.8 compared to a preliminary reading of 95.7 and the October final reading of 95.5. That was the highest reading since July.

Economists had forecast the index to be unrevised at 95.7.

According to the report, the index of the current economic conditions fell to 111.6 from October’s final reading of 113.2.

Meanwhile, the index of consumer expectations jumped to 87.3 from October’s final reading of 84.2.

The report notes that the November 2019 consumer sentiment figure was nearly identical to the average level recorded since the start of 2017 (97.0). 

15:00
U.S.: Reuters/Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, November 96.8 (forecast 95.7)
14:59
U.S. private sector business activity growth accelerates further in November - IHS Markit's survey

Preliminary data released by IHS Markit on Friday pointed to stronger increases in activity across both the manufacturing and service sectors during November.

According to the report, the Markit flash manufacturing purchasing manager's index (PMI) came in at 52.2 in November, up from 51.3 in October. That was the highest reading since April. Economists had expected the reading to increase to 51.5. A reading above 50 signals an expansion in activity, while a reading below this level signals a contraction. According to the report, the increase in the headline PMI was supported by sharper and solid expansions in production and new orders.

Meanwhile, the Markit flash services purchasing manager's index (PMI) jumped to 51.6 this month, from 50.6 in the prior month. The latest reading was the highest one since July. Economists had expected the reading to increase to 51.0. Employment increased for the first time since August, while the upturn in new business was historically weak and optimism among service providers remained historically subdued, amid reports of less favourable demand conditions.

Overall, IHS Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index came in at 51.9 in November, up from 50.9 in October, signaling the sharpest increase in private sector output since July.

Commenting on the flash PMI data, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at HIS Markit, noted: “A welcome upturn in the headline index from the flash PMI adds to evidence that the worst of the economy’s recent soft patch may be behind us. Output of the combined manufacturing and service sectors rose in November at the fastest rate since July, spurred by improved inflows of new business. Encouragingly, firms took on staff again after two months of headcount reductions, primarily to help deal with rising backlogs of work. “

14:45
U.S.: Services PMI, November 51.6 (forecast 51)
14:45
U.S.: Manufacturing PMI, November 52.2 (forecast 51.5)
14:38
Canada's retail sales took a breather in September – RBC

Josh Nye, the Senior Economist at Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), noted that September's retail sales were weighed down by lower gasoline prices and a pullback in auto sales. 

  • "The latter have generally been soft this year--while housing has clearly gotten a boost from lower interest rates, auto sales have not. That strength in housing was evident in rising sales at building material stores, which hit a record high on a volumes basis in October (the only category that can make such a claim).
  • Despite a soft end to the quarter, retail sales volumes rose an annualized 1.9% in Q3, the best pace in a year. We expect overall consumer spending (part of next week's Q3 GDP report) rose at a similar pace. The BoC is keeping its eye on the household sector, with strength there essential to offset headwinds to investment and exports. It looks like both consumer spending and housing made solid contributions to growth last quarter.”

14:07
Eurozone: the worst is behind us in manufacturing, but not in services – ABN AMRO

Han de Jong, Chief Economist ABN Amro, provides his view on Friday's release of the flash version of the Eurozone Manufacturing and Services PMI prints for the month of November.

  • “The preliminary November manufacturing PMI for Germany rose from 42.1 to 43.8, much better than expected, although still indicating a contraction in the sector. The November reading was the highest in five months and the ‘new orders’ series registered its highest reading since January this year. That is all good news.
  • The services PMI, on the other hand, eased: 51.3 versus 51.6. We have highlighted the unusual gap between the manufacturing and the services PMIs, respectively. A convergence was always likely and we have often argued that the services PMI will follow the manufacturing PMI down at some stage. The strong rise of manufacturing and the modest drop in services narrows the gap between the two.
  • The French PMI data and the eurozone data show similar trends. It is noticeable though, that the eurozone numbers are weaker than the numbers for Germany and France. The manufacturing PMI is up 1.7 points in Germany, 0.9 points in France, but only 0.7 points in the eurozone. The composite PMI was up on the month in both Germany and France, but down in the eurozone as a whole. It is hard to understand how that fits together.
  • Eurozone car registrations are growing rapidly on a yoy basis: 9.8% yoy in October after +14.8% in September. This sounds much better than it is, really. Car registrations collapsed last year from September on so the yoy comparison is an easy one, against a very low base. Nevertheless, there are news reports of car manufacturers hiring staff.”


13:48
U.S. President Trump: Deal with China is very close – Fox
  • Trade deal with China is "potentially, very close", but China wants to make a deal more than he does
  • He did not like Chinese President Xi's statement this morning that trade deal must have "equality" because he believes U.S. should have a better deal
  • He did not directly answer a question if he would sign Hong Kong human rights bill
13:44
Canada’s retail sales down 0.1 percent in September

Statistics Canada reported on Friday that the Canadian retail sales edged down 0.1 percent m-o-m to CAD51.58 billion in September, following a revised 0.1 percent m-o-m increase in August (originally a 0.1 percent m-o-m drop).

The result was in line with economists’ forecast, suggesting a 0.1 percent m-o-m decline for September.

According to the report, the September decrease came from lower sales at motor vehicle and parts dealers (-1.0 percent m-o-m) and gasoline stations (-2.3 percent m-o-m).

Excluding motor vehicle and parts dealers, retail sales rose 0.2 percent m-o-m in September compared to an unrevised 0.2 percent m-o-m decline in August and economists’ forecast for a 0.1 percent m-o-m advance. Excluding motor vehicle and parts dealers and gasoline stations, retail sales surged 0.7 percent m-o-m in September.

In y-o-y terms, Canadian retail sales jumped 1.0 percent in September, decelerating from 1.1 percent in August.

In the third quarter, retail sales grew 0.5 percent, following a 1.1 percent climb in the second quarter.

13:31
Canada: Retail Sales YoY, September 1%
13:30
Canada: Retail Sales, m/m, September -0.1% (forecast -0.1%)
13:30
Canada: Retail Sales ex Autos, m/m, September 0.2% (forecast 0.1%)
13:16
ECB's Governing Council member Weidmann: ECB strategy gives us leeway not to respond to every 'slight' revision in inflation outlook
  • Downturn in export-oriented industries could be leveling off
  • Driving inflation rates above target intentionally not consistent with strategy may lead to credibility risk
  • Monetary policy cannot be complacent if it leads to build-up of financial imbalances
  • We should not be over-confident about the role macroprudential policy can play in addressing systemic risks; this policy approach is still in its infancy
13:01
USD/JPY remains bearish/neutral near-term – UOB

FX Strategists at UOB Group say USD/JPY is seen grinding lower in the next weeks, with the next target at the 108.00 handle.

  • "24-hour view: USD dipped to 108.27 before rebounding quickly to touch 108.69. The registered range was close to our expected range of 108.30/108.70. Momentum indicators are turning neutral and USD could continue to trade sideways, likely between 108.30 and 108.75.
  • Next 1-3 weeks: When USD dropped to 108.23 last Thursday, we ‘upgraded’ the downside risk and indicated on Friday (15 Nov, spot at 108.50) that USD is “expected to trade with a downward bias towards 108.00”. While USD held above 108.23 and traded mostly sideways since then, we continue to the view that the risk is on the downside. That said, after the price action over the past few days, 108.00 may not come into the picture so soon. On the upside, only a break of 109.00 (‘strong resistance’ level previously at 109.15) would indicate that the current downward pressure has eased."

12:45
EUR/GBP: Scope for a test of 0.8675 – TDS

Analysts at TD Securities provided their view on Friday's release of Eurozone/UK PMI prints, which resulted into a modest rebound for the EUR/GBP cross.

  • "The Eurozone PMIs for November showed manufacturing generally stronger than expected, with Germany in particular beating markets by one full point. But the services PMI for the Eurozone overall was almost a full point weaker than expected at 51.5 (mkt 52.4), its lowest print since January.
  • This morning's first-ever flash PMIs for the month of November were very disappointing, with the manufacturing PMI falling from 49.6 to 48.3 in November (mkt 48.9), and the services PMI from 50.0 to 48.6. Markit noted that this level of PMIs is consistent with Q4 GDP of -0.2% q/q.
  • A lack of significant directional cues from Lagarde's speech (see below) has kept investors focused on the November PMI parade. Here, the divergent fortunes of the German and UK manufacturing series provide an interesting allegory for a rebound in EURGBP. The cross has been carving out a base in that cross for several weeks and we think existing shorts will be forced into a significant rethink if it reclaims a 0.86 handle. With GBP looking too rich and domestic political factors looking increasingly priced, we see scope for a test of 0.8675 in the days ahead.”

12:27
Decreasing bets for a move higher in GBP/USD – UOB

FX Strategists at UOB Group think the probability of a move higher in GBP/USD  appears somewhat mitigated for the time being.

  • "24-hour view: We expected GBP to trade sideways within a 1.2900/1.2950 range yesterday. The subsequent price action wherein GBP rose to 1.2970 before plummeting back down to 1.2893 came as a surprise. The rapid swing has resulted in a mixed outlook. From here, GBP could continue to trade in a choppy manner and within a relatively broad range of 1.2875/1.2960.
  • Next 1-3 weeks: Our ‘strong support’ level at 1.2875 is still intact as GBP recovered after touching 1.2888 and ended the day little changed in NY at 1.2923 (-0.02%). As highlighted yesterday (20 Nov, spot at 1.2925), only a break of 1.2875 would indicate the current mild upward pressure has eased. Until then, there is still chance for GBP to move towards last month’s peak at 1.3012. That said, after the price action over the past couple of days, the probability for such a scenario has decreased. Looking forward, if GBP were to move below 1.2875, it could trade sideways for a period."

12:00
EUR/GBP: rallies should meet resistance around 0.8635 – Commerzbank

Karen Jones, Team Head FICC Technical Analysis at Commerzbank, suggests that occasional bullish attempts in the European cross are seen meeting initial hurdle at 0.8635 ahead of 0.8802.

  • “EUR/GBP has another 13-count on the daily chart PLUS divergence of the daily RSI and I think this will bounce near term. Rallies will find a minor downtrend at .8635 ahead of the 3-month downtrend at .8802. Overhead resistance is reinforced by .8786 the mid-September low.
  • Beyond this, there is scope for the slide to extend to the .8465 2019 low. We note the TD support at .8485 and we look for the market to hold here."

11:46
China's premier Li says will keep yuan basically stable within a reasonable, balanced range

  • Will not resort to competitive devaluation of the yuan
  • Will push forward with yuan market-based reform

11:42
ECB's Governing Council member Kazimir: 'Not worried' about Eurozone outlook
  • Says monetary policy's key target is inflation but its side effect is monetary policy that supports growth and that is not going to change in coming months
  • Favours waiting for new board members before conducting policy review
11:36
USD/JPY remains bearish/neutral near-term – UOB

FX Strategists at UOB Group note USD/JPY is seen grinding lower in the next weeks, with the next target at the 108.00-handle.

  • "24-hour view: USD dipped to 108.27 before rebounding quickly to touch 108.69. The registered range was close to our expected range of 108.30/108.70. Momentum indicators are turning neutral and USD could continue to trade sideways, likely between 108.30 and 108.75.
  • Next 1-3 weeks: When USD dropped to 108.23 last Thursday, we ‘upgraded’ the downside risk and indicated on Friday (15 Nov, spot at 108.50) that USD is “expected to trade with a downward bias towards 108.00”. While USD held above 108.23 and traded mostly sideways since then, we continue to the view that the risk is on the downside. That said, after the price action over the past few days, 108.00 may not come into the picture so soon. On the upside, only a break of 109.00 (‘strong resistance’ level previously at 109.15) would indicate that the current downward pressure has eased."

11:17
GBP/USD keeps attention on 1.30 – Commerzbank

Karen Jones, the Team Head FICC Technical Analysis at Commerzbank, suggests GBP/USD continue its march north with the next target at 1.30 and possibly above.

  • “GBP/USD continues to square up to the psychological resistance at 1.3000 and the recent high at 1.3013. Directly above here we have the 200-week ma at 1.3116, the 50% retracement of the move down from 2018 at 1.3167, the 5-year downtrend at 1.3185 and the 1.3187 May high and these remain our short term targets, this is TOUGH resistance and we look for the market to fail here. Above here lies 1.3382 the 2019 high”.

10:58
AUD/USD does not rule out another test of 0.6765 – UOB

In view of FX Strategists at UOB Group, extra weakness in the Aussie Dollar seems to have lost momentum, although a test of 0.6765 still remains on the table.

24-hour view: “AUD traded between 0.6783 and 0.6814, relatively close to our expected sideway-trading range of 0.6785/0.6820. The soft closing in NY (0.6787) suggests the immediate risk is on the downside. That said, in view of lackluster momentum, any weakness is unlikely to threaten the solid support at 0.6765. Resistance is at 0.6805 followed by 0.6820”.

Next 1-3 weeks: “AUD surrendered most of the gains from Tuesday (19 Nov) as it declined by -0.40% and closed at 0.6802 in NY. Despite the relatively soft price action, we continue to hold the view from yesterday (20 Nov, spot at 0.6820) wherein the “odds for further AUD weakness have diminished”. However, as highlighted, only a break of 0.6845 (no change in ‘strong resistance’ level) would indicate the current weakness has stabilized. Until then, another ‘down-leg’ to 0.6765 is not ruled out just yet”.

10:39
Eurozone PMI shows economy close to stagnation – ING

The Eurozone economy weakened further in November as services become more affected by the slowdown, and that's sparking more growth concerns, Bert Colijn – Senior Economist Eurozone at ING – commented following Friday's release of the flash version of Eurozone PMIs.

“Eurozone PMI decreased slightly in November, from 50.6 to 50.3. As a reading below 50 indicates contraction in the business economy, it seems that growth is slowing to a snail’s pace in the fourth quarter. Spillover effects from the manufacturing recession to the service sector are at the heart of the decline as employment growth is slowing, which is negatively affecting domestic demand. The service sector slowdown is, in turn, impacting price growth as businesses indicate that prices charged rose at the slowest pace in three years, which also reflectes weaker input costs. For the ECB, this means that little upside to the inflation outlook can be expected in the coming months. All in all, as risks to the global trade outlook remain; we still have no signatures under the phase one deal between the US and China and elections in the UK could determine the fate of the Brexit deal. Without some of these threats off the table, it is tough to see the Eurozone rebounding in the coming months. The winter months will, therefore, be a nail biter for Eurozone growth.”

10:22
Japan tempers view on employment, profits as slowing global growth weighs

Japan's government trimmed its assessment of the labour market in November for the first time in five years and also cut its view on corporate profits as slowing global growth weighs on the manufacturers.

The government left unchanged its overall assessment that the world's third-largest economy is recovering at a moderate pace, though prolonged weakness centred mainly on exporters has remained. The more subdued view on the employment and profit outlook for manufacturers could become a source of concern for policymakers.

"As...production activities are falling, demand for new people is somewhat slowing," a government official told.

However, the November report kept a positive overall view on the employment situation, saying it was "improving" compared to "steadily improving" previously, the first downgrade of employment since November 2014.

The government also took down a notch its view on corporate profits, largely due to weakening third-quarter profits among manufacturers, compared to the same period in the previous year.

But the government said profits were still at a high level and non-manufacturers' profits stayed largely steady. Capital expenditure due to strong corporate profits would continue, the official said.

10:01
UK businesses slip into deepest downturn since 2016 in November - flash PMIs

British business this month suffered its deepest downturn since mid-2016 as the approach of a national election exacerbated uncertainty about Brexit, according to a survey which augured badly for the economy.

The first "flash" early reading of the IHS Markit/CIPS UK Purchasing Managers' Indexes (PMI) for Britain showed that the decline in both the services and manufacturing sectors has quickened in November.

The readings suggested the world's fifth-biggest economy is contracting at a quarterly pace of 0.2%, although the PMIs have overstated economic weakness recently in part because of higher government spending ahead of Brexit. Still, the outlook for next year looks doubtful: Brexit uncertainty is still weighing on business investment at home, while the U.S.-China trade war has stymied the world economy.

The PMI for the dominant services sector fell to 48.6 in November from 50.0 in October, its lowest level since July 2016, just after the Brexit vote. Readings below 50 denote contraction.

The manufacturing PMI dropped to 48.3 from 49.6 as a stockpiling drive before the aborted Oct. 31 Brexit deadline evaporated.

The composite PMI, which combines the services business activity and services and manufacturing output readings, fell to 48.5 from 50.0, also its lowest level since July 2016.

09:47
Former Fed Chair Yellen: ‘there is good reason to worry’ about the US economy sliding into recession

Pronounced wealth inequality that has built up for decades poses a major threat to a U.S. economy that is in otherwise “excellent” shape, former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said.

The central bank leader from 2014 to 2018 also said the U.S.-China tariff war is having a detrimental impact both on businesses and consumers through higher prices and a general air of uncertainty.

While she doesn’t see a recession on the horizon, she also noted that the risks are piling up. “I would bet that there would not be a recession in the coming year. But I would have to say that the odds of a recession are higher than normal and at a level that frankly I am not comfortable with. With three rate cuts this year, there remains “not as much scope as I would like to see for the Fed to be able to respond to that. So there is good reason to worry.” Yellen said.

One particular area she cited was inequality, specifically the extent to which benefits during the longest expansion in U.S. history have flowed mostly to top earners and those with post-high school education levels. Despite the central bank’s efforts to guide the economy, Yellen cited “a very worrisome long-term [trend] in which you have a very substantial share of the U.S. workforce feeling like they’re not getting ahead. It’s true, they’re not getting ahead.”

09:30
Markets tiring of US China trade optimism? – Westpac

Robert Rennie, Head of Financial Market Strategy at Westpac, offered his take on the recent mixed messages over the prospects of a preliminary US-China trade deal.

“Back on the 11th October, US President Trump and China’s Vice Premier Liu He reached a truce in their trade war, after agreeing a limited deal which saw the US hold off on tariff increases that were due the following week in exchange for Chinese concessions on agricultural purchases. The deal was expected to be signed within 5 weeks and global equity markets rose strongly through October and November on expectations for a pickup in global growth. Six weeks have passed since the ‘phase-one’ deal was agreed in principle with no deal in place. Indeed only a week ago White House advisor Larry Kudlow claimed the two sides were down to “short strokes”, implying a deal was indeed close. Markets are showing some signs of tiring of the steady drip feed of upbeat comments from US officials and no signs of a final agreement looking likely.”

09:17
Eurozone near-stalled for third month running in November - IHS Markit

According to the report from IHS Markit, the Eurozone economy remained close to stagnant for a third successive month in November, losing growth momentum slightly again as new orders fell for a third straight month. The survey showed signs of the steep ongoing manufacturing decline spreading further to services. Employment growth meanwhile slipped to the lowest for almost five years as firms took an increasingly cautious approach to hiring. Price pressures also cooled further, running at the lowest for over three years.

At 50.3 in November, the ‘flash’ Eurozone Composite PMI fell from 50.6 in October to signal the second-smallest expansion of output across manufacturing and services since the current upturn began in July 2013. The past three months have consequently seen a continual nearstagnation of output, contrasting markedly with robust growth seen over the same period one year ago.

Weak output growth reflected a third successive monthly decline in new orders for goods and services, albeit with the rate of decline easing slightly for a second month running to register only a marginal drop in demand. The ongoing decline nevertheless represents the worst spell of demand since mid-2013.

09:00
Eurozone: Manufacturing PMI, November 46.6 (forecast 46.4)
09:00
Eurozone: Services PMI, November 51.5 (forecast 52.5)
08:46
Germany business activity remains subdued despite easing drag from manufacturing

Latest PMI data from IHS Markit  pointed to sustained weakness in the underlying trend in German business activity during November. The Flash Germany Composite Output Index – which is based on approximately 85% of usual monthly replies – registered 49.2 in November, edging up for the second month running and from 48.9 in October, but still one of the lowest readings over the past six-and-half years. Elsewhere, employment levels steadied after falling in October, while expectations towards output edged back into positive territory. Manufacturing remained the main area of weakness in November. That said, the sector’s drag on overall output continued to ease as the rate of decline in factory production slowed for the second month running to the weakest since August. Germany Manufacturing PMI ticking up from 42.1 in October to a five-month high of 43.8.

Growth of services business activity meanwhile remained subdued. The increase in services output in November was in fact the weakest since September 2016 (Germany Services PMI Activity Index fell to 51.3 from 51.6 in October). Weighing on business activity in November was a fifth straight monthly decrease in total new orders.

08:30
Germany: Manufacturing PMI, November 43.8 (forecast 42.9)
08:30
Germany: Services PMI, November 51.3 (forecast 52)
08:15
France: Manufacturing PMI, November 51.6 (forecast 50.9)
08:15
France: Services PMI, November 52.9 (forecast 53)
08:00
GBP: Stay nimble through Q1 2020 before spot becomes more attractive in H2 - TD

TD Research discusses GBP outlook through next year and prefers to say mostly tactical and nimble through Q1 of next year. 

"The sharp focus on UK political risks remains, but these should subside - particularly in H2 next year. There, we note a BoE rate cut is possible next year, but think this will be avoided. In any case, a cut is now fully priced into the curve. We think GBP stands to benefit modestly as these expectations are ironed out with time. Spot will remain choppy and headline driven in early 2020, but more attractive in H2. Stay nimble through Q1. With vol low and risk-reversals skewed to the downside, longer-dated GBPUSD calls may offer appealing risk/reward. Otherwise, we like to express GBP upside potential as part of a European basket with EUR & SEK," TD adds.

07:45
RBNZ Financial Stability Report: Expect no changes to policy settings – Westpac

Michael Gordon, Analyst at Westpac, notes that “the Reserve Bank will be releasing its six-monthly Financial Stability Report (FSR) next Wednesday. 

"We do not expect it to include any changes to policy settings. First, we note that the RBNZ will be announcing its final decisions on bank capital requirements on 5 December. It will probably steer clear of commenting on the outcomes ahead of that announcement. Instead, the main point of interest in the FSR will be around any changes to the loan-to-value ratio (LVRs) restrictions on mortgage lending. These have been loosened twice so far, in November 2017 and 2018. Market opinion is split as to whether the RBNZ will loosen them further this time. Our view that there will be no change. There has been speculation that last week’s on-hold OCR decision signalled an intention to loosen the LVR rules instead. That’s not generally the way it works at the RBNZ – each tool is assessed separately. And in any case, such a combo would shift the mix of credit conditions in the opposite direction to what we think the RBNZ would want.”

07:31
GDP revisions put China on target to double economy, but data doubts remain

China on Friday revised up its nominal 2018 gross domestic product (GDP) by 2.1% to 91.93 trillion yuan, keeping it on track to achieving its goal of doubling the size of its economy by 2020 from 2010.

However, with the economy growing at its weakest pace in nearly three decades, the revisions could fuel scepticism about the credibility of Chinese data with some analysts suspecting authorities may be massaging the numbers to achieve Beijing's ambitious targets.

In a statement, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said the change in the size of 2018 GDP will not significantly influence the calculation for the 2019 growth rate.

Yet some analysts suggest the nominal nudge may actually not be so nominal after all.

"Despite NBS stressing that the current round of revisions is the result of the census uncovering previously unrecorded activity, it's hard to ignore the fact that it will also help them meet official growth targets. In previous revisions real growth has almost always been revised upwards," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, Senior China Economist at Capital Economics, in a note.

Indeed, growth of about 6.2% is seen needed for the whole of this year and the next to meet the Communist Party's longstanding goal of doubling GDP and incomes in the decade to 2020. Such a rate of expansion would be a stiff ask given the 6.0% GDP growth logged in the third quarter - the slowest pace since 1992 - and with many analysts tipping the pace to slip below 6% in 2020.

07:15
German GDP increased in line with forecasts in Q3

According to the report from Federal Statistical Office (Destatis), the German economy grew slightly in the third quarter of 2019. The gross domestic product rose 0.1% on the second quarter of 2019 after adjustment for price, seasonal and calendar variations. German economic performance in the second quarter of 2019 had been down 0.2%. In the first quarter of 2019, the German economy had grown by 0.5%.

The quarter-on-quarter comparison (price, seasonally and calendar-adjusted) shows that positive contributions came from consumption, according to provisional calculations. Household final consumption expenditure increased by 0.4% on the second quarter of 2019 and government final consumption expenditure rose by 0.8%. Development of foreign trade made a positive contribution to economic growth, according to provisional calculations. Exports were up 1.0% (price, seasonally and calendar adjusted) on the second quarter of 2019, which had seen a sharp drop in goods exports. Imports in the third quarter of 2019 remained roughly at previous quarter's level (+0.1%).

Compared with a year earlier, the price-adjusted GDP rose 1.0% in the third quarter of 2019. After calendar adjustment, GDP was up by 0.5% on the third quarter of 2018 because there was one working day more than a year earlier.

07:01
Germany: GDP (YoY), Quarter III 0.5% (forecast 0.5%)
07:01
Germany: GDP (QoQ), Quarter III 0.1% (forecast 0.1%)
06:38
Options levels on friday, November 22, 2019 EURUSD GBPUSD

EUR/USD

Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)

$1.1162 (5315)

$1.1126 (3030)

$1.1100 (2001)

Price at time of writing this review: $1.1067

Support levels (open interest**, contracts):

$1.1049 (3724)

$1.1024 (3245)

$1.0989 (3310)


Comments:

- Overall open interest on the CALL options and PUT options with the expiration date December, 6 is 101374 contracts (according to data from November, 21) with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,1200 (5593);


GBP/USD

Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)

$1.2976 (2529)

$1.2955 (1079)

$1.2940 (736)

Price at time of writing this review: $1.2925

Support levels (open interest**, contracts):

$1.2876 (227)

$1.2858 (307)

$1.2835 (1776)


Comments:

- Overall open interest on the CALL options with the expiration date December, 6 is 31707 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,3000 (5424);

- Overall open interest on the PUT options with the expiration date December, 6 is 33363 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,2200 (2280);

- The ratio of PUT/CALL was 1.05 versus 1.10 from the previous trading day according to data from November, 21

 

* - The Chicago Mercantile Exchange bulletin (CME) is used for the calculation.

** - Open interest takes into account the total number of option contracts that are open at the moment.

05:57
Japan: Manufacturing PMI, November 48.6
00:15
Currencies. Daily history for Thursday, November 21, 2019
Pare Closed Change, %
AUDUSD 0.67865 -0.2
EURJPY 120.097 -0.12
EURUSD 1.10581 -0.12
GBPJPY 140.162 -0.12
GBPUSD 1.29058 -0.12
NZDUSD 0.64005 -0.24
USDCAD 1.32835 -0.14
USDCHF 0.99305 0.22
USDJPY 108.599 0

© 2000-2024. All rights reserved.

This site is managed by Teletrade D.J. LLC 2351 LLC 2022 (Euro House, Richmond Hill Road, Kingstown, VC0100, St. Vincent and the Grenadines).

The information on this website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute any investment advice.

The company does not serve or provide services to customers who are residents of the US, Canada, Iran, The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Yemen and FATF blacklisted countries.

AML Website Summary

Risk Disclosure

Making transactions on financial markets with marginal financial instruments opens up wide possibilities and allows investors who are willing to take risks to earn high profits, carrying a potentially high risk of losses at the same time. Therefore you should responsibly approach the issue of choosing the appropriate investment strategy, taking the available resources into account, before starting trading.

Privacy Policy

Use of the information: full or partial use of materials from this website must always be referenced to TeleTrade as the source of information. Use of the materials on the Internet must be accompanied by a hyperlink to teletrade.org. Automatic import of materials and information from this website is prohibited.

Please contact our PR department if you have any questions or need assistance at pr@teletrade.global.

Bank
transfers
Feedback
Live Chat E-mail
Up
Choose your language / location