Ficc Times // /: The Week Gone by and The Week Ahead
Ficc Times // /: The Week Gone by and The Week Ahead
Ficc Times // /: The Week Gone by and The Week Ahead
08 Feb 2013
Risk on sentiment got a sharp reversal when ECB President last week commented about a very late-in-year Euro recovery hope and also talked the Euro down. USD recovered sharply against most currencies, including Asians, and we expect that trend to continue in the next few days. Indian GDP growth expectation at 5% saw many luminaries comment in denial but there is no denying the fact that growth remains sluggish and it is hard to extricate ourselves from this position in the short term.
The various statements emanating from political and economic leaders set the tune for global markets this week. The ECB president kept key rates unchanged at the governing council meet this week keeping the overall policy stance as accommodative in view of inflation remaining within the ECB target and expected a recovery in Euro economy in the second half of 2013. He also hinted at further rate cuts to aid recovery, if needed. The ECB presidents concerns about strengthening euro as a key risk to the Euro area recovery led to the euro hitting a twoweek low after touching a 15-month high in the previous week. The Japanese Yen, on the other hand, reversed its trajectory and pulled back to 92.1 after touching a low of 94.05 earlier this week against the dollar after the Finance Minister said that the yens drop had been overdone. In China, The Peoples Banks of China (PBOC) in its fourth quarterly monetary report, cautioned against inflationary pressures going forward and stated controlling inflation as a priority. European markets and Asian markets, ex Japan, fell after the ECB statement. The US markets, however, closed higher after positive trade data from China and US. Closer home, lower growth forecasts from the IMF and CSO spooked the markets. The INR closed at a four week low and the stock markets trended lower despite record foreign flows so far this year.
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US jobless claims fell to a seasonally adjusted 366,000 with the jobless rate at 7.9%. The four-week moving average fell to 350,500, the lowest level since March 2008. This shows that while lay-offs have reduced, new jobs creation has still not picked up. US non-farm productivity fell 2 percent for the quarter and labor cost rose 4.5 percent for the quarter The Euro zone composite PMI for January came in at 48.6 as against 47.2 in December, indicating a slight recovery although the index remains in the contraction zone. US trade deficit in December narrowed to US$ 38.5 bn, on the back of a drop in oil imports. Exports increased by 8.6 bn to US$ 186.4 bn while imports dropped by 6.2 bn to US$ 224.9 bn. The overall trade deficit for 2012 was lower at US$ 540.4 bn as against US$ 559.9 bn in 2011.
The INR ended the week at a four-week low on the back of lower GDP projections from the IMF and CSO. The Indian stock markets too remained weak throughout the week and ended negative
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Event CPI Treasury Budget (Treasury Budget - Level) Tertiary Index (Month over Month) Bank of Japan Announcement Bank of Japan Announcement (Change) Bank of Japan Announcement (Level) Industrial Production GDP (Quarter over Quarter) WPI Inflation (YoY Chg) New Series (Base 2004-05) Jobless Claims Merchandise Trade Industrial Production
Period Jan, 2013 Jan, 2013 Dec, 2012 Feb, 2013 Feb, 2013 Feb, 2013 Dec, 2012 Q4, 2012 Jan wk2/9, 2013 Dec, 2012 Jan, 2013
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We will like to remain on the sidelines for now as we suspect some more rupee weakness before the medium term rupee strengthening trend picks up again. Short at 54-54.10 with a astop at 54.40 day's close stop.
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