Brexit and Trade Chatter to Drive the GBP and USD
Forex Daily Outlook – March 14, 2019 · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session was on the lighter side this morning, with key stats limited to Japan’s August inflation figures and September’s prelim manufacturing PMI.

For the Japanese Yen,

On inflation, Japan’s national core CPI rose by 0.9% Year-on-year, which was in line with expectations and, whilst the annual rate of core inflation picked up from July’s 0.8%, continued to fall well below the BoJ’s 2% objective. Month-on-month, consumer prices rose by 0.5%.

Japan’s manufacturing PMI rose from 52.5 to a 3-month high 52.9 in September, according to prelim figures, coming in short of a forecasted increase to 53.1.

  • Input cost inflation accelerated at the fastest pace since Mar-11, while output prices increased at a slower pace from the previous month.

  • New orders increased at a faster pace, with new export orders.

  • The pace of hiring slowed, with backlogs building by a greater amount in the month.

  • While firms remained optimistic about the economic outlook, business confidence fell to a 22-month low, with the decline attributed to geo-political tensions and ultimately trade.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥112.433 to ¥112.455 against the Dollar upon release of the figures, before easing to ¥112.53 at the time of writing, down 0.04% for the session.

Elsewhere, the Kiwi Dollar and the Aussie Dollar were in the red following strong gains through the week. The Aussie Dollar was down 0.11% to $0.7284 at the time of writing, with the Kiwi Dollar down just 0.01% to $0.6684, minor data out of New Zealand providing support, visitor numbers seeing a marked increase year-on-year in August.

In the equity markets, the softer Yen and pickup in manufacturing sector activity provided support to the Nikkei, which was up 0.52% at the time of writing, with the Hang Seng and ASX200 up 0.26% and by 0.57% respectively, overnight gains in the U.S providing support early on, while the CSI300 bucked the trend, down by 0.07%.

The Day Ahead:

For the EUR, following a particularly quiet week on the data front, key stats scheduled for release through the morning include finalized 2nd quarter GDP numbers out of France and prelim September private sector PMI numbers out of France, Germany and the Eurozone.

The markets will be looking for any negative effects from the ongoing trade war between the U.S and China, with any better than expected PMI numbers likely to provide the EUR with another boost. The devil will be in the details, with focus likely to be on new orders and wholesale inflation.