British Pound Ready for this Week’s Top Event Risk: UK 2Q GDP

  • Dollar Recovers but Doubt Reigns Over EUR/USD, GBP/USD Reversals

  • British Pound Ready for this Week’s Top Event Risk: UK 2Q GDP

  • Australian Dollar Sent on a Wild Ride After 2Q CPI, China Data Releases

  • Euro Advances as Eurozone Economy Reading Turns Positive

  • New Zealand Dollar Rallies Despite RBNZ Hold, High Currency Lament

  • Japanese Yen Crosses Advance…But Not on Carry

  • Gold Drops for the First Time in 5 Days with Dollar Rebound

Dollar Recovers but Doubt Reigns Over EUR/USD, GBP/USD Reversals

Confronted with a serious, technical breakdown and a rebound back within a well-formed range; the USDollar followed the easier path this past session. The hearty 0.6 percent rally for the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (ticker = USDollar) no doubt has many thinking we have seen a lasting, bullish reversal for the pained currency. However, the backdrop for fundamentals and market conditions don’t support such a proactive assessment by the reserve currency. Looking to the S&P 500 as a proxy for the combined influence of traditional risk appetite and confidence founded in stimulus, the 0.4 percent dip – the biggest in four weeks – hardly turned the bulls off the scent. We need something definitive to upset the balance of moral hazard and yield chase. The improvement in the July Markit manufacturing report and 8.3 percent jump in pending home sales erodes the argument for a Taper delay, but not materially enough unite the speculative masses on a shared timeframe. The same will be true of Thursday’s initial jobless claims and durable goods numbers. While they are meaningful reads of economic activity, they do not have the clout to sway the Fed’s timetable to ease off QE3. That definitive move may not come until next week’s GDP and NFPs.

British Pound Ready for this Week’s Top Event Risk: UK 2Q GDP

The pound has made a strategic correction this past session pulling GBPUSD back following a six-day rally – the longest bull run for the pair in 15 months. A pullback is to be expected and not just because of the greenback’s rebound. In the upcoming session, sterling traders face key event risk that taps into what truly matters: economic activity and its imposition for more stimulus from the Bank of England. Through the first quarter of the year, the cable collapsed over 1,500 pips as the markets evaluated the risk of a ‘Triple Dip’ recession and assumed that the local central bank would have to play catch up to the enormous stimulus efforts made by the Fed, ECB and BoJ. Yet, those fears never came to pass. The UK avoided its third recession in this cycle and the policy group held its bearing. Yet, despite the relief the pound is still depressed.