A Busy Economic Calendar Puts the EUR, the Loonie, and the U.S Dollar in Focus

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

It was a busier start to the day on the economic calendar this morning. The Kiwi Dollar, the Aussie Dollar, and the Japanese Yen were in action this morning. There was also economic data from China in focus.

For the Japanese Yen

Industrial production fell by 2.1% in February, partially reversing a 4.3% rise in January. Economists had forecast for a 1.2% decline.

According to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry,

  • Industries that mainly contributed to the decrease were:

    • Motor vehicles.

    • Electric machinery, and information, and communication electronics equipment.

    • Chemicals (excl. inorganic, organic chemicals and medicine).

  • Industries that mainly contributed to the increase were:

    • Production machinery.

    • Transport equipment (excl. motor vehicles).

    • Electronic parts and devices.

  • Forecasts are for production in March 2021 to fall by 1.9%. This was up from a forecasted 6.1% slide.

  • Production is projected to jump by 9.3% in April 2021.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥110.329 to ¥110.328 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Japanese Yen was down by 0.20% to ¥110.58 against the U.S Dollar.

For the Kiwi Dollar

Business confidence was in focus early this morning.

In March, the ANZ Business Confidence Index declined from 7.0 to 0.0.

According to the latest ANZ Report,

  • While business confidence fell by 7 points to be flat, some details were stronger for March.

    • Employment intentions increased by 5 points, with capacity utilization up 2 points.

    • Investment intentions remained little changed, however.

    • Expected costs rose 2 points to a net 74% expecting higher costs ahead.

    • Inflation expectations picked up from 1.76% to 1.95%.

  • There were also some negatives, however.

    • Profit expectations fell from 1.3 to 0.5, with ease of credit falling from -31.0 to -38.8.

    • Activity vs same month one year ago was down marginally from 9.2 to 7.6.

    • Employment vs same month one year ago was also weaker, albeit modestly.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.69912 to $0.69899 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Kiwi Dollar was up by 0.11% to $0.6989.

For the Aussie Dollar

Private sector credit figures drew attention this morning.

Private sector credit increased by in February. In January, total private sector credit had risen by 0.2%.

According to the RBA,

  • Personal credit fell by 0.5%.  In January, personal credit had fallen by 0.8%.

  • Business credit stalled after having fallen by 0.1% in January.

  • Housing credit rose by a further 0.4%. In January, housing credit had also risen by 0.4%.

  • Year-on-year, total credit rose by 1.6%. In February 2020, total credit had risen by 2.7%.

  • A 12.3% slide in personal credit was a drag on the headline figure.