The Weekly Wrap – Sentiment Towards Trade and the Middle East Overshadowed the Stats

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a quiet week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 3rd January 2020.

Just 30 stats were monitored over the New Year. A whopping 94 stats had been monitored in the week leading into the Christmas Holidays, before a particularly quiet week last week.

Of the 30 stats, 12 came in ahead forecasts, with 14 economic indicators coming up short of forecast. 4 stats were in line with forecasts.

Looking at the numbers, 14 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 16, 13 stats reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, it was another bearish week, in spite of rising tensions in the Middle East.

For the week, the Dollar Spot Index fell by 0.08% to 96.838.

Out of the U.S

It was a relatively busy week for the Dollar, with the stats skewed to the negative.

November trade and pending home sales figures, together with December’s Chicago PMI kicked things off.

The goods trade deficit narrowed from $66.53bn to $63.19bn, with pending home sales rising by 1.2%. In October sales had fallen by 1.3%.

Manufacturing sector activity in Chicago contracted at a slower pace, with the PMI rising from 46.3 to 48.9.

The focus then shifted to consumer confidence figures, with the CB Consumer Confidence Index falling from 126.8 to 126.5. The numbers had a muted impact on the Dollar, however, as sentiment towards trade continued to overshadow the stats.

On Thursday, initial jobless claims rose by 222k, coming in ahead of a forecasted 225k increase.

Things were less impressive for the manufacturing sector, however.

The markets preferred ISM Manufacturing PMI fell from 48.1 to 47.2, with the numbers on Friday pinning back the Dollar.

Outside of the numbers, it was a mixed week for the Greenback. Positive sentiment towards trade weighed on the Dollar while rising tensions in the Middle East provided support.

In the equity markets, the Dow & S&P500 fell by 0.04% and by 0.16% respectively, while NASDAQ rose by 0.16%. A Friday sell-off did the damage as the markets reacted to rising tensions in the Middle East.

Out of the UK

It was a relatively quiet week on the economic calendar.

Finalized manufacturing PMI and construction PMI numbers provided direction in the 2nd half of the week.

In a shortened week, the manufacturing PMI came in at 47.5, falling short of a forecast of 47.7 on Thursday.

On Friday, the construction PMI fell from 45.3 to 44.4.

Unimpressive numbers contributed to the Pound’s downside in the 2nd half of the week, reversing gains from the 1st half.

For the week, the Pound rose by 0.04% to end the week at $1.3083. The Pound had hit $1.32 levels at the year-end…