The Weekly Wrap – A Trade Deal Delivers Trump That Weaker Dollar

In This Article:

The Stats

It was a particularly quiet week on the economic calendar, in the week ending 27th December.

A mere 13 stats were monitored over the Christmas break. A whopping 94 stats had been monitored in the week prior.

Of the 13 stats, 5 came in ahead forecasts, with 7 economic indicators coming up short of forecast. 1 stat was in line with forecasts.

Looking at the numbers, 7 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 6, 4 stats reflected a deterioration from previous.

For the Greenback, it was a bearish week, with a 0.63% slide on Friday doing most of the damage.

For the week, the Dollar Spot Index fell by 0.79% to 96.919.

Out of the U.S

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

On Monday, durable goods orders and core durable goods orders disappointed. While core durable goods orders came in flat in November, durable goods orders slid by 2%. Economists had forecast a 1.5% increase. In October, core orders had risen by 0.3%, with durable goods orders up by 0.2%.

November’s new home sales figures were somewhat better, however, with sales rising by 1.3% month-on-month.  In October, sales had fallen by 2.7%.

With a half-day on Tuesday and the markets closed on Wednesday, the focus then shifted to the weekly jobless claims figures on Thursday.

Initial jobless claims came in at 222k, which was down from 235k from the previous week.

In spite of the negative numbers on Monday, it was a pickup in risk appetite that weighed on the Greenback in the week.

Positive comments from Beijing and Washington supported record highs for the U.S equity markets in the week.

In the equity markets, the Dow rose by 0.67%, while the S&P500 and NASDAQ gained 0.58% and 0.91% respectively. Trump will be happy that the U.S majors hit new record highs and let’s not forget about the weaker dollar…

Out of the UK

It was a particularly quiet week on the economic calendar.

Following a hectic previous week, there were no material stats to provide the Pound with direction in the week.

A string of weak numbers from the week prior, coupled with negative sentiment towards Johnson’s Brexit Bill had weighed on the Pound.

With Parliament in recess until 5th January and no stats to rock the boat, there was some much-needed support.

A 0.65% gain on Friday delivered the upside as the Greenback hit reverse.

For the week, the Pound rose by 0.61% to end the week at $1.3078.

For the FTSE100, the stronger Pound had limited impact as sentiment towards the U.S – China trade agreement delivered upside. The FTSE100 ended the week up by 0.82%.