Germany is pulling again and Europe will soon leave
recession behind, while the US economy should continue to grow moderately. The EUR/USD
exchange rate is reaching the important resistance line of 1.3820; the next
target is 1.44.Europe emerging from recession
In January the German jobless rate declined to 6.8%,
the lowest level in 20 years. Unemployment fell for the second straight month with
the job market seeing the biggest fall in a year. The positive trend should
persist throughout 2013 as the debt crisis fades away and will help
peripheral nations pull out of recession. Wages are expected to rise as well
and will boost confidence and increase consumption. The EUR/USD exchange
rate is targeting 1.3820, which corresponds to the higher channel line of the
past eight months. It should hold at first; nonetheless, the uptrend should
persist, and the next target should be 1.44.
In reality, some uncertainty
remains over the Italian election results at the end of February. Former Premier
Berlusconi, the leader of the far right coalition, has just declared that
Germany should stop its hegemonic policy toward Europe or Italy will have to leave
the Eurozone. However, the financial markets expect the center-left coalition
to win the elections. In Spain, on the other hand, the revision of the deficit
targets by February could inspire Moody to cut the credit rating again. This will
raise the cost of the Spanish debt and press the government to ask for help from
the European Central Bank. Finally, Greece will probably not meet its
commitments to the world financial community and might ask for help again this
year. None of these events would be surprising.
Political
friction may cause US rating to be slashed again
After
having increased 3.1% on average in the third quarter of 2012, the US Gross
Domestic Product fell 0.1% in the last quarter of the year. However, the
decline should only be temporary. Defense spending fell the most since 1972, and super
storm Sandy took a chunk out of the supply chain. In fact, the pace
of growth in private domestic demand rose 3.1% and was in line with 2012’s
positive numbers. Also, business spending remained strong. The ISM
manufacturing index rose to 53.1 in January from 50.2 in December. The biggest push
came from inventories, new orders, and employment. Decline of the
unemployment rate is set to continue this year as well, despite January’s uptick
to 7.9%. Hourly earnings are still positive at 2.1% year on year. Finally,
growth in the housing sector should expand and eventually accelerate.
Another deal for
the reduction of the deficit will probably be made at the last minute. The
increase of revenue limits and the spending cuts agreed to so far by Mr. Obama
could cause GDP growth to contract by around 1.0%. Cuts in the
deficit should contain inflation and increase the budget’s balance. However, fiscal
consolidation is not enough to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio. Despite rumors
about unleashing the third round of quantitative easing (QE3), the Federal
Reserve should keep its monetary policy unchanged until the end of the year. A
high and consistent number of newly employed is expected before rates rise
again. This will limit downside challenges, but it will not boost growth.
The data contained herein
is believed to be drawn from reliable sources but cannot be guaranteed, neither
the information presented nor any opinion expressed constitute a solicitation
of the purchase or sale of any forex, futures or commodity product. Those
individuals acting on this information are responsible for their own actions.
Forex, futures and commodity trading may not be suitable for all recipients of
this report. The risk of loss in trading forex, futures and options can be
substantial. Each investor must consider whether this is a suitable investment.
All recommendations are subject to change at any time. Past performance is not
a guarantee of future results.

Webring - Forex
No comments:
Post a Comment