Market Review: 23/09/2013 22:10GMT
The single currency opened higher and rose to an intra-day high of 1.3555 at New Zealand open after voters in Germany gave Angela Merkel a third term as Chancellor in elections held on Sunday. Price retreated in the Asian morning and traded sideways before falling to 1.3508 in the European morning after the release of weaker-than-expected Germany and EU manufacturing PMI data. The euro remained under pressure in the New York morning, and dropped to a session low at 1.3480 before stabilising.
Germany manufacturing PMI (flash) in September came in 51.3, worse than the forecast of 52.2. EU, and the manufacturing PMI (flash) in September came in 51.1, worse than the forecast of 51.8.
Versus the Japanese yen, the greenback remained under pressure in Asia and retreated to 98.86 in the European morning on continued expectations that the Fed will not taper its bond purchases anytime soon. The price dropped to an intra-day low at 98.65 after Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William C. Dudley said policy makers must “forcefully” push against economic headwinds.
The British pound traded with a firm undertone in Australia and strengthened to 1.6032 in the Asian morning before rising to an intra-day high at 1.6073 due to cross-buying of sterling vs. euro. EUR/GBP fell from 0.8475 to 0.8404. However, the price pared intra-day gains, and retreated to 1.6017 in the New York morning before stabilising.
In other news, ECB's Draghi said that he expects recovery to continue in the current quarter despite weak industrial production in July, and the underlying price pressures in the eurozone is expected to remain subdued. Moreover, he emphasized that inflation risks are broadly balanced, and the ECB monetary policy stance will remain accommodative for as long as necessary.
On the data front, U.S. Markit PMI preliminary (Sep) came in at 52.8, vs. the forecast of 54.0. U.S. Chicago Fed index (Aug) came in at 0.14, vs. the forecast of -0.05, previous reading is revised to -0.43.
Data to be released on Tuesday:
U.K. BBA mortgage approvals, Germany IFO business climate and current assessment, Canada retail sales, U.S. retail sales, house price index, S&P house price index and consumer confidence.