Yesterday’s Trading:

My euro expectations were fulfilled on Tuesday. The euro updated its maximum against the USD during European trades, dropping to 1.0818 and then returning to 1.0868. The only thing that didn’t fit with my forecast was what happened at the end: the close price was higher than I thought it would be.

The maximum was updated after a fall in European stock indices which followed the Chinese ones. The Shanghai composite fell by 6.72% to 2,749.79 due to a continuation of capital flight from China. This capital flight reached $1 trillion last year due to the devaluation of the yuan, a slowing of Chinese economic growth and a fall of the stock market.

Pressure on the euro came from a rise in oil prices and a fall in the euro/pound cross. The Iraqi oil minister and the OPEC representative for Kuwait hinted that the organization is ready to reduce quotas in order to stabilize the price. That is, of course, if other countries which are not part of the cartel follow suit.

The US consumer confidence index for January stood at 98.1 (forecasted: 97.0, previous: reassessed from 96.5 to 96.3).

Main news of the day (EET):

  • 09:00, German consumer confidence from GfK for February, Swiss consumer activeness from UBS for December. UK housing price index;
  • 09:45, French consumer confidence in January;
  • 17:30, US data on oil reserves from the Ministry for Energy;
  • 21:00, Fed decision on interest rates announced along with further words from the FOMC;
  • 22:00 New Zealand interest rate decision and announcement from RBNZ.
  • Market Expectations:

    Today’s key event is the FOMC meeting. No one expects the Fed to up the rates. Market participant interest will be on the monetary policy announcement. The tone of the announcement will set the direction for the dollar for the coming two months. A soft tone will cause a weakening and a hard tone will cause a strengthening.

    Technical Analysis:

  • Intraday target maximum: n/a, minimum: n/a, close: n/a;
  • Intraday volatility for last 10 weeks: 100 points (4 figures).
  • Print Friendly, PDF & Email