The latest Euro-zone data has been stronger than expected which will increase near-term confidence in the economic outlook. Policy-makers have also managed to stabilise immediate confidence surrounding the banking sector which will provide some degree of Euro support. There will still be very important reservations over the debt profiles of weaker members and financial-sector fears could return very quickly. With the currency outlook also geared to global economic trends, the Euro will still face important barriers to further gains.
The Euro maintained a firmer tone with the run of better than expected run of economic data compounded by reduced structural fears. The Euro strengthened to a 12-week high close to 1.31 against the dollar as there was some month-end demand for the currency.
There was relief over the banking-sector stress test results with 7 of the 91 banks deemed to have failed, although there were doubts whether the capital raising assumptions were realistic.
German consumer confidence rose to 3.9 in the latest month from a revised 3.6 for June, maintaining the recent run of favourable data. There was a further decline in German unemployment
There was an annual increase in Euro-zone money supply for the first time since January. There were also stronger than expected gains for business confidence which helped underpin sentiment towards the economy. There were still fears that the rest of the Euro area would lag behind the German economy.
The ECB did report that there had been a further tightening of credit conditions during the second quarter and this will raise some doubts over the financial-sector outlook. Similarly, ratings agency Standard & Poor’s stated that European banks were still vulnerable and this tempered Euro optimism to some extent.
Yen:
The yen will continue to gain some protection from doubts over the US economy and a suspicion that the global economic growth will also disappoint. Trends in risk appetite will also be important and the yen will gain when global confidence deteriorates. The Japanese fundamentals will remain under close scrutiny and there will be further speculation that the Bank of Japan and Finance Ministry will take further action in an attempt to block significant yen appreciation. The yen will find it difficult to sustain a robust advance.
The yen was able to resist significant selling pressure against the dollar and the US currency tested support below 87 later in the week with a decline to 8-month lows just below 86.50. The yen dipped to 12-week lows against the Euro before finding some respite.
Domestically, the Your Party which secured gains in the recent Upper-House elections and could enter a coalition with the government called for aggressive measures to curb deflation which would include a weaker yen.
Markets remained on high alert for comments and potential verbal intervention from Bank of Japan and Finance Ministry officials, especially as the dollar dipped towards the pivotal 85 fundamental and technical area against the Japanese currency.
The retail sales data was slightly stronger than expected with a 3.2% increase in the year to June. Markets were still sensitive to the deflation threat as consumer prices continued to decline. The latest industrial production data was also weaker than expected with a 1.5% decline for June. |