Financial Market Review for February 23 2018 In the curruncy market, the Dollar as in recovery through the Asian session, following a pullback on Thursday, with focus through the rest of the day being on inflation and GDP numbers out of the Eurozone, FED chatter and Canada’s inflation figures for January. Economic data released through the Asian session this morning included New Zealand’s 4th quarter retail sales numbers and January inflation figures out of Japan. For the Kiwi Dollar there was some good news, with retail sales surging by 1.7%, quarter-on-quarter, coming in ahead of a forecasted 1.4% rise and 3rd quarter 0.2% increase. Core retail sales was even better, rising by 1.8% against a forecasted 0.7% increase, following a 3rd quarter 0.6% rise. According to StatsNZ, out of the 15 retail industries, 11 recorded higher sales volumes, with the F&B sector seeing the largest increase, up 3.7%, more than reversing a 3rd quarter 2.6% fall. On the downside, Accommodation was the largest drag, down 2.3%, which partially reversed a record 6% rise in the 3rd quarter. The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.73318 to $0.73418 upon release of the figures before going into reverse, with the Kiwi Dollar down 0.58% to $0.7305 at the time of writing. For the Yen, January inflation figures may have been better than forecasted, but with the annual rate of core inflation siting at 0.9%, there’s certainly little impetus for the Bank of Japan to begin shifting on monetary policy any time soon. The Yen moved from ¥106.728 to ¥106.776 against the Dollar upon release of the figures, with tepid wage growth and soft domestic consumption continuing to place downward pressure on inflation. At the time of writing, the Yen was down 0.22% to ¥106.98 against the Dollar. For the Aussie Dollar, there were no material stats leaving it at the mercy of the U.S Dollar, which was on another run through the early part of the session, leaving the Aussie Dollar down 0.22% at $0.7829, the Aussie Dollar recovering from an intraday low $0.7817. After another day of negatives for the EUR from a data perspective, stats out of the Eurozone this morning include the Eurozone’s finalized January inflation figures and Germany’s finalized GDP numbers for the 4th quarter. Based on forecasts, the finalized GDP numbers are forecasted to be in line with 1st estimate numbers, with any deviation likely to have a greater impact on the EUR ahead of the inflation figures later this morning. On the inflation numbers, while finalized headline inflation is forecasted to be in line with prelim figures, the annual rate of core inflation is forecasted to rise to 1% that could provide the EUR with some upside upon release. The markets will be conscious that the ECB minutes released on Thursday noted that there could be a near-term shift in forward guidance on the asset purchasing program. An uptick in core inflation would certainly bring that forward.
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