FINANCIAL MARKET REVIEW FOR JUL 27, 2018
Economic data released through the Asian session this morning included July core inflation figures out of Japan and 2nd quarter wholesale inflation numbers out of Australia. For the Japanese Yen, Tokyo core CPI rose by 0.8% year-on-year in July, which was better than a forecasted 0.7%, with inflation picking up from June’s 0.7%, though the numbers will still leave the BoJ struggling, the 0.8% number sitting well below the BoJ’s target, with inflation showing very little sign of a shift to give the BoJ an opportunity to move on policy. The Japanese Yen moved from ¥111.218 to ¥111.159 against the Dollar upon release of the figures, before rising to ¥110.98 at the time of writing, a gain of 0.22% for the session. For the Aussie Dollar, based on figures released by the ABS, final demand prices rose by 1.5% in the 2ndquarter, yearon-year, the annual rate of wholesale price inflation easing from a 1st quarter 1.7%. Month-on-month, final demand prices rise by 0.3%, coming up short of a forecasted 0.4% rise and a 1st quarter 0.5% increase. The month-on-month increase was attributed to prices received for heavy and civil engineering construction (+1.5%); building construction (+1.2%) and petroleum refining and petroleum fuel manufacturing (+11.9%). Offsetting the upside were falls in prices received for other agriculture (-2.9%); fishing (-18.9%) and professional and scientific equipment manufacturing (-2.3%). The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.73848 to $0.73814 upon release of the figures, before rising to $0.7388, a gain of 0.15% for the morning. For the Kiwi Dollar, a lack of data left the Kiwi flat for the session, following Thursday’s 0.78% slide, the Kiwi down just 0.04% to $0.6781 at the time of writing. In the equity markets, it was a mixed morning, the Nikkei reversing start of the day gains following the release of the July inflation figures to sit with a 0.28% rise at the time of writing, while the Hang Seng and CSI300 look to be heading for a 2nd consecutive day of losses, down 0.05% and by 0.09% respectively. For the Hang Seng, a more than 1% slide in Tencent holdings contributed to the pullback, with tech stocks under pressure following Facebook’s close to 20% slide on Thursday. Things were better for the ASX200, following 2 consecutive days of losses, the index up 0.74% at the time of writing, the gains pulling the index into positive territory for the current week. For the EUR, economic data scheduled for release out of the Eurozone this morning is limited to prelim 2ndquarter GDP numbers and June consumer spending figures out of France. While 1st estimate figures are forecasted to show a slight uptick in growth in the 2nd quarter, which will likely have the greater impact on the EUR, consumer spending is forecasted to slow and, with Draghi keeping the outlook for policy unchanged, any slight pickup in growth, which has been expected in the 2nd quarter, is unlikely to fuel a EUR rebound to $1.17 levels. At the time of writing, the EUR was up 0.05% to $1.1649, with today’s stats and continued response to the ECB press conference to provide direction through the day.
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