Jobless claims were up 23,500 against the expectation of a fall of 10,000 so not good feedback for the employment sector. This data for January was disappointing but not wholly unexpected and simply reinforces the fact that the employment sector remains very sluggish. Although we may have officially exited the recession on paper the reality is that we still have a long a painful road ahead.
The official unemployment rate remains at 7.8%. In addition to the employment data we also had the minutes from the February interest rate meeting for the UK. The BoE minutes came in 9-0 as expected to keep interest rates and QE on hold. Although all members voted to leave the size of the asset purchase programme unchanged- it was noted that some members felt the arguments for a further increase were “finely balanced”. This underlies the uncertainty within the MPC on the future impact of the £200 billion already introduced and therefore the MPC will not close the door on further QE if required.
Sterling is likely to remain subdued as the BoE feel that inflation will fall further in 2010 and further expansion of QE is a weapon that they will use again if necessary.
Back to Greece and yesterday it was agreed to give the government time to co-ordinate their future policy on their budget. However there was a clear tone of anger from the EU for the shocking handling of their finances to date and they have until the end of March to come up with some answers. The EU also stripped Greece of its voting rights at next months meeting in an attempt to demonstrate their anger towards Greece. So although no firm agenda or plan in place the markets have started to feel more comfortable or possibly bored with the affairs in Greece and investors once again started to dip their toes in again. The USD and the JPY weakened in line with a tentative return to risk. GBP/USD pushed back through 1.57 and tested 1.58 in early trading and EUR/USD pushed through 1.37.
Discuss on this on the Currency Exchange Forum




No Comments
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post.
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.