Trends in risk appetite will remain very important and the yen will certainly gain support when global confidence deteriorates. Interest rate trends will also continue to be watched closely and the yen will still find it difficult to gain strong support. There will be yen backing from capital repatriation over the next few weeks ahead of the fiscal year-end and there will also be exporter selling to take advantage of any yen weakness. From a medium-term perspective, overall confidence in the Japanese fundamentals is likely to remain weak as the rising debt burden continues to sap confidence.
The yen gained defensive support from a deterioration in risk appetite and declining global stock markets as increased fears over the Middle East situation triggered an international shift in confidence . The dollar weakened to test support below 82 for the first time since early February.
The yen will continue to gain support when risk aversion increases and there will also be increased fears over global growth prospects if energy prices continue to rise. Former top financial official Sakakibara stated that the dollar was likely to weaken to below the 80 level which had some negative impact on the US currency.
A government upgrade to its view of the economy did not have a major market impact. There was also a measured reaction to Moody’s downgrading of Japan’s credit rating to negative watch from stable with the dollar spiking higher only briefly.
There was a recorded 0.2% decline in core consumer prices in the year to January. There will be speculation that higher energy costs will boost headline prices, but underlying deflation is liable to persist.
Sterling:
Monetary policy will remain an extremely important focus and there will be expectations that the Bank of England will move to increase interest rates, possibly as soon as March. Higher yields will offer some Sterling support, but there will also be further fears surrounding the economy, especially as any increase in interest rates would weaken confidence at a time when fiscal tightening is already undermining confidence. A combination of higher inflation and weaker growth will not support Sterling even if interest rates are increased. Overall confidence in the UK economy will remain weak and Sterling’s best support still comes from a lack of confidence in the other major economies.
Sterling found it difficult to sustain gains during the week, failing to hold above 1.6250 against the dollar and also weakening against the Euro.
The Bank of England MPC minutes recorded a 6-3 vote for unchanged rates at the February meeting. As well as Sentence and Weale, who had voted for a hike in January, Dale voted to increase rates and Sentance was looking for a 0.50% increase to 1.00%. The majority preferred to leave rates on hold, but there was certainly greater concern over the inflation outlook and members suggested that rates would be increased if there were signs of firmer growth. There was still a high degree of caution over the inflation and growth outlook, especially with fiscal tightening in place.
The latest government borrowing data was stronger than expected with a surplus of GBP3.7bn for January compared with a revised GBP14.5bn deficit the previous month. January is a strong month seasonally for tax receipts, but there was some relief that there was an annual improvement.
Sterling again hit resistance above the 1.62 level against the dollar during Thursday and there was heavy selling pressure during US trading which pushed it to below 1.61. The UK currency also weakened to a three-week low near 0.8575 against the Euro. Sterling will tend to under-perform when international risk appetite deteriorates, but there will also be domestic concerns.
The latest CBI retail sales survey recorded a sharp decline to 6 for February from 37 the previous month while the prices component rose to the highest level for 20 years and consumer confidence remained weak which increased stagflation fears. |