RBA hike as the BoC cuts. XAU tumbles on profit taking
CURRENCY TRADING SUMMARY – 05 MARCH 2008 (00:30GMT)
·U.S. Dollar Trading (USD) was mixed versus a number of majors yesterday tracking data and rate outcomes of other central banks for a change. In events specific to the
·The Euro (EUR) was once again range bound, trading higher during the day despite the Euro zone policy makers pressuring Washington to do more to halt the dollar’s decline. On the data front Eurozone PPI data came in on expectations of 0.8% for the month of January. Overall the EURUSD traded with a low of 1.5174 and a high of 1.5250 before closing the day at 1.5210 in the
·The Japanese Yen (JPY) strengthened against the dollar, as investors’ concern over the
·The
·The Australian Dollar (AUD) had a data filled day first with Retail Sales figures for the month of January coming in unchanged from the previous at 0.0%. The Aussie Dollar sell off was limited ahead of the much anticipated RBA rate announcement in which board decided to lift the cash rate to 7.25% (25 basis point hike), the highest level in 12 years. Nonetheless the AUD did suffer on the back of tentative comments in which policy makers noted “some moderation in household demand is beginning to occur” in which “the extent of the moderation was uncertain. In other news the current account deficit widened to a record $19.4 billion from it previously revised $16.4 billion. Overall the AUDUSD traded with a low of 0.9220 and a high of 0.9371 before closing the day at 0.9274 in the
·The Canadian Dollar (CAD) fell to the lowest in more than a week after the central bank reduced the benchmark interest rate a half-percentage point and signaled it probably will cut again to help the economy cope with a slowdown in the U.S. Overall the USDCAD traded with a low of 0.9854 and a high of 0.9978 before closing the day at 0.9950 in the New York session.
·Gold (XAU) fell sharply on profit taking having traded at record highs the previous session. XAU traded with a high of 987.50 and a low of 959.35.
TECHNICAL COMMENTARY