Poor existing home sales, durable goods orders, and a negative Beige Book all point to further interest rate cuts in the
CURRENCY TRADING SUMMARY –29 NOVEMBER 2007 (00:30GMT)
·U.S. Dollar Trading (USD) was weaker against the majors barring CHF and JPY as sales of existing homes fell 1.2% to its lowest level since 1999. Durable goods orders fell for a third straight month, pulling back 0.4%. The Beige Book did not offer any respite for the battered greenback, noting downbeat retail spending and a quite depressed residential real estate all pointing to a slow down in US economic growth. In
·The Euro (EUR) initially was sold off but recovered after the release of the Beige Book to remain relatively unchanged despite the volatility. Overall the EURUSD traded with a low of 1.4712 and a high of 1.4858 before closing the day at 1.4855.
·The Japanese Yen (JPY) was sold off against the US dollar as the market sought to re-establish carry trades following news of possible rate cuts in the
·The Sterling (GBP) benefited from the negative sentiment expressed in the Beige book recovering most of its losses from the week. Overall the GBPUSD traded with a low of 2.0584 and a high of 2.0824 before closing the session at 2.0811. Looking ahead, Gov King amongst others is speaking tonight to the Treasury Committee and mortgage approvals are due for release later today.
·The Australian Dollar (AUD) was spurred by news of a bigger than expected US economic slowdown which could lead to rate cuts sooner rather than later. The Aussie was one of the big gainers in the overnight session especially against the low-yielding Japanese Yen. The AUDUSD traded with a low of 0.8721 and a high of 0.8920 before closing the day at 0.8915. Looking ahead, CAPEX is due out today.
·Gold (XAU) was weaker in response to a drop in crude oil. Gold fell by US$10.20 to US$803.80 an ounce.
TECHNICAL COMMENTARY