FOREX: US Dollar, Japanese Yen finish week higher versus Majors on Risk Aversion

By CountingPips.com

The U.S. dollar and Japanese yen surged higher in forex trading this week against the other major currencies while the U.S. stock markets had their worst week in 10 months. Risk aversion was the dominant theme of the week and was triggered by numerous factors including Greece’s continuing financial woes, Barack Obama’s plan for tighter regulation on banks, disappointing earnings and fears that China may slow bank lending.

The dollar surged higher versus the euro for the second straight week as the euro (EUR/USD pair) fell to its lowest exchange rate since July 30th on Thursday at the 1.4029 level. The dollar also increased for the week versus the Swiss franc, British pound, Canadian dollar and New Zealand dollar and Australian dollar while falling versus the Japanese yen.

The largest gain for the dollar this week was against the Canadian dollar with a 287 pip increase followed by a 282 pip advance versus the New Zealand dollar (see chart). The dollar also rose by over 200 pips against the euro and the Australian dollar.

The Japanese yen, meanwhile, gained ground for the second straight week versus these other major currencies with the exception of the U.S. dollar, which the yen has climbed against for three weeks in a row. The yen increased by over 300 pips this week versus the euro (+360 pips), the Canadian dollar (+329 pips) and the New Zealand dollar (+322 pips).

The yen also rose by 297 pips over the British pound, by 286 pips against the Australian dollar, by 230 pips versus the Swiss franc and by 95 pips against the U.S. dollar.

The U.S. stock markets ended the week with three straight negative sessions as the Dow fell by roughly 217 points on Friday and finished the week 537 points lower. The Dow’s 4.1 percent drop for the week marked the largest decline since March when stocks started 2009’s remarkable uptrend. The Nasdaq decreased by 60.41 points on Friday and declined by 3.6 percent for the week while the S&P 500 dropped by 24.72 points on Friday to a 3.9 percent weekly decline.

Next week will be another interesting and potentially volatile week in the forex markets with many major economic releases coming out. Interest rate decisions by the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand are all due in the middle of the week while there will Gross Domestic Product reports from Canada, the U.K. and the U.S. There will also be new and existing homes sales data, durable goods and consumer confidence data out the U.S.

Have a great weekend.

GBPUSD’s bounce reaches 1.6456 only

GBPUSD’s bounce from 1.5829 reaches 1.6456 level only. The subsequent pullback suggests that a cycle top is being formed on daily chart. Deeper decline to test 1.5829 key support is expected next week. A breakdown below this level will confirm the cycle top and indicate that the downtrend from 1.6875 has resumed. Resistance is at 1.6456, only rise above this level could take price back to range trading between 1.5708 and 1.7042.

For long term analysis, GBPUSD has formed a cycle bottom at 1.5708 level on weekly chart. Sideways consolidation in range between 1.5708 and 1.7042 is expected in a couple of weeks and another fall towards 1.4800 is possible.

Weekly Forex Forecast

A Greenback Alternative Part 2 – “Large Cap” Versus “Small Cap”

A Greenback Alternative Part 2 – “Large Cap” Versus “Small Cap”

Justice Litle, Editorial Director, Taipan Publishing Group

If countries are like companies, which ones to buy? To answer that question, we begin with the characteristics of a good long-term investment – and then consider the merits of “large cap” versus “small cap” currencies.

Earlier this week, we explored how fiat currencies are like shares of stock. The question was then asked: If countries are like companies, which ones should we buy?

One can begin with the qualifications of a good long-term stock investment. Here are a few:

• A strong management team

• A clean and stable balance sheet (not too much debt)

• Attractive assets on the books

• Positive cash flow

• An “economic moat” (sustainable competitive advantage)

• Clear opportunities for long-term growth

• Attractive valuation (relative to long-term prospects)

As an investor, when you find a company that hits all the above criteria, you don’t just dip a toe in the water. You buy a good slug of shares and hold on for years.

One can think about countries (and thus currencies) the same way. For a country, the “management team” is akin to political leadership. The “balance sheet” is akin to the balance of payments (and long-term debt levels). “Attractive assets” count for things like natural resources and human capital. Positive cash flow reflects the balance of trade… and so on. You get the idea.

By the above criteria, the “big three” currencies – the euro, the yen, and of course the USD – all look like dog poo.

Europe and Japan Grow Violently Ill

Before we continue, it should be noted that the U.S. dollar is in a clear uptrend right now. Taipan Daily anticipated this would happen back in early December.

In case you missed it, in Dec. 9 we ran Taipan Daily “Outbreak Alert – P1N1 Forex Flu.”  In that piece we said the following:

Even though the $USD is the carrier, and the U.S. central banking system is “Patient Zero,” America has a sort of built-in immune system defense (by virtue of its still unchallenged world reserve currency status)…

“Patient Zero” is also stronger than average. Even now, the U.S. economy is large, powerful and diverse relative to most others. Again, the U.S. is the keeper of the world’s reserve currency. Its government debt is the most desirable. It is home base for the most liquid capital markets in the world.

These superlatives may eventually slip away, but they have not done so yet. The above traits make the U.S. like a big, burly individual who can handle being sick better than others.

Think of the lumberjack with a hardy constitution who laughs at the prospect of a nasty cold. What happens when that cold is passed on to someone smaller… frailer… weaker? Perhaps the lumberjack shrugs and goes back to work – while the weaker individual finds himself in a hospital bed.

Countries like Iceland and Latvia have already learned this lesson the hard way.

In the early Taipan Daily P1N1 piece, we then went on to note the clear signs of “outbreak” in countries like Japan, Greece, Britain and Venezuela.

Since that broadcast, the euro has plummeted to multi-month lows as the Greece situation gets splashed all over the financial papers. (By the way, Spain could be next.) Japan has been told by the financial wizards at PIMCO that it must “reflate or die.” Venezuela has pushed through an emergency 50% devaluation of its currency. And Britain, by some observers’ grim estimations, is still on track to becoming another Iceland.

The point here is that, although the U.S. dollar now rises, it does not do so out of virtue. The fresh $USD uptrend is born of size, circumstance, and the inertia of historical advantage. In sheer circulation terms, the greenback is the biggest game in town… and if balance sheet woes count as sickness, king dollar’s major competitors (i.e. the euro and the yen) are all but barfing up chunks of lung.

Large Caps Versus Small Caps

Back to the opening question – which countries (i.e. currencies) to buy? Now that we’ve established “none of the above” when it comes to the big boys, think about this.

Countries and companies have another similarity in that one can think of “large caps” versus “small caps.” By way of this analogy, the large cap currencies – i.e. the scrip of the big rich Western giants – are the ones we want to stay away from. The “small caps” are where the value is…

Take a country like Australia, for example. When one tallies up all the things Oz has going for it, “the lucky country” starts looking damned attractive. (They gave it that nickname for a reason.)

For starters, Australia’s economic recovery is no smoke-and-mirrors fluke. It is the real deal. That is a huge plus in comparison to the rest of the deeply indebted Western world, where painful deleveraging is a process that will most likely take years – not months, but years – to fully play out.

Second, Australia is blessed with prodigious natural resources… and a ravenous source of demand right next door. Not only does the lucky country possess vast quantities of the metals, minerals and various raw materials that Asia will want (and need) to buy in the coming years, it happens to be perfectly situated as a supplier.

Third, Australia’s balance sheet is attractive. Oz is not drowning in long-term debt, nor piling on additional debt like mad in an effort to buy itself out of a jam (as Japan has already done, the United States is currently doing, and the eurozone may soon be forced to do – if it doesn’t crack up first).

Hidden Assets on the Books

The other attractive thing about Australia – and other countries like it blessed with natural resources – is the nature of “hidden assets on the books.” Let me try to explain…

One time-tested value investing strategy is poring over balance sheets for the presence of hidden or undervalued assets, and then waiting for the market to recognize or “unlock” the true value of those assets.

For a true-to-life example, imagine coming across a company that has a few million acres of timberland buried in its list of current assets. For quirky accounting reasons, one might find that this timberland is being carried on the books not at present day value, i.e. 2010 prices, but instead at 1982 prices, i.e. prices paid in the year the acreage was acquired. This actually happens a lot… and sometimes management does it on purpose, to give insiders the chance to accumulate shares more cheaply.

When a situation like this arises – and again, it happens more often than one might think – a savvy value investor will recognize that the company is actually worth far more than Wall Street is giving it credit for, because such-and-such an asset is “hidden on the books” at a far lower recorded price than present day value would reflect. Sometimes the discrepancy between recorded value and present value is so great, it becomes possible to buy in for less than the dollars-per-share value of the tangible asset itself… and get a profitable business thrown in for free!

Your editor is reminded of this “hidden assets on the books” strategy when he considers all those hard assets and raw materials that countries like Australia, Canada, Norway and the like have locked away in the ground.

After all… if we expect the major fiat currencies of the West to turn into confetti longer term, then what is going to happen to the price of highly desirable resources like oil and copper and uranium and gold? If we further expect Asia to boom in the long run, how much more attractive will those hard assets become? And, in turn, how will investors value the prospect of countries sitting on huge stores of the very same – locked in the ground and “hidden on the books” as it were?

Countries That Pass Muster

Going over the sound investment criteria laid out at the beginning of this piece, a clearer picture now begins to form.

In terms of which countries to invest in (by way of currencies as shares of stock), we want nations with decent management (or at least competent management) and not too much debt. An abundance of natural resources (“hidden assets on the books”), ample long-term growth prospects, and positive cash flow (i.e. positive trade balance) would also be good.

To relieve the suspense, Taipan has actually come up with a list of such countries that fit the bill. They are as follows:

• Australia

• Hong Kong

• Canada

• New Zealand

• Norway

• Singapore

Australia and Canada are the hard asset kings, and have more or less avoided the global financial crisis. While their fortunes are inextricably linked to hard assets, this will be a huge advantage in the years to come.

Norway is one of the richest countries in the world, and vastly rich in oil resources to boot.

Hong Kong and Singapore are rich in connections, entrepreneurial dynamism and human capital, with Hong Kong a gateway to China, and Singapore in strong bid to become the “Switzerland of Asia.”

New Zealand is one of the most beautiful resource-rich countries in the world, with prospects similar to next-door-neighbor Australia.

Why Better Than Gold?

Why, you ask, would these “greenback alternatives” be considered better than gold? Because gold, as attractive as it is, does not offer a direct return on investment (other than potential capital gain).

Don’t get me wrong here. Everyone should have solid exposure to gold, and the outlook for the yellow metal is still quite attractive over the long haul. The Achilles’ heel of gold as an investment, though, is that it doesn’t pay dividends or offer a yield of any kind… and it doesn’t do much in times of prosperity and growth.

From a purely financial standpoint, gold is insurance against the folly of men – and that is as it should be. Gold is in a bull market now because folly is high and rising. But juxtaposed as it is against the crumbling foundations of a rotten system, gold is more a form of insurance than a bet on the future. And dumb as he can be at times, man still has enough ingenuity and heart and innovation up his sleeve to make permanently betting against him an unwise choice.

The virtue of small-cap currencies backed by countries rich in hard assets and growth prospects, then, is the opportunity to do well both in good times and bad. As the fortunes of the West go into decline – and the dollar, euro and yen look more shaky by the day – the more stable, less indebted small-cap currencies of select countries look more valuable.

Nor are we the only ones to have noticed. Consider this from the Financial Times:

Russia’s central bank announced on Wednesday that it had started buying Canadian dollars and securities in a bid to diversify its foreign exchange reserves.

Analysts said the move could be a sign of increased diversification of emerging market central bank assets away from the dollar and into investments denominated in other commodity-linked currencies, such as the Australian dollar.

An Easy Way to Diversify

Taipan is nothing if not proactive. And that’s why you’ll be pleased to know there is an easy way to diversify out of U.S. dollars… and into a basket of yield-producing currencies from the countries listed above.

It’s called the EverBank Ultra Resource Index CD. The CD is available from EverBank in three- and six-month terms, and offers exposure to currencies of Australia, Hong Kong, Canada, New Zealand, Norway and Singapore (the same countries as mentioned above).

Coincidence? No. EverBank created this CD at the specific request of the Taipan Publishing Group. We wanted to come up with a simple, easy way to diversify out of greenbacks without hassle or headache.

And in contrast to the aggressive Forex trading services Taipan offers (like Currency Profits Trader), in working with EverBank we sought a currency product more suited to a long-term investment point of view.

Obviously, your editor is somewhat biased. He has been an accountholder with EverBank for some years now, and writes to you as a satisfied customer. The Taipan Publishing Group also receives a small commission from the sale of EverBank products (which would be logical, particularly as we requested this one).

But given the above, the case for the “small cap” currencies seems clear – as does the intrinsic value of what EverBank has to offer. If you want to find out more about the Ultra Resource Index CD, you can do so here.

Warm Regards,

JL

About the Author: Justice Litle is the Editorial Director of Taipan Publishing Group, Editor of Justice
Litle’s Macro Trader and Managing Editor to the free investing and trading
e-letter Taipan Daily. His articles have been featured in Futures magazine; he
has been quoted in The Wall Street Journal and contributed regular market
commentary to Reuters and Dow Jones.

AUD/USD Fluctuates Above .90 Amid Heightened Market Activity

By Fast Brokers – The AUD/USD is working to consolidate above its psychological .90 level as we witness heightened market activity in the Dollar and U.S. equities.  The S&P futures and gold tumbled yesterday after U.S. Unemployment Claims popped back towards the 500k level and investor uncertainty increased over fear that Obama’s proposed regulation of the financial industry could weigh on the earnings of banks.  The ADU/USD participated to the downside, exhibiting its positive correlation with gold as the precious metal sunk below its psychological $1100/oz level.  Furthermore, the Aussie has been hit by a tighter monetary policy stance in China.  China’s demand for Australia’s commodities has been a driving force behind Australia’s strong economic performance.  Hence, if China cools down, this could also slow down Australia, thereby discouraging Australia’s central bank from tightening once again.  However, investors should keep in mind that Australia’s economic data has been printing strong lately, particularly in employment.  Australia will kick off next week with PPI data during Monday’s Asia trading session.  The Aussie could receive extra attention during this time frame since behavior of prices could determine whether Australia raises rates again or not.  That being said, should PPI print strong the AUD/USD could experience a nice pop.  On the other hand, a weak PPI could place considerable downward pressure on the Aussie since investors may speculate that the central bank will hold off considering tightening in China.

Technically speaking, the AUD/USD faces multiple downtrend lines along with intraday and 1/21 highs.  As for the downside, the AUD/USD has multiple uptrend lines serving as technical cushions along with 1/21 lows and the psychological .90 level should it be retested.

Price: .9050

Resistances:  $77.48. $77.87/bbl, $78.33/bbl, $78.76/bbl, $79.25/bbl

Supports: $77.10/bbl, $76.69/bbl, $76.15/bbl, $75.63/bbl, $75.32/bbl

Psychological: $80/bbl, $75/bbl, January highs and lows

Market Commentary provided by Fast Brokers.

Disclaimer: FastBrokers’ market commentary is provided for information purposes only and under no circumstances should be regardedneither as an investment advice nor as a solicitation or an offer to sell/buy any financial product. FastBrokers assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein contained.

Risk Disclosure: There is a substantial risk of loss in trading futures and foreign exchange. Please carefully review all risk disclosure documents before opening an account as these financial instruments are not appropriate for all investors.

USD/JPY Fights to Stabilize Around 90 After Thursday’s Setback

By Fast Brokers – The USD/JPY is fighting to stabilize around its highly psychological 90 level after the currency pair took a large step down on sizable volume.  The Dollar strengthened across the board after Unemployment Claims jumped back towards 500k and investors reacted negatively to Obama’s proposal to reduce the size and influence of banks.  However, the psychological 90 level could prove to be a solid support as investors await next Tuesday’s BoJ monetary policy meeting.  We would not be surprised to see the BoJ reiterate its commitment to a loose monetary policy as long as deflation is a concern, especially considering yesterday’s setback in the USD/JPY.  In addition to the BoJ’s meeting the Fed will also make a monetary policy decision later in the week along with a slew of key economic data from around the globe.  Japan will join the data wire with its Trade Balance, Retail Sales, CPI, Household Spending, and Industrial Production numbers peppered throughout the week.  Hence, FX markets could remain very active next week as investors digest the wealth of data and news.  Australia will kick off with PPI during Monday’s Asia trading session followed by U.S. Existing Home Sales.

Technically speaking, the USD/JPY has multiple uptrend lines serving as technical cushions along with intraday, 12/16, and 12/18 lows.  Furthermore, the highly psychological 90 level could continue to serve as a solid support over the near-term.  As for the topside, the USD/JPY faces multiple downtrend lines along with intraday and 12/18 highs.

Present Price: 90.14

Resistances: 90.33, 90.49, 90.68, 90.91, 91.19, 91.44

Supports: 89.90, 89.65, 89.40, 89.21, 88.85, 88.62

Psychological: 90, December highs and lows

Market Commentary provided by Fast Brokers.

Disclaimer: FastBrokers’ market commentary is provided for information purposes only and under no circumstances should be regardedneither as an investment advice nor as a solicitation or an offer to sell/buy any financial product. FastBrokers assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein contained.

Risk Disclosure: There is a substantial risk of loss in trading futures and foreign exchange. Please carefully review all risk disclosure documents before opening an account as these financial instruments are not appropriate for all investors.

GBP/USD Darts Lower Following Disappointing Retail Sales

By Fast Brokers – The Cable continued yesterday’s downturn in reaction to UK Retail Sales printing a full basis point below analyst expectations.  The Cable had held up very well during the EUR/USD’s deterioration earlier this week due to positive UK CPI and employment data.  Hence, today’s negative Retail Sales number gave investors a fundamental reason to weaken the Pound, highlighted by a sizable pop in the EUR/GBP.  Meanwhile, gold has dropped below $1100/oz and the S&P futures are testing their own highly psychological 1100 level.  That being said, the Cable’s correlations are creating an environment suitable for a stronger dollar should fundamentals continue to cooperate.  The UK will keep the data train rolling next week with the release of its Prelim GDP on Tuesday coupled with Nationwide HPI data.  Furthermore, both the BoJ and the Fed will make monetary policy decisions, implying more volatility in the major Dollar pairs.  Australia will kick off the week with PPI, followed by Existing Home Sales data from the U.S. the following day.  In the meantime investors should keep a sharp eye on activity in the S&P futures and gold for any further technical setbacks.

Technically speaking, the Cable does have multiple uptrend lines serving as technical supports along with the psychological 1.60 level.  That being said, our 1st-3rd tier uptrend lines are packed tightly together, indicating an area of solid support should it be tested.  As for the topside, the Cable faces multiple downtrend lines along with 1/11, 1/04, and 1/22 highs.  Therefore, despite solid support in the wings, the Cable now has a hill to climb to the topside.

Present Price: 1.6078

Supports: 1.6073, 1.6055, 1.6026, 1.5996, 1.5971, 1.5954

Resistances: 1.6099, 1.6119, 1.6142, 1.6161, 1.6180, 1.6215

Psychological: 1.60, 1.65, January highs and lows

Market Commentary provided by Fast Brokers.

Disclaimer: FastBrokers’ market commentary is provided for information purposes only and under no circumstances should be regardedneither as an investment advice nor as a solicitation or an offer to sell/buy any financial product. FastBrokers assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein contained.

Risk Disclosure: There is a substantial risk of loss in trading futures and foreign exchange. Please carefully review all risk disclosure documents before opening an account as these financial instruments are not appropriate for all investors.

EUR/USD Stabilizes Following Encouraging Industrial New Orders Data

By Fast Brokers – The EUR/USD has stabilized above Thursday lows after the EU released an Industrial New Orders figure a full percentage point above analyst expectations.  A positive data release has allowed the Euro to finally create some sort of bottom after this week’s huge pullback.  The Euro’s relative strength today is highlighted by a solid pop in the EUR/GBP.  However, the S&P futures made a key step back yesterday and gold has dropped below its highly psychological $1100/oz level, both negative developments for the EUR/USD due to correlative forces.  That being said, investors should keep a sharp eye on the S&P futures around 1100 and monitor gold’s ability to stabilize above December ’09 lows should they be tested.  If these two psychological cushions don’t hold the Dollar could be in for a more extensive leg up over the medium-term.  Volatility could remain at a heightened state next week with the EU kicking off by releasing its GfK Consumer Climate data followed by U.S. Existing Home Sales.  Additionally, we’ll receive heavily weighted data from around the globe over the week including monetary policy decisions from Japan and the U.S.

Technically speaking, the EUR/USD understandably faces multiple downtrend lines considering the extent of its decline.  However, our downtrend lines have quite a bit of space between them, meaning the Euro could gain back some ground should the Dollar experience broad-based weakness.  As for the downside, the EUR/USD has a new 1st tier uptrend line running through Thursday lows acting as a support.  Additionally, the EUR/USD does have the psychological 1.40 level serving as a technical cushion.

Present Price: 1.4130

Resistances: 1.4117, 1.4146, 1.4165, 1.4191, 1.4224, 1.4247, 1.4291

Supports:  1.4080, 1.4065, 1.4045, 1.4015, 1.3981, 1.3950

Psychological: 1.40

Market Commentary provided by Fast Brokers.

Disclaimer: FastBrokers’ market commentary is provided for information purposes only and under no circumstances should be regardedneither as an investment advice nor as a solicitation or an offer to sell/buy any financial product. FastBrokers assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein contained.

Risk Disclosure: There is a substantial risk of loss in trading futures and foreign exchange. Please carefully review all risk disclosure documents before opening an account as these financial instruments are not appropriate for all investors.

FOREX: Canadian Retail Sales fall in November, Canadian dollar declines

By CountingPips.com

Canadian Retail Sales decreased in November after three straight monthly increases according to the monthly report released by Statistics Canada today. Retail sales decreased by 0.3 percent to C$35.2 billion in November following a robust increase of 1.0 percent in October. The fall in retail sales was more than expected as economic forecasts were predicting a 0.2 percent decline for the month.

Core retail sales, excluding automobile sales, showed no change in November following a revised increase of 0.3 percent in October.

Contributing to the slide in the retail sales numbers was a decrease in clothing and accessories stores by 3.6 percent which the report said was due to unseasonably warm weather in Canada. This decline marked the largest drop in this sector since September 2002.

Sales at general merchandise stores fell by 2.8 percent for the month while sales at sporting goods, hobby, music and book stores declined by 4.1 percent. Automotive sales for November edged down by 0.2 percent as new car dealers sales declined by 2.2 percent.

Contributing positively to the retail sales report were gains in food and beverage stores by 0.9 percent and gasoline station sales by 2.4 percent. Sales at furniture, home furnishings & electronics stores rose by 1.1 percent while sales at building and outdoor home supplies stores also rose by 1.1 percent and miscellaneous store retailers advanced by 3.0 percent.

Saskatchewan was the province with the largest decline in November with a 1.1 percent fall as seven out of ten provinces saw decreases. New Brunswick’s retail sales fell by 1.0 percent and Alberta’s sales dropped by 0.8 percent. On the positive side, sales increases were registered in the Yukon, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Nunavut.

Canadian Loonie falls in Forex Trading.

The Canadian loonie dollar has been weaker today in the forex markets versus the major currencies after the lower retail sales data. The Canadian currency has decreased versus the euro, Japanese yen, U.S. dollar, Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar while trading almost unchanged versus the British pound at just after noon EST in the North American trading session.

The U.S. dollar is advancing against the Canadian loonie for the fourth straight day as the USD/CAD pair has increased by approximately 60 pips today. The euro has surged sharply higher versus the Canadian dollar by over 150 pips and is gaining for the third straight day today against the CAD. The Australian dollar and Japanese yen have each advanced by approximately 70 pips versus the Canadian currency while the New Zealand dollar has moved higher by approximately 45 pips against the CAD.

USD/CAD 30-Minute Chart -The USD advancing today versus the Canadian dollar for the fourth consecutive day. The USD/CAD had fallen to a three month low last week at the 1.0225 exchange rate before reversing higher and today this pair touched the 1.0600 level for the first time since December 22nd.

FOREX: UK Retail Sales gain less than expected in December. Pound falls.

By CountingPips.com

Retail Sales data was released today out of the United Kingdom and showed that sales rose by less than expected in December. The UK retail sales data, released by the U.K. Office of National Statistics, advanced by 0.3 percent in December following a decrease of 0.3 percent in November. On an annual basis, retail sales increased by 2.1 percent over the December 2008 time period following a 3.1 percent annual gain in November.

December’s sales data failed to meet the market forecasts, which were predicting that sales would increase by 1.1 percent to register an annual increase of 3.0 percent. The sales level was disappointing because of the potential for Christmas holiday shopping to boost retail sales and the opportunity for consumers to take advantage of a 15 percent VAT rate before it returned to 17.5 percent in January.

On a quarterly basis, the U.K. retail sales increased by 0.7 percent for the fourth quarter 0f 2009 from the third quarter.

Contributing to the increase in retail sales for December was a gain of 0.3 percent in predominantly food stores while predominantly non-food stores registered a gain of 0.1 percent for the month. On the year through December, predominantly food stores advanced by 2.8 percent over the December 2008 level while predominantly non-food stores increased by 0.7 percent.

British Pound Sterling falls in Forex Trading versus majors.

The British pound has traded lower today in forex trading against the other major currencies following the retail sales data. The pound has fallen versus the U.S. dollar, euro, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, New Zealand dollar, Australian dollar and the Canadian dollar.

The pound has declined approximately 75 pips versus the US dollar today as the GBP/USD trades at the exchange rate of 1.6123 at 11:11 am EST in the U.S. trading session after opening the day at 1.6199 (00:00GMT). The GBP/USD has touched a lowpoint of 1.6077 today.

The euro has advanced over 60 pips today versus the pound and looks to make it two straight gaining days after declining last week and the first three full days of this week. The pound has also declined by over 100 pips versus the Swiss franc and New Zealand dollar, by approximately 130 pips against the Japanese yen and by over 150 pips versus the Australian dollar.

Against the Canadian dollar, the pound has fallen by approximately 5 pips from the 1.7020 opening rate to trading at the exchange rate of 1.7015 CAD per GBP.

EUR/GBP 1-Hour Chart – The Euro gaining today against the British Pound for a second day in forex trading after the EUR/GBP had been declining since the January 12th high exchange rate of 0.9028.  Today the pair has advanced on the pound’s weakness to extend above the 100-hour simple moving average in red.

Spot Crude Oil Prices Follow the EUR/USD Lower

By Russell Glaser – Spot crude oil prices were trending higher during the morning hours of the European trading session today. That was despite poor data from the Department of Energy. Driving the prices higher today so far was a weaker dollar.

Spot crude oil is up $0.30, trading near the $76.12 price level after opening the day at $75.82, a monthly low for the commodity. The EUR/USD has climbed higher today as well, trading up at 1.4144 from an opening day price of 1.4122. Typically spot crude oil prices rise with a falling dollar

Yesterday’s data release by the U.S. Department of Energy showed refinery output plummeted to a historic low. The reduced crude oil output produced by refineries is a response to low demand on the part of consumers. It is expected that crude oil demand will not recover in the next few weeks, which may lead to further price declines in the price of spot crude oil.

While demand is seen as weakening, an appreciating dollar has also been a drag on spot crude oil prices as well. From January 11th, spot crude oil prices have fallen 8.7% while the EUR/USD is down 2.4%. The trend of falling crude prices with a rising dollar retains a relatively strong negative correlation. Traders should always be following the dollar when trading spot crude oil.

Forex Market Analysis provided by Forex Yard.

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Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.