US Economy in Adverse Case of FED.?

The Financial Development Report 2012

Latest FOMC Minutes

World Economic Forum ' Transparency for Inclusive Governance'

Alan Greenspan ' Fiscal Cliff is Painful '

Showing posts with label Standard and Poors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Standard and Poors. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2011

Mexico, Brasil, and Latin America growth retards : S & P


Latin America's Growth Outlook Dampens Amid Global Uncertainty

Latin America's growth prospects have weakened following the slowing of growth among advanced economies and other emerging markets. Standard & Poor's Ratings Services expects real GDP in the region to rise by 4.2% in 2011 and 3.8% in 2012--down from our previous forecasts of 4.5% and 4.2%, respectively, in June.

The slower growth outlook reflects our expectations that the global slowdown will hurt both domestic demand and net exports across the region. We believe that weaker growth in the U.S. will hit growth in Mexico and Central America harder because of trade and worker remittance ties to the country. In South America, larger trade links with Asia and the Eurozone mean that expectations for slower growth in China, other parts of Asia, and Europe will have a greater impact.

The risk of a more pronounced global economic crisis stemming from the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and its effect on the European banking system also weigh heavily on market sentiment and provide additional downside risk. More global risk aversion could prompt a slowdown or reversal of foreign capital flows to Latin America, which have contributed to abundant liquidity in the region.

While Latin America cannot escape a global slowdown, its governments do have some flexibility to soften any external hits through policy actions. The region demonstrated unprecedented resilience amid the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009 and will have a projected $680 billion in international reserves by year-end to help cover external financing for both the public and private sectors. Fiscal deficits, while still not back to their pre-2008 levels, are relatively low, and Brazil and Peru already plan for more expansionary fiscal policies over the next year.

Central banks are poised to cut monetary policy base rates, responding to expectations of slower growth and some easing of inflation. In a controversial action, given that inflation was running significantly above its target, Brazil initiated an easing cycle at the end of August, specifically citing the deteriorating global economy. Central banks in Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Peru, where actual and projected inflation is lower, have all voiced similar concerns and seem prepared to cut rates later this year or in 2012.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Standard/Poor's Explains. Downgrade Politics or debt


Recent Rating Action On The United States of America

Overview

We have lowered our long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States of America to 'AA+' from 'AAA' and affirmed the 'A-1+' short-term rating.

We have also removed both the short- and long-term ratings from CreditWatch negative.

The downgrade reflects our opinion that the fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the Administration recently agreed to falls short of what, in our view, would be necessary to stabilize the government's medium-term debt dynamics.

More broadly, the downgrade reflects our view that the effectiveness, stability, and predictability of American policymaking and political institutions have weakened at a time of ongoing fiscal and economic challenges to a degree more than we envisioned when we assigned a negative outlook to the rating on April 18, 2011.

Since then, we have changed our view of the difficulties in bridging the gulf between the political parties over fiscal policy, which makes us pessimistic about the capacity of Congress and the Administration to be able to leverage their agreement this week into a broader fiscal consolidation plan that stabilizes the government's debt dynamics any time soon.

The outlook on the long-term rating is negative. We could lower the long-term rating to 'AA' within the next two years if we see that less reduction in spending than agreed to, higher interest rates, or new fiscal pressures during the period result in a higher general government debt trajectory than we currently assume in our base case.

Rating Action

On Aug. 5, 2011, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services lowered its long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States of America to 'AA+' from 'AAA'. The outlook on the long-term rating is negative. At the same time, Standard & Poor's affirmed its 'A-1+' short-term rating on the U.S. In addition, Standard & Poor's removed both ratings from CreditWatch, where they were placed on July 14, 2011, with negative implications.

The transfer and convertibility (T&C) assessment of the U.S.--our assessment of the likelihood of official interference in the ability of U.S.-based public- and private-sector issuers to secure foreign exchange for debt service--remains 'AAA'.

Rationale

We lowered our long-term rating on the U.S. because we believe that the prolonged controversy over raising the statutory debt ceiling and the related fiscal policy debate indicate that further near-term progress containing the growth in public spending, especially on entitlements, or on reaching an agreement on raising revenues is less likely than we previously assumed and will remain a contentious and fitful process. We also believe that the fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the Administration agreed to this week falls short of the amount that we believe is necessary to stabilize the general government debt burden by the middle of the decade.

Our lowering of the rating was prompted by our view on the rising public debt burden and our perception of greater policymaking uncertainty, consistent with our criteria. Nevertheless, we view the U.S. federal government's other economic, external, and monetary credit attributes, which form the basis for the sovereign rating, as broadly unchanged. We have taken the ratings off CreditWatch because the Aug. 2 passage of the Budget Control Act Amendment of 2011 has removed any perceived immediate threat of payment default posed by delays to raising the government's debt ceiling.

In addition, we believe that the act provides sufficient clarity to allow us to evaluate the likely course of U.S. fiscal policy for the next few years. The political brinksmanship of recent months highlights what we see as America's governance and policymaking becoming less stable, less effective, and less predictable than what we previously believed. The statutory debt ceiling and the threat of default have become political bargaining chips in the debate over fiscal policy. Despite this year's wide-ranging debate, in our view, the differences between political parties have proven to be extraordinarily difficult to bridge, and, as we see it, the resulting agreement fell well short of the comprehensive fiscal consolidation program that some proponents had envisaged until quite recently.

Republicans and Democrats have only been able to agree to relatively modest savings on discretionary spending while delegating to the Select Committee decisions on more comprehensive measures. It appears that for now, new revenues have dropped down on the menu of policy options. In addition, the plan envisions only minor policy changes on Medicare and little change in other entitlements, the containment of which we and most other independent observers regard as key to long-term fiscal sustainability.

Our opinion is that elected officials remain wary of tackling the structural issues required to effectively address the rising U.S. public debt burden in a manner consistent with a 'AAA' rating and with 'AAA' rated sovereign peers. In our view, the difficulty in framing a consensus on fiscal policy weakens the government's ability to manage public finances and diverts attention from the debate over how to achieve more balanced and dynamic economic growth in an era of fiscal stringency and private-sector deleveraging (ibid). A new political consensus might (or might not) emerge after the 2012 elections, but we believe that by then, the government debt burden will likely be higher, the needed medium-term fiscal adjustment potentially greater, and the inflection point on the U.S. population's demographics and other age-related spending drivers closer at hand. Standard & Poor's takes no position on the mix of spending and revenue measures that Congress and the Administration might conclude is appropriate for putting the U.S.'s finances on a sustainable footing.

The act calls for as much as $2.4 trillion of reductions in expenditure growth over the 10 years through 2021. These cuts will be implemented in two steps: the $917 billion agreed to initially, followed by an additional $1.5 trillion that the newly formed Congressional Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction is supposed to recommend by November 2011. The act contains no measures to raise taxes or otherwise enhance revenues, though the committee could recommend them. The act further provides that if Congress does not enact the committee's recommendations, cuts of $1.2 trillion will be implemented over the same time period. The reductions would mainly affect outlays for civilian discretionary spending, defense, and Medicare. We understand that this fall-back mechanism is designed to encourage Congress to embrace a more balanced mix of expenditure savings, as the committee might recommend.

We note that in a letter to Congress on Aug. 1, 2011, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated total budgetary savings under the act to be at least $2.1 trillion over the next 10 years relative to its baseline assumptions. In updating our own fiscal projections, with certain modifications outlined below, we have relied on the CBO's latest "Alternate Fiscal Scenario" of June 2011, updated to include the CBO assumptions contained in its Aug. 1 letter to Congress. In general, the CBO's "Alternate Fiscal Scenario" assumes a continuation of recent Congressional action overriding existing law.

We view the act's measures as a step toward fiscal consolidation. However, this is within the framework of a legislative mechanism that leaves open the details of what is finally agreed to until the end of 2011, and Congress and the Administration could modify any agreement in the future. Even assuming that at least $2.1 trillion of the spending reductions the act envisages are implemented, we maintain our view that the U.S. net general government debt burden (all levels of government combined, excluding liquid financial assets) will likely continue to grow.

Under our revised base case fiscal scenario--which we consider to be consistent with a 'AA+' long-term rating and a negative outlook--we now project that net general government debt would rise from an estimated 74% of GDP by the end of 2011 to 79% in 2015 and 85% by 2021. Even the projected 2015 ratio of sovereign indebtedness is high in relation to those of peer credits and, as noted, would continue to rise under the act's revised policy settings.

Compared with previous projections, our revised base case scenario now assumes that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, due to expire by the end of 2012, remain in place. We have changed our assumption on this because the majority of Republicans in Congress continue to resist any measure that would raise revenues, a position we believe Congress reinforced by passing the act. Key macroeconomic assumptions in the base case scenario include trend real GDP growth of 3% and consumer price inflation near 2% annually over the decade.

Our revised upside scenario--which, other things being equal, we view as consistent with the outlook on the 'AA+' long-term rating being revised to stable--retains these same macroeconomic assumptions. In addition, it incorporates $950 billion of new revenues on the assumption that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for high earners lapse from 2013 onwards, as the Administration is advocating. In this scenario, we project that the net general government debt would rise from an estimated 74% of GDP by the end of 2011 to 77% in 2015 and to 78% by 2021.

Our revised downside scenario--which, other things being equal, we view as being consistent with a possible further downgrade to a 'AA' long-term rating--features less-favorable macroeconomic assumptions, as outlined below and also assumes that the second round of spending cuts (at least $1.2 trillion) that the act calls for does not occur. This scenario also assumes somewhat higher nominal interest rates for U.S. Treasuries.

We still believe that the role of the U.S. dollar as the key reserve currency confers a government funding advantage, one that could change only slowly over time, and that Fed policy might lean toward continued loose monetary policy at a time of fiscal tightening.

Nonetheless, it is possible that interest rates could rise if investors re-price relative risks. As a result, our alternate scenario factors in a 50 basis point (bp)-75 bp rise in 10-year bond yields relative to the base and upside cases from 2013 onwards. In this scenario, we project the net public debt burden would rise from 74% of GDP in 2011 to 90% in 2015 and to 101% by 2021. Our revised scenarios also take into account the significant negative revisions to historical GDP data that the Bureau of Economic Analysis announced on July 29.

From our perspective, the effect of these revisions underscores two related points when evaluating the likely debt trajectory of the U.S. government. First, the revisions show that the recent recession was deeper than previously assumed, so the GDP this year is lower than previously thought in both nominal and real terms. Consequently, the debt burden is slightly higher. Second, the revised data highlight the sub-par path of the current economic recovery when compared with rebounds following previous post-war recessions. We believe the sluggish pace of the current economic recovery could be consistent with the experiences of countries that have had financial crises in which the slow process of debt deleveraging in the private sector leads to a persistent drag on demand.

As a result, our downside case scenario assumes relatively modest real trend GDP growth of 2.5% and inflation of near 1.5% annually going forward.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Sovereign Down grading War Among Rating Agencies. Japan Next ?



















Standard & Poor's Ratings Services on Monday lowered the ratings on U.S.-guaranteed bonds issued by the Israeli government to AA+ from AAA. The downgrade comes in the wake of the ratings agency's move on Friday to strip the U.S. of its triple-A rating. However, Israel's sovereign rating is unchanged at A with a stable outlook. The decision affects about $6 billion in debt.




















 In connection with its downgrading of the U.S. government, ratings service Standard & Poor's early Monday likewise downgraded the senior issue ratings on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to 'AA+' from 'AAA'. S&P added it was maintaining its 'A' subordinated debt rating and 'C' rating on the preferred stock for the government-backed entities, and affirmed their short-term issue ratings at 'A-1+'. "The downgrades of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac reflect their direct reliance on the U.S. government. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed into conservatorship in September 2008 and their ability to fund operations relies heavily on the U.S. government," S&P said, in a statement.


President Barack Obama will make a statement has more a historical and Political View Point. 


White House In Denial Mind Set and Blurred Vision.


While, Moody's Have warned Japan for the Rating Down Grade And it is widely, expected to Sooner than Latter.


Heard on the Street, is down grading War between Rating Agencies, may start soon. May Be Wednesday..?

Stable Prospects For Oil And Gas Companies Reflect The Economy And High Oil Prices



Credit quality for the U.S. oil and gas sector is--and should remain--relatively stable for the remainder of 2011 and into 2012, in Standard & Poor's Ratings Services' view. The ongoing gradual improvement in GDP supports oil prices and could aid natural gas, which accounts for 30% of industrial energy demand, though excess supply will continue to set the direction of natural gas prices. Our 2011 and 2012 forecast for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil of $97.67 and $103.59 per barrel bodes well for exploration and production (E&P) companies with a focus on oil and oilfield services and drilling contract companies. Despite $100 oil, consumers have not cut back much on driving, which has benefited refineries' gasoline and diesel throughput and kept their utilization rates high.

We believe robust oil prices are sustainable throughout the remainder of the year and into 2012, which benefit any producer focused on oil and natural gas liquids. Healthy oil prices, favorable price hedges, and lease requirements that require drilling to hold acreage are helping oilfield and contract drilling companies achieve very strong ratios. We expect E&P companies to keep their capital expenditures high through 2012, thus helping oilfield service companies and drillers maintain healthy credit ratios and earnings.

Economic Outlook


Our latest base-case economic forecast still assumes a weak recovery in 2011 and 2012. Our base-case outlook for the oil and gas industry reflects that assumption and the following expectations: 

  • Real GDP remains moderately positive, with the economy growing 2.4% in 2011 and 2.6% in 2012. However, we can expect to shave off several basis points from our 2.4% estimate for 2011 after the disappointing economic news on July 29. U.S. GDP rose at an annualized rate of just 1.3% in the second quarter, after a downwardly revised 0.4% (originally 1.9%) in the first;
  • Oil prices remain at about $100 per barrel, but below levels that would affect how much people drive and therefore, refinery throughput and margins;
  • Oilfield services and drilling activity stays robust;
  • Healthy capacity utilizations and margins continue for most refiners; and
  • Capital market conditions and interest rates remain favorable.

At Standard & Poor's, we publish monthly our economists' scenario of where we think the U.S. economy could be heading. Beyond projecting GDP and inflation, we also include outlooks for other major economic categories. We call this forecast our "baseline scenario," and we use it in all areas of our credit analyses.
However, we realize that financial market participants also want to know how we think the economy could worsen--or improve--from our baseline scenario. Any point-in-time forecast of the economy will be wrong; it is simply a question of how far wrong. As a result, we now project two additional scenarios, one upside and one downside. These scenarios are set approximately at one standard deviation from the base line (roughly the 20th and 80th percentiles of the distribution of possible outcomes). We use the downside case to estimate the credit effect of an economic outlook that is weaker than our expected case.

Industry Credit Outlook


E&P producers reap the benefits of high oil prices

Several factors continue to support lofty crude prices: steady growth in the global economy, the loss of approximately 1.6 million barrels per day (1.8% of total daily consumption) of Libyan production, political turmoil in other North African countries and the Middle East, temporary North Sea production outages of approximately 400,000 barrels per day, and uncertainties surrounding Saudi Arabia's ability to ramp up additional capacity. Yet supply-demand fundamentals alone don't explain oil prices. The rise has mirrored the declining value of the U.S. dollar, which we expect to remain weak. High prices have benefited E&P producers' cash flows and, as a result, the companies have sought to acquire acreage in the oil and natural gas liquid rich fields, such as the Eagle Ford Shale and Granite Wash.

In sharp contrast, natural gas prices are still weak. Over the past couple of years, the number of natural gas rigs has largely exhibited inelastic behavior to declining prices, and a balancing of supply and demand remains elusive. Production economics and cash costs have taken a back seat to the ongoing need to drill to satisfy held by production (HBP) leases, joint venture agreements, and because of favorable producer hedges. Moreover, a significant backlog of drilled, but not yet completed, wells will continue to put downward pressure on gas prices.

We believe only a decline in supply could trigger an improvement in natural gas prices. Specifically, natural gas prices could increase when:

  • Existing favorable price hedges roll off;
  • Forward strip prices remain consistently below $5 per million cubic feet, which we believe to be an uneconomic threshold for a meaningful amount of production;
  • Drilling declines meaningfully, possibly sometime in the latter half of 2012, due in part to a reduction in drilling to maintain lease acreage (HBP), particularly in the Haynesville shale; and
  • A meaningful number of the drilled, but uncompleted, natural gas wells are completed.

Barring a recession, the confluence of these factors could reestablish the relationship between gas prices and rig count and ultimately lead to a reduction in natural gas inventories, thus increasing prices.

Demand for oilfield services and contract drilling is robust

Higher oil prices also benefit service providers that support oil drilling and production. Moreover, based on preliminary data, E&P capital budgets should be moderately up in 2012, continuing healthy demand for oilfield equipment and services. Land-based drillers, in particular, are benefiting as the drilling boom in liquids-rich shale plays offsets what we believe will be a slow but steady decline in natural gas drilling. With natural gas trading at record discounts relative to oil, we expect drillers to continue shifting to oil or liquids-based drilling (natural gas currently represents approximately 45% of the total rig count).

Offshore drillers face mixed prospects, with nascent signs of increasing demand offset by the specter of newbuild rig deliveries. Although the pace and prospects for tenders remains materially better than in 2010, the impact of scheduled additions to offshore fleets over the next several quarters is a risk in our view. Based on scheduled deliveries, we expect that global jackup and floating rig fleets will increase by approximately 7% and 13%, respectively, by the end of 2012. While we believe the recent trends of increasing dayrates and utilization for jackup rigs will continue over the next couple of years, given E&P companies' spending projections and the moderate nature of planned fleet additions, mid to deepwater floating rigs will likely face greater challenges because of the number of new deliveries coming on line. We expect to see further bifurcation between the segments with newer, higher-specification floating units achieving strong utilization levels and older, lower specification units facing lower utilization and potential declines in dayrates. Permitting activity in the Gulf of Mexico remains slow since the Macondo disaster, and will likely continue slow into 2012. The timing of a sustained recovery in drilling in the Gulf is still uncertain.

Refining and marketing margins should remain solid

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Israel and Dubai slump Disney,Retail sales results, China data

The Next Week is entered with Huge Change of Back Drop. The US Sovereign Ratings are cut to AA/+. The Israel Stock Markets opened with a Circuit Halter and ended with about 6 % downside.

This Week the Earlier part, Monday & Tuesday, are field days for US Debt.
Monday : Standard and Poor's releases concerning affected ratings in the funds, government-related entities, financial institutions, insurance, public finance, and structured finance sectors. 
This shall include Fannie Mae and Fredie Mac, host of Insurers, Banks , And Pension funds.
This is a Serious Stuff and Investors shall be better off, if they wait for Full Impact.


Tuesdays : FOMC meets and its press statement is ' Generally' expected to Counter the S&P Move.
What FED can Do ? 1) Guidance for Low rates 2) Lower Interest rates 3) Buy Back Programme- QE-3
The Option 2, may undo the market reaction to S&P downgrade.

According to Alan Greenspan, 'the Equity Market shall act negatively. And, the Bottoming out process shall take time.' The Massive impact may usurp latter on, when the Interest Cost will rise and hit the Housing Market.

Value Destruction Phase ?; 
It seems that,  Intra-markets will have contagion effect shall play out. i.e. Rise in Bonds to Affect equities and fall in Equities and both shall trigger a fall in commodities. The Currency Markets, though will Trigger the Market reactions. All though Gold is perceived to be the Beneficiary, the markets may not play accordingly. It might also be affected in short term.

The Latter Week shall follow the Data and US Results, particularly US Consumer giants and Disney.
In Indian Diaspora : Nifty 50 Changes by 2 companies from 8th, Tuesday
L&T, Mahindra & Mahindra, Tata Coffee, Tata Chemical, Aurbindo Pharma, PTC, on Monday, 
J Kumar Infra, ABB , Wockhardt, Tata Comminications, On Tuesday. 
On 10th Wednesday,VIP Industries, TATA Power, REC, IOC, Jubillant are Reporting.
11th has Reliance Infra, JP Power, Tata Motors, Zuari, SPIC, Rolta, Reliance Power, etc.
12the  Friday : Punj Lloyd, Tech Mahindra, TATA Steel, Gammon, JP Infra, Videocon, BPCL, Reliance Mediaworks, Coal India, etc shall be declaring Result.

The List of Economic data is :

DateTimeCurrencyEventImportanceActualForecastPreviousNotes
Sun
Aug 7
Currency: nzdNZD REINZ Housing Price Index (JUL)Low3229
Currency: nzdNZD REINZ Housing Price Index (MoM%) (JUL)Low1.3%
Currency: nzdNZD REINZ House Sales (YoY) (JUL)Medium14.2%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Japan Money Stock M2+CD (YoY) (JUL)Low2.9%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Japan Money Stock M3 (YoY) (JUL)Low2.2%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Bank Lending Banks ex-Trust (JUL)Low-0.6%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Bank Lending incl Trusts (YoY) (JUL)Low-0.6%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Current Account Total (Yen) (JUN)Low¥652.8B¥590.7B
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Adjusted Current Account Total (Yen) (JUN)Low¥961.1B¥391.0B
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Current Account Balance (YoY%) (JUN)Low-40.1%-51.7%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Trade Balance - BOP Basis (Yen) (JUN)Medium¥113.1B-¥772.7B
Mon
Aug 8
00:00Currency: nzdNZD QV House Prices (YoY) (JUL)Low-0.9%
00:30Currency: audAUD TD Securities Inflation (MoM) (JUL)Medium0.0%
00:30Currency: audAUD TD Securities Inflation (YoY) (JUL)Medium2.9%
01:30Currency: audAUD ANZ Job Advertisements (MoM) (JUL)Low3.7%
04:30Currency: jpyJPY Bankruptcies (YoY) (JUL)Medium1.5%
05:00Currency: jpyJPY Eco Watchers Survey: Current (JUL)Medium50.049.6
05:00Currency: jpyJPY Eco Watchers Survey: Outlook (JUL)Medium49
05:45Currency: chfCHF Unemployment Rate (JUL)Medium2.8%2.8%
05:45Currency: chfCHF Unemployment Rate s.a. (JUL)Medium3.0%3.0%
06:30Currency: eurEUR Bank of France Business Sentiment (JUL)Low99
08:30Currency: eurEUR Euro-Zone Sentix Investor Confidence (AUG)Medium3.45.3
22:45Currency: nzdNZD NZ Card Spending - Retail (MoM) (JUL)Medium0.5%1.2%
22:45Currency: nzdNZD NZ Card Spending (MoM) (JUL)Medium0.5%0.8%
23:01Currency: gbpGBP BRC Sales Like-For-Like (YoY) (JUL)Low-0.5%-0.6%
23:01Currency: gbpGBP RICS House Price Balance (JUL)Medium-28%-27%
Tue
Aug 9
Currency: gbpGBP NIESR Gross Domestic Product Estimate (JUL)Medium0.1%
Currency: cnyCNY Actual FDI (YoY) (JUL)Medium2.8%
Currency: eurEUR German Wholesale Price Index (MoM) (JUL)Low-0.6%
Currency: eurEUR German Wholesale Price Index (YoY) (JUL)Low8.5%
01:30Currency: audAUD Home Loans (JUN)Medium0.8%4.4%
01:30Currency: cnyCNY Producer Price Index (YoY) (JUL)Medium7.5%7.1%
01:30Currency: audAUD Investment Lending (JUN)Low4.4%
01:30Currency: audAUD Value of Loans (MoM) (JUN)Low2.2%
01:30Currency: audAUD NAB Business Confidence (JUL)Medium0
01:30Currency: audAUD NAB Business Conditions (JUL)Low2
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Industrial Production (YoY) (JUL)Medium14.6%15.1%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Industrial Production YTD (YoY) (JUL)Medium14.3%14.3%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Consumer Price Index (YoY) (JUL)Medium6.4%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Fixed Assets Inv Excl. Rural YTD (YoY) (JUL)Medium25.5%25.6%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Retail Sales (YoY) (JUL)Medium17.7%17.7%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Retail Sales YTD (YoY) (JUL)Medium17.0%16.8%
05:00Currency: jpyJPY Consumer Confidence (JUL)Medium37.035.3
05:45Currency: chfCHF SECO Consumer Confidence (JUL)Medium-5-1
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Exports s.a. (MoM) (JUN)Low-1.0%4.3%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Imports s.a. (MoM) (JUN)Low-1.5%3.7%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Current Account (euros) (JUN)Low6.9B
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Trade Balance (euros) (JUN)Medium14.0B14.8B
06:00Currency: jpyJPY Machine Tool Orders (YoY) (JUL P)Medium53.5%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Central Government Balance (euros) (JUN)Low-68.4B
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Industrial Production (MoM) (JUN)Low0.4%0.9%
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Industrial Production (YoY) (JUN)Medium0.2%-0.8%
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Manufacturing Production (MoM) (JUN)Low0.2%1.8%
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Manufacturing Production (YoY) (JUN)Medium2.8%2.8%
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Visible Trade Balance (Pounds) (JUN)Medium-£-8100-£8478
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Trade Balance Non EU (Pounds) (JUN)Low-£4800-£5109
08:30Currency: gbpGBP Total Trade Balance (Pounds) (JUN)Low-£3600-£4060
11:30Currency: jpyJPY Machine Tool Orders (YoY) (JUL)Medium90.8
12:15Currency: cadCAD Housing Starts (JUL)Medium195.0K197.4K
12:30Currency: usdUSD Unit Labor Costs (2Q P)Low2,4%0.7%
12:30Currency: usdUSD Non-Farm Productivity (2Q P)Low1.8%
14:00Currency: usdUSD IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism (AUG)Low42.041.4
18:15Currency: usdUSD Federal Open Market Committee Rate Decision (AUG 9)High0.25%0.25%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY BOJ to Publish Minutes of July 11-12 Board MeetingHigh
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Housing Loans (YoY) (2Q)Low2.7%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Tertiary Industry Index (MoM) (JUN)Medium0.9%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index (MoM) (JUL)Low0.0%-0.1%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index (YoY) (JUL)Low2.6%2.5%
Wed
Aug 10
Currency: cnyCNY New Yuan Loans (JUL)High633.9B
Currency: cnyCNY Money Supply - M0 (YoY) (JUL)Low14.4%
Currency: cnyCNY Money Supply - M1 (YoY) (JUL)Low13.1%
Currency: cnyCNY Money Supply - M2 (YoY) (JUL)Low15.9%
Currency: gbpGBP Nationwide Consumer Confidence (JUL)Medium51
00:30Currency: audAUD Westpac Consumer Confidence s.a. (MoM) (AUG)Medium-8.3%
00:30Currency: audAUD Westpac Consumer Confidence Index (AUG)Low92.8
01:30Currency: audAUD Retail Sales Ex Inflation(QoQ) (2Q)Medium
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Trade Balance (USD) (JUL)Medium$27.40B$22.27B
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Exports (YoY%) (JUL)Low17.0%17.9%
02:00Currency: cnyCNY Imports (YoY%) (JUL)Low22.0%19.3%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Consumer Price Index (MoM) (JUL F)Medium0.4%0.4%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Consumer Price Index (YoY) (JUL F)High2.4%2.4%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (MoM) (JUL F)Medium0.5%0.5%
06:00Currency: eurEUR German Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (YoY) (JUL F)High2.4%2.4%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Industrial Production (MoM) (JUN)Low2.0%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Industrial Production (YoY) (JUN)Low2.6%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Current Account (euros) (JUN)Low-5.5B
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Manufacturing Production (MoM) (JUN)Low-0.1%1.5%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Manufacturing Production (YoY) (JUN)Low6.8%5.4%
09:30Currency: gbpGBP Bank of England Inflation ReportHigh
11:00Currency: usdUSD MBA Mortgage Applications (AUG 5)Low
14:00Currency: usdUSD JOLTs Job Openings (JUN)Low2974
14:00Currency: usdUSD Wholesale Inventories (JUN)Low1.0%1.8%
14:30Currency: usdUSD DOE U.S. Crude Oil Inventories (AUG 5)Low
14:30Currency: usdUSD DOE Cushing OK Crude Inventory (AUG 5)Low
14:30Currency: usdUSD DOE U.S. Distillate Inventory (AUG 5)Low
14:30Currency: usdUSD DOE U.S. Gasoline Inventories (AUG 5)Low
14:30Currency: usdUSD DOE U.S. Refinery Utilization (AUG 5)Low
18:00Currency: usdUSD Monthly Budget Statement (JUL)Medium-$140.0B-$43.1B
22:30Currency: nzdNZD Business NZ Performance of Manufacturing Index (JUL)Medium54.3
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Machine Orders (MoM) (JUN)Medium1.8%3.0%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Machine Orders (YoY) (JUN)Medium11.3%10.5%
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Japan Buying Foreign Bonds (Yen) (AUG 5)Low
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Japan Buying Foreign Stocks (Yen) (AUG 5)Low
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Foreign Buying Japan Bonds (Yen) (AUG 5)Low
23:50Currency: jpyJPY Foreign Buying Japan Stocks (Yen) (AUG 5)Low
Thu
Aug 11
01:00Currency: audAUD Consumer Inflation Expectation (AUG)Low3.4%
01:00Currency: nzdNZD ANZ Consumer Confidence Index (AUG)Low109.4
01:00Currency: nzdNZD ANZ Consumer Confidence (MoM) (AUG)Low-2.3%
01:30Currency: audAUD Employment Change (JUL)High23.4K
01:30Currency: audAUD Unemployment Rate (JUL)High4.9%
01:30Currency: audAUD Full Time Employment Change (JUL)Medium59.0K
01:30Currency: audAUD Part Time Employment Change (JUL)Medium-35.6K
01:30Currency: audAUD Participation Rate (JUL)Low65.6%
08:00Currency: eurEUR ECB Publishes Aug. Monthly ReportHigh
12:30Currency: cadCAD New Housing Price Index (MoM) (JUN)Low0.3%0.4%
12:30Currency: cadCAD New Housing Price Index (YoY) (JUN)Medium2.1%1.9%
12:30Currency: cadCAD International Merchandise Trade (Canadian dollar) (JUN)Low-0.8B
12:30Currency: usdUSD Trade Balance (JUN)Medium-$48.0B-$50.2B
12:30Currency: usdUSD Initial Jobless Claims (AUG 5)Low401K400K
12:30Currency: usdUSD Continuing Claims (JUL 30)Low3725
13:45Currency: usdUSD Bloomberg Consumer Comfort (AGU 7)Low
14:30Currency: usdUSD EIA Natural Gas Storage Change (AUG 5)Low
22:45Currency: nzdNZD Retail Sales Ex Inflation (QoQ) (2Q)Medium0.9%
Fri
Aug 12
03:00Currency: nzdNZD Non Resident Bond Holdings (JUL)Low61.4%
04:30Currency: jpyJPY Industrial Production (MoM) (JUN F)Low
04:30Currency: jpyJPY Industrial Production (YoY) (JUN F)Medium
04:30Currency: jpyJPY Capacity Utilization (MoM) (JUN)Low12.8%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (MoM) (JUL)Low-0.3%0.1%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (YoY) (JUL)Low2.3%2.3%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Consumer Price Index (MoM) (JUL)Low-0.3%0.1%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Consumer Price Index (YoY) (JUL)Low2.2%2.1%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Consumer Price Index Ex Tobacco Index (JUL)Low122,19122.49
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) (2Q P)Low0.3%0.9%
05:30Currency: eurEUR French Gross Domestic Product (YoY) (2Q P)Low2.0%2.2%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Non-Farm Payrolls (QoQ) (2Q P)Low0.4%
06:45Currency: eurEUR French Wages (QoQ) (2Q P)Low1.0%
08:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Trade Balance (Total) (euros) (JUN)Low-2407M
08:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Trade Balance Eu (euros) (JUN)Low-600M
09:00Currency: eurEUR Euro-Zone Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) (JUN)Low0.0%0.1%
09:00Currency: eurEUR Euro-Zone Industrial Production w.d.a. (YoY) (JUN)Medium4.2%4.0%
09:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Consumer Price Index (NIC incl. tobacco) (MoM) (JUL F)Low0.3%0.3%
09:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Consumer Price Index (NIC incl. tobacco) (YoY) (JUL F)Low2.7%2.7%
09:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonized (MoM) (JUL F)Low-1.7%-1.7%
09:00Currency: eurEUR Italian Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonized (YoY) (JUL F)Low2.1%2.1%
12:30Currency: usdUSD Advance Retail Sales (JUL)High0.5%0.1%
12:30Currency: usdUSD Retail Sales Less Autos (JUL)Medium0.2%0.0%
12:30Currency: usdUSD Retail Sales Ex Auto & Gas (JUL)Medium0.2%0.2%
13:55Currency: usdUSD U. of Michigan Confidence (AUG P)High63.063.7
14:00Currency: usdUSD Business Inventories (JUN)Medium0.6%1.0%