UK November construction PMI 50.4 vs 52.0 expected 0 (0)

<ul><li>Prior 53.2</li></ul><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>UK construction growth falls to a three-month low as business activity grinds to a halt amid subdued demand conditions and reduced risk appetite among clients. Of note, business expectations were seen at their weakest since May 2020 as the outlook deteriorates heading into the end of the year. S&P Global notes that:</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>“Stalling house building activity contributed to the weakest UK construction sector performance for three months in November. Survey respondents noted that new residential building projects had been curtailed in response to rising interest rates, cancelled sales and worries about the economic outlook. </p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>“Construction growth was largely confined to the commercial segment, but even here the speed of expansion slowed considerably since October as client confidence weakened in response to heightened business uncertainty. At the same time, a lack of new work to replace completed projects resulted in another fall in civil engineering activity. </p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>“The number of construction firms anticipating a rise in overall business activity during the year ahead exceeded those forecasting a decline by only a very fine margin during November. Moreover, disregarding a three-month period of negative sentiment at the start of the pandemic, our survey measure of business expectations across the construction sector was the joint-weakest since December 2008.“</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>/<a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/terms/g/gbp/“ target=“_blank“ id=“3a5ab7c1-ff09-45ea-87d4-eea6613bb754_1″ class=“terms__main-term“>GBP</a></p>

This article was written by Justin Low at forexlive.com.

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USD/JPY turns flat as buyers fail to top 200-hour moving average 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>Amid the lack of change in the major currencies space, this is one of the only notable pieces of action in trading so far today. 10-year Treasury yields are also pretty much flat again on the day, relieving USD/JPY buyers of their impetus at the moment. The pair <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/usdjpy-nudges-higher-to-test-key-near-term-level-to-start-the-session-20221206/“ target=“_blank“ rel=“follow“>ran up to test</a> its 200-hour moving average (blue line) earlier but for now, sellers are holding the line.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>As such, the near-term bias stays more neutral after the developments from yesterday – in which we saw price climb back above 135.00 and its 200-day moving average, as well as the 100-hour moving average (red line) above.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>For now, price action is caught in a near-term tussle in determining the next directional bias before we look at the bigger picture levels on either side again.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>The dollar remains little changed overall today, trading within 0.1% against other major currencies with only AUD/USD up 0.3% to 0.6720 – owing to the RBA policy decision earlier in the day.</p>

This article was written by Justin Low at forexlive.com.

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