How does a slowing economy help to tame inflation? 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>The recipe for what is needed to bring things under control in the US, without incurring a recession that is:</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>The question now is whether we will see a soft landing or hard landing when it comes to how much the economy is going to slow down as lawmakers and policymakers try to bring inflation under control. Ideally, they’d like the former but there are many moving parts to determining that – not to mention factors outside their control such as China’s situation.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>In some sense, central banks are in the driver’s seat as their management of tighter policy is akin to shifting through the gears in determining the speed in which we are going to be dealing with said economic challenges. Goldman Sachs‘ take is that they see the Fed hiking by 75 bps this week followed by two more 50 bps rate hikes in November and December:</p>

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

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Eurozone July construction output +0.3% vs -1.2% m/m prior 0 (0)

<ul><li>Prior -1.2%</li></ul><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>Looking at the details, building construction increased by 0.3%, while civil
engineering decreased by 0.6%. It’s a decent recovery after the drop in June but other areas of the euro area economy are less optimistic basing off Q3 figures so far.</p>

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

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Goldman Sachs on the US economy – more aggressive Fed, higher unemployment, lower growth 0 (0)

<p>A Goldman Sachs note from later Friday (info via Reuters) has analysts at the bank making more pessimistic forecasts ahead due to a more aggressive Federal Reserve tightening policy through the rest of this year:</p><ul><li>“higher rates path combined with recent tightening in financial conditions implies a somewhat worse outlook for growth and employment next year“</li></ul><p>Goldman Sachs have revised their projection for next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. GS expects the FOMC to hike 75 basis points, up from 50 basis points previously.</p><ul><li>sees 50 bp hike in November</li><li>sees 50 bp hike in December</li><li>sees the fed funds rate peaking at 4-4.25% by the end of 2022</li></ul><p>-</p><p>Economic forecasts:</p><ul><li>sees GDP growth of 1.1% in 2023 (down from its preivous tip of 1.5% growth from the fourth quarter of 2022 to the end of 2023).</li><li>unemployment rate at 3.7% by the end of 2022 (from prior call of 3.6%), to 4.1% by the end of 2023 (from 3.8%)</li></ul><p>Sep, Nov, & Dec dates below:</p>

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at forexlive.com.

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Breakout or Fakeout? The USD moved to new multi -year/multi-decade lows. Can it continue? 0 (0)

<p>Breakout or Fakeout? There are reasons to see the USD moving even higher after 4 currencies made new multi-year lows vs the USD last week. Can the USD buying momentum continue in the new trading week?.</p><p>In this video, Greg Michalowski, talks of the breaks and why they occurred and then looks at the technicals that will keep the momentum of the break going OR fakeout the dollar buyers – at least in the short term. </p>

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at forexlive.com.

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VIDEO: Seeing is believing. In trading the sense of sight is essential to your success. 0 (0)

<p>In the video below, Greg Michalowski takes a look at the sense of site and outlines its importance – and why it is so essential – in your trading. </p><p>The sense of sight needs help from tools applied to the price action, but if done properly, you will be able to see and believe more in your trading. Enjoy and learn.</p><p>The video goes hand in hand with another video titled „Making Sense of your Senses in your trading“. You can watch that video too by clicking on the play button below.</p><p>Good fortune with your trading. </p>

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at forexlive.com.

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Canadian dollar hits a 22-month low. What’s next 0 (0)

<p>The Canadian dollar is at an interesting spot on the global spectrum of risk assets at the moment.</p><p>Domestically, it’s been a good year with strong GDP growth as the economy reopened from covid. Commodity investment has picked up and terms of trade have improved.</p><p>For much of the year, that kept the loonie neck-and-neck with the US dollar as the top G10 performer. Lately though, it’s lost some ground.</p><p>Some of that is domestic. The two most-recent Canadian jobs reports have been soft and there have been other signs of creeping demand. House prices are down around 15% from the February peak as well, though still up around 5% y/y.</p><p>I don’t think those factors are having a big effect on the loonie. Instead, it’s intensifying worries about the global economy and rate differentials that are weighing.</p><p>Yesterday’s <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/fedex-warning-has-stock-futures-deeply-negative-20220916/“ target=“_blank“>warning </a>from FedEx on global macro deterioration speaks to the mood of the market. Global equities struggled all week and the market can’t see past the energy crisis in Europe or covid-zero in China. High commodity prices and inflation are also wreaking havoc on emerging market growth.</p><p>Rate differentials an emerging factor</p><p>It’s critical to understand the differences in the US and Canadian housing market. Rate hikes in Canada hit the consumer harder and more directly than in the US. Canadians either have fixed rates with 5-year terms or variable rates that adjust immediately. Contrast that with the US where mortgages have fixed rates for 30 years.</p><p>That means that many Canadians are directly feeling the pinch from higher rates while the only Americans who feel it are those moving or buying a home for the first time. In practice, it means that Bank of Canada will struggle to get above 4% while the Fed will have more latitude.</p><p>Before this week, both were expected to pause around 4% but now Fed funds are pricing in 4.40% in March. That’s creating a central bank divergence and cleared the way for a break above 1.32 in USD/CAD. I continue to think the destination is 1.37.</p><p>In the longer term, there’s mounting evidence hat commodities will be in short supply in the back half of this decade and that makes Canada one of the best places to be. Over the next year though, that’s not the case. North America is slowing down and central banks everywhere are raising rates at an unprecedented pace. There’s a real chance of a policy mistake and recession everywhere.</p>

This article was written by Adam Button at forexlive.com.

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: US dollar gives a bit back after UMich 0 (0)

<ul><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/umich-september-us-prelim-consumer-sentiment-595-vs-600-expected-20220916/“>UMich September US prelim consumer sentiment 59.5 vs 60.0 expected</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/putin-says-main-goal-is-to-liberate-donbas-region-and-we-are-not-in-a-hurry-20220916/“>Putin says main goal is to liberate Donbas region and ‚we are not in a hurry'</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/cnn-chinas-xi-has-told-military-wants-china-to-have-capability-to-take-taiwan-by-2027-20220916/“>CNN: China’s Xi has told military he wants China to have capability to take Taiwan by 2027</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/uk-planning-to-cut-business-energy-rates-in-half-20220916/“>UK planning to cut business energy rates in half</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/the-bakers-hughes-oil-rigs-move-up-8-in-the-current-week-20220916/“>The Bakers Hughes oil rigs move up 8 in the current week</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/centralbank/canadian-july-wholesale-trade-06-vs-06-expected-20220916/“>Canadian July wholesale trade -0.6% vs -0.6% expected</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/saudi-arabia-and-russia-see-100-as-a-fair-price-for-oil-report-20220916/“>Saudi Arabia and Russia see $100 as a fair price for oil – report</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/canada-august-housing-starts-2674k-vs-2650k-expected-20220916/“>Canada August housing starts 267.4K vs 265.0K expected</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/eurozone-core-cpi-final-mom-aug-act-07-prev-02-fcst-06-20220916/“>Eurozone Core CPI Final MoM (Aug) Act: 0.7% Prev: 0.2% Fcst: 0.6%</a></li><li><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/uk-retail-sales-uk-retail-sales-mom-aug-act-16-prev-03-fcst-05-20220916/“>U.K. Retail Sales U.K. Retail Sales MoM (Aug) Act: -1.6% Prev: 0.3% Fcst: -0.5%</a></li></ul><p>Markets:</p><ul><li>WTI crude oil up $0.21 to $85.30</li><li>US 10-year yields down 1 bps to 3.45%</li><li>Gold up $10 to $1673</li><li>S&P 500 down 28 points to 3873, or 0.7% — down 4.8% on the week</li><li>NZD leads, GBP lags</li></ul><p>It could have been worse.</p><p>The FedEx warning late yesterday boosted the dollar and weighed heavily on equity futures. In the end, the decline in the S&P 500 was only about half of the worst levels. The commodity currencies in particular showed some late life and that ensured AUD/USD closed above some critical levels after touching a two-year low in early European trade.</p><p>The euro caught a bid into the London fix. It later gave about half of that move back but ultimately finished 10 pips higher with some late-day bids on improving equities.</p><p>The simmering catalyst was a dip in inflation expectations in the UMich survey. Both 1 year and 5-10 year inflation moved lower month-to-month and led to a small bid in bonds. It also led to a drift lower in 100 bps Fed hike odds from 25% to 17%.</p><p>Cable ended the day as the worst peformer but it made up some ground in US trade as it rose to 1.1423 from a low of 1.1351. The catalyst was a soft retail sales report. Late in the day we also learned the businesses will be getting their power bills cut in half. The question is: Was the market expecting more help on energy?</p><p>USD/JPY remains a focus with the threat of intervention looming. The pair formed something of a double top at 143.75 today and drifted lower to finish near the lows at 142.94. That’s still a gain on the week but the 145.00 level is looking like a tough one to crack and that’s five straight weeks of gains.</p><p>Have a wonderful weekend. Next week is Fed week.</p>

This article was written by Adam Button at forexlive.com.

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US equities find some life late but the weekly chart and seasonals are ominous 0 (0)

<p>Closing changes for the main US markets:</p><ul><li>S&P 500 -0.6%</li><li>Nasdaq composite -0.8%</li><li>Russell 2000 -1.7%</li><li>DJIA -0.4%</li></ul><p>On the week:</p><ul><li>S&P 500 -4.8% — worst since week ending June 17</li><li>Nasdaq composite -5.5%</li><li>Russell 2000 -4.9%</li><li>DJIA -4.1%</li></ul><p>Now for more bad news: There’s an outside bearish reversal on the weekly chart of the S&P 500 (and the Nasdaq as well).</p><p>If that’s not bad enough, next week is the worst week on the calendar seasonally for equities, over the past 50 years.</p>

This article was written by Adam Button at forexlive.com.

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US equities show signs of life late 0 (0)

<p>A bounce earlier today took the S&P 500 to 3873. We’re 9 points below that now and 27 points above the low. If it can get into the post-opening gap, there could be some follow-through.</p><p>Lots of eyes are on the WSJ because we’re now right around the time when the June FOMC leak hit. For now though, there’s no news and there’s not much happening in bonds or FX.</p>

This article was written by Adam Button at forexlive.com.

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UK planning to cut business energy rates in half 0 (0)

<p>Bloomberg reports that UK businesses will get their energy bills cut in half in a government bailout package.</p><p>The market has been assuming that some kind of business bailout was coming and I’m not sure this is good enough. Consumer bills will be capped at £2500 and that same largess was never going to come to businesses but I suspect more than this was anticipated.</p><p>I’ve been arguing that we’re starting to see the covid playbook from governments, where they take on all the financial risk of the crisis rather than letting businesses and consumers suffer. Instead, it’s evolving into more of a covid-lite approach. Given that central banks are also raising rates and hurting the economy, it might not be enough to stave off a tough recession.</p><p>Cable is largely unmoved on this news but earlier today it trade to the lowest since 1985.</p>

This article was written by Adam Button at forexlive.com.

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