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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6902.04
6902.04
6902.04
6920.39
6891.58
+43.57
+ 0.64%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
48977.17
48977.17
48977.17
49209.95
48449.62
+594.79
+ 1.23%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23395.81
23395.81
23395.81
23476.51
23332.23
+160.19
+ 0.69%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
97.900
97.980
97.900
98.090
97.890
-0.100
-0.10%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.17340
1.17348
1.17340
1.17380
1.17104
+0.00128
+ 0.11%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.35603
1.35612
1.35603
1.35618
1.35276
+0.00192
+ 0.14%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4466.44
4466.82
4466.44
4468.38
4427.82
+17.44
+ 0.39%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
57.926
57.961
57.926
58.138
57.736
-0.251
-0.43%
--

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Spot Silver Continued Its Short-term Upward Trend, Rising More Than $2 During The Day To Reach $79 Per Ounce, With Gains Expanding To 3.2%. New York Silver Futures Also Broke Through $79 Per Ounce, Rising More Than 3% During The Day

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Yield On 20-Year Japanese Government Bond Rises 1.0 Basis Point To 3.055%

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Yield On 10-Year Japanese Government Bond Rises 0.5 Basis Points To 2.120%

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[Report: Hg Capital Close To Reaching Onestream Privatization Agreement] Sources Familiar With The Matter Revealed That Private Equity Acquisition Firm Hg Capital Is In Advanced Talks To Acquire Financial Software Maker Onestream Inc., And The Deal Could Be Announced As Early As The Next Few Days

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India's Nifty Oil And Gas Index Last Down 1.3%

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India's Nifty Bank Futures Up 0.05% In Pre-Open Trade

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India's Nifty 50 Futures Up 0.09% In Pre-Open Trade

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Dollar/Yen Last Unchanged At 156.39 Yen After 10-Year Japanese Government Bond Auction

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Japan 10-Year Bond Auction Tail 0.05 Versus 0.04 At Previous Sale

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India 10-Year Benchmark Government Bond Yield At 6.6318%, Previous Close 6.6331%

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Indian Rupee Opens 0.07% Higher At 90.2150 Per USA Dollar, Previous Close 90.2775

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Spot Silver Extended Its Gains To 3.00% On The Day, Currently Trading At $78.90 Per Ounce

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Spot Silver Rose Above $78 Per Ounce, Up More Than 2% On The Day. New York Silver Futures Rose 2.00% On The Day, Currently Trading At $78.20 Per Ounce

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Citi Expects Venezuelan Oil Supply Disruptions To Persist, Supporting Sturdy Crude Prices

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The Main Shanghai Tin Contract Surged 4.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At 345,770.00 Yuan/ton

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Russia's Lipetsk Region Governor: Ukrainian Drone Debris Sparks Fire At Industrial Site In Russia's Lipetsk Region

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[Three New Wallets Withdrew 752 Bitcoins From Binance And Okx, Worth $70.3 Million] January 6Th, According To Lookintobitcoin Monitoring, Three New Wallets Withdrew 752 Bitcoins From Binance And Okx 8 Hours Ago, Worth $70.3 Million

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Spot Platinum Rises Nearly 3% To $2339.20/Oz

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Asked About Her Return To Venezuela, Machado Says 'Want To Go Back As Soon As Possible'

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Venezuelan Opposition Leader Machado: I Have Not Spoken With US President Trump Since October

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          Bank of Japan Meeting: Another Baby Step to Exiting Negative Rates?

          XM

          Forex

          Central Bank

          Summary:

          Despite heightened rate hike speculation, BoJ to likely stand pat in December.No change is anticipated either in yield curve control.But yen traders will be seeking fresh clues in Tuesday’s announcement.

          BoJ still to join the rate hike club

          The Bank of Japan is the only major central bank that has not yet raised interest rates, as despite inflation running above its 2% target for the past one-and-a-half years, Japan has yet to be declared free of deflation.
          Policymakers are keen to see domestically fuelled price pressures like wage growth replacing external drivers such as last year’s energy price shock to be convinced that the inflation rate can be sustained above 2%. Whilst there have been plenty of encouraging signals from the data, there’s yet to be anything conclusive to suggest that inflation has made a permanent comeback in Japan.
          Bank of Japan Meeting: Another Baby Step to Exiting Negative Rates?_1
          The consumer price index ticked up to 3.3% y/y in October but if the Tokyo CPI numbers, which are leading indicators, are to be believed, the nationwide readings due on Friday likely moderated in November. The GDP data is another one not going in the BoJ’s favour. The Japanese economy contracted more than expected in the third quarter, raising question marks about its strength just as the BoJ is considering exiting negative interest rates.

          Consumers are spending less but businesses are upbeat

          Much of the weakness is down to sluggish household spending. Consumption has fallen sharply in the past two quarters as household budgets have been squeezed by rising prices. It’s an entirely different story for corporate Japan, however, as businesses have been benefiting from the favourable exchange rate that’s seen the yen slump to levels last seen in 1990. Optimism among large Japanese firms has been going from strength to strength this year.
          Bank of Japan Meeting: Another Baby Step to Exiting Negative Rates?_2
          But the outlook is far from clear. The yen’s fortunes have started to change now that the Fed has opened the door to rate cuts and the BoJ is on the verge of scrapping negative rates. Moreover, growth in all the major economies is slowing, thus, this optimism may not last very long.
          On the other hand, the Japanese government recently announced a large stimulus package aimed at easing the pain of high inflation on households, so a turnaround in consumer spending is possible in the coming months.

          Waiting for the elusive wage acceleration

          The muddied economic picture may complicate matters for policymakers, but ultimately, the BoJ will likely base its decision on whether to exit stimulus on what happens to wages. To this effect, next year’s spring wage negotiations will be crucial. Early signs of where the latest round of pay deals are headed are promising.
          If the BoJ is satisfied with the outcome, there could be liftoff by April, even if all the other pieces of the jigsaw don’t quite fit properly. The Bank likely recognizes that this may be its best and only opportunity to end the highly unpopular policy of negative rates once and for all.

          Will the BoJ give up control of the yield curve?

          But what happens to yield curve control (YCC) policy is somewhat less straightforward. Although the BoJ significantly loosened its grip on the yield curve in October when it raised the upper bound of the 10-year yield target to 1.0%, it will probably not want to abandon YCC policy entirely so as to be able to prevent sudden moves in yields.
          For investors, however, the immediate priority is the timing of any big policy shift. Some traders are speculating that the BoJ will hike rates as early as the December meeting, if not, in January. A 10-basis-point hike is not fully priced in until June so the consensus view seems to be that the BoJ will remain patient. With sovereign bond yields globally taking a dive lately, there’s also less pressure on policymakers to make any further tweaks to their YCC policy.

          Yen on standby for policy hints

          Yet, the rhetoric from Governor Ueda suggests some bias towards normalizing policy. Given the BoJ’s history to shock the markets, the risk of a surprise decision in January to either hike rates or end YCC, or both, cannot be dismissed.
          However, such a risk is very low for the December meeting so much of the reaction in the markets will depend on any changes in Ueda’s language. Any clues that a rate increase is on the way in early 2024 could fuel the US dollar’s selloff against the Japanese currency.
          Bank of Japan Meeting: Another Baby Step to Exiting Negative Rates?_3
          Dollar/yen could extend its slide to the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the January-November uptrend at 136.65, which is near where prices troughed in July.
          But if the BoJ disappoints by not altering much in its statement and Ueda gives little away in terms of fresh hints on the timing of a possible exit, dollar/yen could stage a rebound. Any upside could initially target the 23.6% Fibonacci of 146.09 before aiming for the 50-day moving average at 148.87.

          Source: XM

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Argentine Economy Struggling

          Alex

          Economic

          The painful economic steps that Argentina's new president, Javier Milei, announced this week sound draconian: cutting the currency's value in half. Reducing aid to provincial governments. Suspending public works. Cutting subsidies for gas and electricity. Raising some taxes.
          Yet the South American country's economy is such a basket case -- and has been for so long -- that many analysts believe that only such radical measures offer a realistic opportunity to rescue the economy.
          "It was a good start," said Ivan Werning, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "If the economy were a house, it is already burning."
          Inflation in Argentina has hit 161%. Its economy is shrinking, in part because of a ruinous drought. In the past five years, its currency has lost about 90% of its value against the U.S. dollar. Its debts, including $45 billion that it owes the International Monetary Fund, are suffocating. One in four Argentinians lives in poverty.
          Whether Milei succeeds will depend partly on details that have yet to be worked out and compromises that need to be made to win political support for his program. He commands a fragile base in the Argentine Congress, with his party ranking a distant third in the number of seats it holds.
          But the critical question, economists say, is this: Will the Argentinian people -- who gave Milei, a libertarian economist, nearly 56% of the vote in a runoff election last month -- continue to back his plan once real economic pain inevitably sets in?
          "They appear to have the sense that the population has given them a mandate to do all these painful measures," said Monica de Bolle, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "The moment [Argentinians] start seeing their empty pockets and nothing is really improving because it's going to take time ... people will get impatient, and that support can evaporate."
          What makes his challenge so difficult is that Milei's plan seems certain to make people's lives worse long before they get better. Reduced government subsidies mean that Argentinians will pay more for electricity and transportation. A devalued peso will make imports more expensive. The annual inflation rate, de Bolle said, could roughly double to 300%.
          In the meantime, the government spending cuts will derail economic growth.
          "A recession next year is unavoidable," said Martin Castellano, head of Latin American research at the Institute of International Finance, a banking trade group that is forecasting that Argentina's economy will shrink 1.3% in 2024. "We think it's going to be a painful year."
          The economy's troubles have been building for decades. The government, long dominated by the political descendants of the 1940s and 1950s populist strongman Juan Peron, has spent recklessly. The central bank has printed money -- and fueled explosive rates of inflation -- to finance the resulting debts. In the process, the Argentine peso has gone into freefall and lost credibility as a national currency.
          The previous government sought to deny reality by strictly limiting Argentinians' ability to exchange pesos into U.S. dollars or other foreign currencies. As a result, the official exchange rate made the peso look stronger than it actually was -- around 400 pesos for every $1 before the devaluation that Milei's government announced Tuesday. But no one was fooled. The black market has lately pegged the peso at around 1,000 per $1.
          Milei is targeting what many economists see as the root of Argentina's economic problems: out-of-control government spending. Milei proposes to balance the budget by the end of 2024 -- a bold goal -- by lowering spending and imposing some tax increases. He plans to increase aid to Argentina's poorest to help them cushion the pain.
          "Getting the fiscal house in order is mandatory, so these are the right step: a mix of taxes and spending adjustments," said Werning of MIT.
          The International Monetary Fund, which has repeatedly bailed out Argentina, has lent its critical support to Milei's plan.
          "These bold initial actions aim to significantly improve public finances in a manner that protects the most vulnerable in society and strengthen the foreign exchange regime," Julie Kozack, an IMF spokeswoman, said in a statement. "Their decisive implementation will help stabilize the economy and set the basis for more sustainable and private-sector led growth."
          At the heart of Milei's audacious economic agenda is his plan to devalue the peso from 400 to 800 per $1 and then by an additional 2% each month. Part of the goal is to make Argentina's exports less expensive -- and thus more competitive -- overseas and reduce the country's gaping trade deficit.
          And by making imports more expensive, the devaluation should not only help cut the trade gap but also slow the amount of money leaving Argentina. This would allow the central bank to replenish its depleted foreign-currency reserves, which are vital during financial crises.
          Some economists worry that Milei's devaluation doesn't actually go far enough. His plan would narrow -- but not close -- the gap between the official exchange rate and the 1,000-peso-to-$1 black market rate.
          "It's like pulling the Band-Aid halfway off," said Lawrence White, an economist at George Mason University and senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute.
          Milei's plan has also come under attack from critics on the political left who argue that it will cause needless pain to ordinary people. Juan Grabois, an activist who is close to former center-left President Cristina Fernández (2007-2015), said that Milei's government has announced "a social murder without flinching like a psychopath about to massacre his defenseless victims."
          Milei campaigned as a radical reformer, calling himself an "anarcho-capitalist" and theatrically brandishing a chainsaw to illustrate his commitment to budget cutting. He would close the country's discredited central bank, he said, and "dollarize" Argentina by replacing the beleaguered peso with the U.S. dollar.
          Since winning, though, he has shown some tentative signs of moderation. He named a former central bank chief as his economy minister. And he appears to have shelved the dollarization plan, perhaps out of necessity.
          "The truth of the matter is that Argentina could not dollarize, not right now," said Liliana Rojas-Suarez, an economist who is head of the Latin America program at the Center for Global Development. "It does not have the dollars to dollarize."
          De Bolle at the Peterson Institute said Argentina needs to scrap the existing peso, which has lost all credibility, and replace it -- not with dollars but with a new homegrown currency.
          In 1994, she noted, Brazil vanquished two decades of hyperinflation by replacing its currency with a new one, the real.
          "To this day, no hyperinflation came back," she said.
          For a new currency to be accepted, though, Argentinians would need to feel confident that the government was committed to controlling spending and containing inflation.
          For now, many economists express at least cautious optimism that Milei is taking the right steps.
          "It's a dysfunctional economy," Rojas-Suarez said. "Something has to be done about it. What Milei is trying to do is shock therapy. You go to the center of the problem, and attack."

          Source: NWA

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Comments
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Dollar Edges Higher but Set for Weekly Loss; Fed's Williams in Spotlight

          Zi Cheng

          Forex

          Economic

          Fed’s dovish pivot hits the dollar

          Both the European Central Bank and the Bank of England expressed their desire to keep policy tight well into next year to combat inflation, as they kept interest rates unchanged on Thursday.
          The ECB said policy easing was not even brought up in a two-day meeting, the BOE said rates would remain high for "an extended period."
          This contrasted with the Fed's pivot towards rate cuts, and means that the dollar will remain out of favor as the year comes to an end.
          “As the dust settles after a furious period for central bank meetings we are left to conclude that European policymakers have chosen to push back more than the Fed when it comes to what the market prices for 2024 rate cuts,” said analysts at ING, in a note.
          There’s more U.S. economic data to digest later in the session, including November industrial and manufacturing production as well as S&P PMI numbers, but most focus will be on a speech by Fed policymaker John Williams, as the market looks for confirmation that the debate has moved on to the timing of the first rate cut.
          “Should Williams mention rate cuts, we suspect the dollar will stay on the soft side today,” ING added.

          Euro, sterling fall back from recent highs

          EUR/USD fell 0.3% to 1.0953, just below 1.1009, a two-week high it touched on Thursday, after PMI data showed that German business activity deteriorated in December, increasing the likelihood of a recession in Europe's biggest economy at the end of the year.
          Still, while the ECB's next move should be a lowering of interest rates from record highs the central bank should "enjoy the view" for a while, French central bank chief Francois Villeroy de Galhau said on Friday, implying a rate cut was not imminent.
          GBP/USD fell 0.2% to 1.2747, with sterling having surged 1.1% to a four-month peak on Thursday after BoE's hawkish tilt.
          “Of the recent central bank meetings, the Bank of England probably offered the most pushback against dovish expectations,” said ING. “There was nothing in their statement to encourage dovish expectations for 2024.”

          Yen steadies ahead of next week’s BOJ meeting

          In Asia, USD/JPY traded 0.1% lower to 141.75, with the Japanese yen steadied near a four-month high to the dollar, having appreciated sharply against the greenback in recent sessions.
          But further gains in the yen were uncertain, with the Bank of Japan expected to maintain its ultra-dovish stance in its final meeting for the year next week.
          USD/CNY traded 0.1% lower at 7.1035, after the People’s Bank of China injected 1.45 trillion yuan ($200 billion) into the economy through its medium-term lending facility.
          Economic data also offered some positive cues on China. Industrial production grew more than expected in November, although retail sales and fixed asset investment missed expectations.
          AUD/USD rose 0.3% to 0.6717, as the Aussie dollar, a major indicator of Asian risk sentiment, rose to an over four-month high.

          Source: Investing.com

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Euro and Pound Surge as ECB and BoE Diverge from Dovish Fed

          XM

          Economic

          No rate cut talk at the ECB and BoE
          Central banks in Britain and the euro area diverged from their US counterpart on Thursday, sidestepping any talk about rate cuts while reiterating the need to maintain higher rates for longer. The European Central Bank kept its main lending rates unchanged as expected, but President Christine Lagarde took markets by surprise with the hawkishness of tone.
          Although the ECB lowered its forecasts for inflation for this year and next, Lagarde displayed heightened wariness about elevated wage pressures, warning that policymakers shouldn't lower their guard. She also disappointed those anticipating some signal of a rate cut, telling reporters "We did not discuss rate cuts at all" in her press briefing.
          In a further hawkish twist, the ECB accelerated its quantitative tightening schedule by announcing an early end of its PEPP reinvestments.
          The Bank of England also delivered a hawkish pause, pointing to several upside risks to inflation. Higher services inflation and strong wage growth in particular are a bigger problem in the UK than elsewhere, so the BoE's stance is probably the least surprising. Nevertheless, it's far too evident how much more work the BoE still has in reining in inflation completely and that explains why the pound was the best performer yesterday, followed closely by the euro and the yen.
          Dollar selloff aids euro, pound and yen
          The pound came just shy of reclaiming the $1.28 level, while the euro briefly brushed the $1.10 mark. The yen has also been on a roll lately amid the US dollar's broad selloff and speculation that the Bank of Japan is inching closer to exiting negative interest rates. The dollar hit a four-and-a-half-week low of 140.94 yen on Wednesday.
          However, there's a bit of a pullback today for the euro following a very poor batch of flash PMI readings out of the Eurozone. The French and German PMIs have fallen deeper into contraction territory, dragging the Eurozone composite PMI down to 47.0 in December from 47.6 previously. Expectations were for a slight improvement to 48.0.
          The UK economy on the other hand seems to be faring notably better. Although the manufacturing PMI disappointed, the services sector appears to be bouncing back, pushing the composite PMI to a 6-month high of 51.7.
          Monetary policy divergence in the spotlight after latest data
          The latest data highlights how central banks have become at odds about the way forward on rates and is perhaps one of the reasons why investors are not listening to policymakers. Only yesterday, US retail sales beat expectations in November and weekly jobless claims declined. Yet, the Fed seems to be sending a clear signal that rate cuts are on the way, while the ECB wants to keep rates on hold for an extended duration despite the Eurozone economy being the weakest among the G10.
          Investors have not altered their view that the ECB will begin slashing rates in April, with the cumulative cuts for 2024 being ratcheted up after the PMI releases. As for the Fed, there is greater certainty that the first cut will come in March rather than May.
          Investors have also upped their bets for Bank of England rate cuts, but in the short term at least, the pound's bullish streak is likely to continue. The yen is another currency that could extend its gains in the coming days should the Bank of Japan offer clues about the possible timing of liftoff when it meets on Tuesday.
          Stocks remain buoyant
          For equity traders, though, the sharp slide in yields has turbo-charged the end-of-year rally, with even Hong Kong's Hang Seng index joining in today. China's central bank injected a record amount of liquidity into the economy after another batch of underwhelming economic data were released on Thursday. The cash injection, along with the relaxation of property restrictions in Beijing and Shanghai boosted sentiment in Asia.
          On Wall Street, the Dow Jones closed at another record high, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq set new 2023 highs as tech behemoth, Apple, saw its share price hit an all-time high.
          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Pound to Euro Rate On Course for 1.17 After UK PMI and Consumer Confidence Improvement

          Warren Takunda

          Central Bank

          Economic

          The British Pound rose against the Euro ahead of the weekend after UK survey data pointed to a more upbeat picture of the economy in December, while a similar survey of the Eurozone warned of economic contraction.
          The S&P PMI survey showed services sector activity increased in December, building on November's improvement and raising the odds that a recession will be avoided.
          The services PMI read at 52.7, well above November's 50.9 and the expectation for 51.
          The composite PMI, which assesses the broader economy, read at 51.7, suggesting the economy is comfortably in expansionary territory. The market was expecting 50.9, a shave higher than November's 50.7.
          These data contrast with the Eurozone's composite figure - released half an hour earlier - of 47, which was below consensus estimates and points to an ongoing contraction in the bloc.
          The contrasting fortunes create a clear gulf between the UK and Eurozone economies that supports the Pound to Euro exchange rate, which has jumped a third of a per cent to 1.1650.
          "We see this as a more positive backdrop for sterling than the euro over coming months, a sentiment seemingly shared by markets this morning. GBPEUR is almost half a percent following this morning's prints, and now well on track for our year-end target of 1.17," says Nick Rees, FX Market Analyst at Monex Europe.
          "The Euro Area economy appears to be barrelling towards a technical recession in Q4," says Matthew Ryan, Head of Market Strategy at Ebury. "By contrast, the UK economy looks to be in a much healthier state... this should both quell investor concerns surrounding the possibility of a UK recession and vindicate the Bank of England’s ‘higher for longer’ stance on interest rates."
          The Pound to Dollar exchange rate is higher by 0.10% at 1.2777, taking its two-day gain to 1.70%.
          S&P Global says UK business activity was supported by a renewed improvement in order books, alongside efforts to work through post-pandemic backlogs.
          Meanwhile, the survey confirms that the Bank of England is right to be worried about persistent inflationary pressures in the services industry.
          S&P Global reports input cost inflation increased to its highest since August, driven by another sharp rise in operating expenses at service sector companies. This was widely linked to rising salary payments.
          Pound to Euro Rate On Course for 1.17 After UK PMI and Consumer Confidence Improvement_1
          "The increase in input costs shows inflation is proving stickier than hoped and indicates there is still some way to go before costs stabilise," says John Glen, Chief Economist at CIPS.
          The Bank of England kept interest rates unchanged on Thursday and warned rates could rise again owing to fears of ongoing inflation pressures linked to wages, particularly in services.
          The Pound rose in response to this message, and Friday's findings from the PMI survey give the Bank's stance added credibility.
          December data also indicated that UK private sector firms are optimistic overall about their own growth prospects for 2024.
          It's not just businesses that are increasingly optimistic about the next year; consumers are also more chipper.
          The recovery in consumer confidence extended into December, according to GfK's composite index of consumers' confidence, which rose to -22 in December from -24 in November. November had seen a marked improvement on October's reading, which suggests a trend is establishing.
          "The ongoing recovery in consumers’ confidence adds weight to our view that households’ spending will partially rebound in Q4, supported by an increase in real wages," says Gabriella Dickens, Senior UK Economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

          Source: poundsterlinglive.com

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          JPY Has the Greatest Scope to Outperform within G10 Next Year – MUFG

          Zi Cheng

          Forex

          Economic

          JPY to outperform notably as BoJ act

          "We expect the BoJ to end YCC and NIRP at the January meeting. This is partially priced but the tone of the BoJ is likely to fuel expectations of further policy tightening later in 2024."
          "We believe the JPY has the greatest scope to outperform within G10 next year. The global inflation shock is reversing and that has the greatest implications for JPY with even a partial reversal of the move in USD/JPY from 115.00 to 150.00 implying considerable scope to outperform."
          "After such a big move higher and given the attractive carry, short JPY positioning remains substantial but once expectations of a turn in the trend build further there is a risk of a more abrupt and even larger move stronger for the Yen than we currently forecast."

          Source: FXSTREET

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Euro Pares Gains As Soft PMI Figures Undermine ECB's 'Higher for Longer'

          Warren Takunda

          Central Bank

          Enthusiasm for the Euro was curtailed by a disappointing survey of the Eurozone's economy that revealed activity fell in December and undermined the European Central Bank's message on interest rates.
          The Euro was softer against the Dollar and Pound after S&P Global's Eurozone manufacturing PMI read at 44.2 in December, which was unchanged on November but below the consensus expectation for 44.6.
          Services disappointed at 48.1, which was softer than November's 48.7 and below the expectation for 49. This takes the Eurozone's composite PMI measure to 47, down from 47.6 and below expectations for 48.
          The Euro had risen against the Dollar and other currencies on Thursday after the European Central Bank (ECB) released relatively upbeat projections for the economy, saying this justified interest rates remaining unchanged for the foreseeable future.
          These data, however, question this stance and will bolster market bets for a rate cut falling as early as March.
          "Any lack of material improvement in today’s Eurozone flash PMIs for December could somewhat curtail the relative optimism embedded in the ECB and EUR," says Valentin Marinov, Head of G10 FX Strategy at Crédit Agricole.
          The Euro to Dollar exchange rate has fallen back from the cusp of 1.10 to 1.0965 at the time of writing. The Euro to Pound rate is lower by 0.40% at 0.8580.
          "There’s a bit of a pullback today for the euro following a very poor batch of flash PMI readings out of the Eurozone," says Raffi Boyadjian, Lead Investment Analyst at XM.com. "The UK economy on the other hand seems to be faring notably better. Although the manufacturing PMI disappointed, the services sector appears to be bouncing back, pushing the composite PMI to a 6-month high of 51.7."
          Euro Pares Gains As Soft PMI Figures Undermine ECB's 'Higher for Longer'_1
          Business activity in the Eurozone fell at its fastest rate for 11 years, barring only the early 2020 pandemic months, said S&P Global.
          Jobs were cut for a second month running as firms scaled back operating capacity in line with the worsening order book situation
          Future sentiment remains well below its long-run average despite lifting slightly higher.Employment fell for a second consecutive month as companies scaled back capacity in line with the weakened demand environment, which will bolster market expectations for ECB rate cuts in 2024.
          The recent falls in employment were the first recorded since early 2021, suggesting the labour market is cooling in a manner consistent with slowing inflation rates.
          The data will cast doubts on the credibility of the ECB's recent guidance, which could undermine the Euro's ability to advance higher from current levels.
          SOURCE :Poundsterlinglive
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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