Post date: 20/05/2019 11:05


The Pound was the worst performing G10 currency last week as Brexit concerns once again focus traders attention. Theresa May announced she will resign this summer, and Labor leader Corbyn reacted by walking out of the Brexit talks. Elsewhere, while Chinese-US trade tensions continue unresolved, they receded a bit on the Trump administration announcement that any auto tariffs will be delayed by six months.

Emerging market currencies had a rough go as US-Iran tensions were added to the trade conflict. All the major ones sold off save the Ruble, buoyed by higher oil prices. The worst performer last week was the Brazilian real, hammered by poor domestic economic data.

Next week data is scarce in the key currency areas. We expect politics to dominate, including trade conflict headlines, Brexit events, and European Parliament election results. The main macroeconomic report will be the flash PMI indices of economic activity releases Thursday in the Eurozone.

GBP

Reasonably good economic data out of the UK was completely overshadowed by the forceful return of Brexit politics to the top of the agenda. The labor market contributes to cruise ahead, generating nearly 100,000 jobs in the three months to March. None of this mattered to markets as the news that Prime Minister May plans to leave during the summer hit the wires. The likelihood that she will be replaced by a hard Brexiteer, and the subsequent collapse of the May-Corbyn talks on Brexit hammered Sterling, which ended the week down up to 2% against every other G10 currency.

EUR

Economic news out of the Eurozone continued their tendency to surprise the upside. This time it was core inflation that was revised up, to 1.3%. While this is still below the ECB target, it is the highest reading since early 2017. This upward trend will be very welcome by the ECB council, and probably means that significant stimulus measures are far from guaranteed in the Eurozone. While this an unambiguously positive development for the common currency, last week the Euro traded very quietly in the middle of its recent tight range.

Next week we look for the PMI surveys of business activity to confirm the rebound in European indicators and surprise to the upside. If so, we would not be surprise to see the Euro break higher towards 1.13

USD

Market moving data was scarce last week in the US, and the dollar mostly reacted to headlines from the US-China trade conflict, as well as the increased tensions with Iran. The latter provided support for the greenback, which rose steadily all week against all major currency save the oil-dependent Russian Ruble.

This week is also short on key data, but the minutes from the last Federal Reserve meeting will be released Wednesday. This should provide critical insight on whether market expectations that the next move in rates will be down are correct. We believe they are not.