EUR/USD–Euro Calm As Investors Look For Cues

 | Jun 21, 2017 06:36AM ET

The euro continues to show little movement this week, and has inched higher in the Tuesday session. Currently, EUR/USD is trading at 1.1140. On the release front, there are no major events in the eurozone, so it could remain a quiet day for the pair.

The US will release Existing Home Sales, which is expected to dip to 5.54 million. As well, the weekly crude oil inventories will be published, with a forecast of -1.2 million barrels. On Thursday, the US releases unemployment claims.

The well-respected German BDI Federation of Industry added its voice to the chorus, saying that Germany’s economic output would increase by 1.5%. At the same time, the BDI counseled caution, noting that the economy had been buoyed by a weaker euro, lower oil prices and the ECB’s accommodative monetary policy. All three of these are ‘external factors’, in the sense that Germany has limited influence on them, and a significant change in any one factor could hamper the country’s economy.

In the meantime, a growing global demand for German products as boosted the export sector, and relieved concerns about President Trump’s protectionist ‘America first’ stance.

The Federal Reserve has now raised rates twice this year, each time by 25 basis points. The Fed has hinted at one more rate hikes in the second half of 2017, and the markets have circled December as the most likely date for a rate move. The CME Group has pegged the odds of a September hike at just 13%, compared to 18% a week ago. However, the odds for a December increase are at 49%, and this could increase if Fed policymakers continue to wax positive about the economy.

Earlier this week, Federal Reserve of New York President Charles Dudley continued the upbeat message, cautioning the Fed against halting its current tightening cycle. Dudley said that the tight labor market should lead to higher wages, which in turn would push inflation to the Fed’s target of 2.0%. The markets like what they are hearing – not just the positive spin on the economy, but also that the Fed has signaled that it plans to reduce the bloated balance sheet of $4.2 trillion.

Is the US headed for another weak disappointing quarter?

Last week ended on a sour note, as construction and consumer confidence reports missed expectations. Building Permits dropped to 1.17 million, its lowest level since August 2016.

Housing Starts were also weak, as the reading of 1.09 million marked the lowest since November 2016. There is concern that the soft construction numbers could weigh on second-quarter GDP. There was more bad news from UoM Consumer Sentiment, which dipped to 94.7 in May, marking a 7-month low.

This is significant, as it is the indicator’s lowest reading since President Trump took office, and points to consumer unease with how the US economy is being handled. There are troubling signs that the June UoM report could be even lower, coming after the Comey testimony which has damaged Trump’s credibility even further.

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The labor market remains strong, but this has not translated into stronger consumer spending, which accounts for some two-thirds of economic growth.

EUR/USD Fundamentals

Wednesday (June 21)

  • 5:35 German 30-year Bond Auction. Estimate 1.02%
  • 10:00 US Existing Home Sales. Estimate 5.54M
  • 10:30 US Crude Oil Inventories. Estimate -1.2M

Thursday (June 22)

  • 8:30 US Unemployment Claims. Estimate 241K

*All release times are EDT

*Key events are in bold

EUR/USD for Wednesday, June 21, 2017