EUR/USD: Landscape After The Fed

 | Dec 18, 2014 06:37AM ET


GROWTHACES.COM Trading Positions
EUR/USD: short at 1.2440, target 1.2250, stop-loss 1.2340
USD/JPY: long at 116.50, target 119.80, stop-loss 118.10
GBP/JPY: long at 183.70, target 186.50, stop-loss 184.30
GROWTHACES.COM Pending Orders
USD/CAD: buy at 1.1540, target 1.1740, stop-loss 1.1480
AUD/USD: sell at 0.8260, target 0.8100, stop-loss 0.8320
NZD/USD: sell at 0.7810, target 0.7630, stop-loss 0.7880
EUR/CHF: buy at 1.2010, target 1.2090, stop-loss 1.1995
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EUR/USD: Landscape After The Fed
(short, the target is 1.2250)

  • The Fed dropped a pledge to keep interest rate near zero for a "considerable time", as we expected and offered a strong signal that it was on track to raise interest rates sometime next year.
  • The U.S. central bank said it would take a "patient" approach in deciding when to bump borrowing costs higher. Fed Chair Janet Yellen said at a conference that "patient" meant the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee was unlikely to hike rates for "at least a couple of meetings," meaning April of next year at the earliest. Yellen said that even with a sharp drop in energy costs, the Fed felt confident that inflation would eventually turn higher and approach the central bank's 2% target, and she suggested officials would feel comfortable raising rates as long as other economic signals stayed strong and expectations of future inflation held firm.
  • U.S. policymakers continue to expect the economy to grow between 2.6% and 3.0% next year. The Fed acknowledged that headline inflation was likely to slow next year to between 1.0% yoy and 1.6% yoy, the result of a cratering in oil prices. Core inflation, which excludes volatile items like food and energy, is projected to dip only slightly next year and reach the Fed's target by the end of 2016. The median projected federal funds rate was 1.125% for the end of 2015, a 0.25 percentage point drop from the last projection.
  • Yesterday’s data showed U.S. CPI fell 0.3% mom, the largest decline since December 2008, after being flat in October. The CPI increased 1.3% yoy, the smallest gain in nine months, after advancing 1.7% yoy in October. A fall by 0.1% mom and rise by 1.4% yoy was expected. Gasoline prices have recorded their biggest drop since December 2008. Stripping out food and energy prices, the so-called core CPI edged up 0.1% mom and 1.7% yoy after rising 0.2% mom and 1.8% yoy in October.
  • European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure said ECB policymakers are discussing how best to act to revive the euro zone economy rather than whether to do so. He said: “I see a broad consensus around the table in the Governing Council that we need to do more” and added that sovereign bond purchases were the “baseline option”.
  • Germany's Ifo business climate index rose to 105.5 in December from 104.7 in November. The median forecast amounted to 105.4. With the current conditions index steady at 110, the rise from the previous month was driven by an increase in the expectations index from 99.8 to 101.1. The breakdown by sector showed an improvement in the manufacturing sector, perhaps reflecting the fall in the EUR/USD that improved competitiveness in the short term.
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