EUR/USD: Little Movement As German Consumer Climate Softens

 | Aug 27, 2014 07:27AM ET

It continues to be a quiet week for EUR/USD, which is trading in the high-1.31 range in Wednesday's European session. On the release front, there are no major releases out of the Eurozone or the US. There was more weak data out of Germany, as GfK German Consumer Climate came in at 8.6 points, marking a three-month low.

Germany is supposed to be the Eurozone's reliable locomotive, but the region's largest economy is showing signs of weakness. On Wednesday, GfK Consumer Climate came in at 8.6 points, short of the estimate of 8.9. It was a disappointing result compared to the June reading of 9.0 points. Earlier in the week, German Ifo Business Climate dropped to 106.3 points, its lowest reading since June 2013. This follows the Services and Manufacturing PMIs, both of which softened in July. The markets are bracing for more bad news, with a weak release expected from German Preliminary CPI on Thursday.

US durables painted a mixed picture on Tuesday. Core Durable Goods Orders, a key indicator, came in at -0.8%, its worst showing in 2014. This was nowhere near the estimate of +0.5%. At the same time, Durable Goods Orders stunned the markets with a record gain of 22.6%. The reason? A huge increase in the purchase of passenger planes in July. Meanwhile, the CB Consumer Sentiment jumped to 92.4 points, up from 90.3 a month earlier.

Financial leaders and central bankers met at Jackson Hole for a conference late last week, and the markets were all ears as Fed chair Janet Yellen delivered the keynote address on Friday. Any hopes for some dramatic news were dashed, as Yellen did not provide any clues as to the timing of a rate hike. She reiterated that the US job market still needed to improve, so employment numbers remain a crucial factor in any rate move by the Fed. There is a divergence in monetary stance between the ECB and the Fed, as the Fed is winding up QE, while the ECB may be forced to provide stimulus to the prop up the sagging Eurozone economy.