US Existing Home Sales Unexpectedly Fell In December

 | Jan 23, 2013 06:37AM ET

Today’s highlights:
  • Claimant Count Change + MPC Meeting Minutes (GB, 09:30 GMT)
  • BoC Monetary Policy Report + Interest Rate Decision (Can, 15:00 GMT)
  • BoC Gov Carney Speaks (Can, 16:15 GMT)

Sales of U.S. existing homes unexpectedly fell in December as supply shrank, underscoring the hurdles for an industry seeking to strengthen its recovery even as it completed its best year since 2007. Purchases fell 1 percent to a 4.94 million annual rate last month, figures from the National Association of Realtors showed yesterday in Washington. Other news is that Global investors say the state of the U.S. government’s finances is the greatest risk to the world economy and almost half are curbing their investments in response to continuing budget battles, a Bloomberg poll shows.

The Bank of Japan (8301)’s decision to hold off on fresh monetary stimulus for a year puts pressure on the Abe administration to revive growth through fiscal measures and risks capping losses in the yen that aid export competitiveness. Governor Masaaki Shirakawa, whose term ends in less than 11 weeks, yesterday agreed to set the 2 percent inflation target urged by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, while stopping short of immediate action to achieve it. The BOJ plans to start open- ended asset purchases in January next year.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said it may be appropriate to review the U.K.’s inflation- targeting regime, and that government measures to strengthen the economy are needed to underpin a “gentle recovery.” In a wide-ranging address, King said the BOE is ready to add more stimulus if needed, though monetary policy is not a “panacea” and more must be done to strengthen banks and implement structural reforms.

King said his view remains that a long-run 2 percent inflation target “should be an essential part of our macroeconomic framework,” and it would be “irresponsible to lose that.” He added that the BOE has the flexibility to allow above-target inflation during slumps.

EUR/USD: The EUR/USD traded flat yesterday as improving German economic sentiment data was outshined by the weaker-than-expected U.S. home sales. Market sentiments were also affected after the Bank of Japan said it would start open-ended asset purchases from banks to stimulate the economy but not until 2014. Today, the pair was trading slightly lower at 1.33109 at the time of writing as market participants were disappointed by the decision of BoJ.

Sentiments will continue to drive the market. On the European session only the French Business Survey will be released, which expected to come at 90 compared to 89 registered previously. Later in the day, on the American session, the U.S will release its MBA Mortgage Applications (WoW), the Redbook (MoM), the House Price Index (MoM), the 4-Week Bill Auction, the API Weekly Crude Stock and the API Weekly Gasoline Stock.

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All these soft economic data is likely to bring some fluctuations intra trade. Investors should be cautious and focus on the latest developments in the U.S regarding the debt ceiling to get visibility. The resistance level is at 1.33985 and the support level is at 1.32502.