Yen Slides On Sharp US GDP

 | Jul 31, 2014 11:12AM ET

The Japanese yen continues to sag, as USD/JPY is trading in the high-102 range. The yen lost close to a cent on Wednesday, as US GDP jumped 4.0%. Taking a look at Thursday's events, Japanese data was weak, as Average Cash Earnings and Housing Starts disappointed. In the US, Unemployment Claims is today's highlight. The markets are braced for rise in the number of claims, with an estimate of 303 thousand.

In the US, GDP soared in the second quarter, expanding at an annual rate of 4.0%. This easily beat the estimate of 3.1%. The boost in economic activity was boosted by strong consumer confidence and business activity in Q2. Meanwhile, ADP Nonfarm Payrolls was unable to keep pace. The key employment indicator dropped to 218 thousand, compared to 284 thousand a month earlier. This was well off the estimate of 234 thousand. If the official Nonfarm Payrolls follows suit with a weak reading on Friday, the US dollar could give up its recent gains.

CB Consumer Confidence was outstanding in June. The key indicator jumped to 90.9 points, crushing the estimate of 85.5 points. This was the indicator's highest level since September 2007. Consumer confidence is closely tracked by analysts since a confident consumer is likely to increase consumption, which is critical for economic growth. The strong reading has helped the dollar posts gains against the retreating yen.

Japanese data continues to struggle this week. Average Cash Earnings slipped to a four-month low, while Housing Starts posted its fourth straight decline. Earlier this week, Preliminary Industrial Production, an important manufacturing release, posted a sharp drop of 3.3% in June. This is the indicator's sharpest decline since June 2013. There was no relief from Household Spending and Retail Sales, as both consumer spending indicators posted a third straight decline. These figures point to trouble in the economy, as a decrease in consumer spending will likely translate into weaker economic growth and put more pressure on the struggling Japanese yen.