GBP/USD came under pressure with a slide to fresh 10-month lows near 1.3400.

US bond yields continued to edge higher on Wednesday with markets again fretting over the threat of higher inflation. Fed Chair Powell’s comments were in line with last week’s policy statement.

Risk appetite was relatively steady despite underlying reservations over inflation. Chinese PMI data provided an element of relief with limited net gains for Asian equities.

The dollar posted strong gains amid buying interest on yield grounds and the US index posted 12-month highs. EUR/USD dipped sharply to 14-month lows around 1.1600.  GBP/USD came under pressure with a slide to fresh 10-month lows near 1.3400, but Sterling recovered from intra-day lows against the Euro. strength hurt commodity currencies before a limited retracement on Thursday.

Euro-zone industrial confidence index edged higher to 14.1 for September from 13.8 previously and above market expectations while there was a net retreat in services-sector confidence. The data overall continued to indicate resilience within the Euro area despite the strong net increase in energy prices.

The Euro attempted to resist further losses ahead of Wednesday’s New York open, but underlying selling pressure gradually increased as the dollar posted further net gains. ECB President Lagarde again expressed confidence that the increase in inflation would be transitory.

There was more substantial Euro selling after the US open with the dollar maintaining a strong tone and commodity currencies continuing to lose ground. In this environment, EUR/USD retreated to 14-month lows around 1.1600 near the European close with the dollar index at 12-month highs.

Philadelphia Fed President Harker stated that he did not expect an increase in interest rates until late 2022 or early 2023. Fed Chair Powell reiterated that the central bank is close to achieving substantial further progress to begin tapering, but also repeated that interest rates are a long way off. As far as inflation is concerned, he insisted that there was no evidence that the spike in inflation is having an impact on expectations.

The dollar maintained a firm underlying tone following the commentary with the Euro continuing to test support. Markets will be wary over potential choppy month-end trading on Thursday, but there was little change in early Europe with EUR/USD close to 1.1600 as the dollar held a firm tone.

The Bank of Japan bought ETF funds on Wednesday for the first time in over three months with a suggestion that the buying was aimed at stabilising equity markets.

Evidence from bondholders suggested that the latest Evergrande Coupon payment had been missed, although there was no formal announcement.

US pending home sales posted a strong 8.1% gain for August after a 2.0% decline the previous month.  There was no further increase in US bond yields into the European close on Wednesday, but the dollar overall maintained a strong tone and USD/JPY posted highs just above the 111.90 level.

Markets were continuing to monitor developments surrounding the US debt limit and Federal funding with evidence that Congressional Democrats had resolved their differences, but Republicans were still blocking headway. There will be votes on a stop-gap funding Bill on Thursday with procedural developments likely to dominate. USD/JPY maintained a strong tone to challenge the 112.00 level, the strongest reading for 17 months.

The Chinese manufacturing PMI index edged lower to 49.6 for September from 50.1 and slightly below consensus forecasts, but there was a strong recovery in the non-manufacturing index to 53.2 from 47.5 following coronavirus-related weakness in August. The Caixin manufacturing index was also slightly higher than expected which offered some reassurance. Asian equities held firm on Thursday with USD/JPY trading just below the 112.00 level and EUR/JPY around 129.75.

UK mortgage approvals edged lower to 74,500 for August from a revised 75,100 previously, but slightly above consensus forecasts. There was a rebound in mortgage lending to £5.29bn for the month from the contraction of £1.75bn the previous month while consumer credit also rebounded for the month.

The UK data was unable to gain any support from the data and lost ground amid further unease over the impact of higher energy prices. GBP/USD dipped to fresh 10-month lows below 1.3420 while GBP/EUR hit lows at 1.1550 before a retreat to 1.1575.

Bank of England Governor Bailey stated that the UK recovery is uneven, although he also warned that the bank must consider the possibility that supply constraints will have second-round effects. In this context, he noted that inflation expectations needed to be watched closely. The furlough scheme will expire on Thursday.

Sterling managed to stabilise but failed to make more than a limited recovery with further unease over the impact of high energy prices. GBP/USD traded close to 1.3450 on Thursday with EUR/GBP around 0.8630 as media coverage surrounding the energy situation faded to some extent and revised second-quarter GDP was above expectations.

Economic Calendar

ExpectedPrevious
08:00CHF KOF Leading Indicator(SEP)125113.5
08:55German Unemployment Rate(M/M)(SEP)
08:55German Unemployment Change(M/M)(SEP)-53K
09:00Unemployment Rate(AUG)9.70%9.30%
09:00CPI (EU Norm) Prelim YY(SEP)2.00%2.00%
09:00CPI (EU Norm) Prelim MM(SEP)0.40%0.40%
09:00CPI (EU Norm) Final YY*(SEP)2.00%2.50%
09:00CPI (EU Norm) Final MM*(SEP)-0.30%0.20%
09:30GBP Total Business Investment (Q/Q)2.40%
09:30GBP Current Account-13.3B-12.8B
09:30United Kingdom GDP (Y/Y)22.20%
09:30United Kingdom GDP (Q/Q)4.80%
10:00Euro-Zone Unemployment Rate(AUG)7.60%7.60%
13:00Germany CPI (Y/Y)(SEP)3.90%3.90%
13:00Germany CPI (M/M)(SEP)0.10%0.90%
13:00Germany Harmonised CPI (M/M)(SEP)0.10%0.10%
13:00Germany Harmonised CPI (Y/Y)(SEP)3.40%
13:30USD GDP Price Index (Q/Q)
13:30USD GDP (Annualized)
13:30USD Initial Jobless Claims
13:30USD Continuing Jobless Claims
14:45USD Chicago PMI(SEP)66.8
23:30JPY Unemployment Rate(AUG)2.80%

*All rates shown are indicative of interbank rates and should only be used for indication purposes only. It is important to note that foreign exchange rates fluctuate and that rates may vary depending on the amount and the base currency that is purchased or sold. Rates are correct as of 8:00am UK time. CentralFX are not responsible for the rates shown.