Daily Market Update 20/01/2022


Main Headlines

President Biden said Wednesday that fighting inflation is the job of the Federal Reserve, tacitly endorsing the central bank’s shift toward higher interest rates. Consumer-price inflation hit a 7% annual rate in December, the highest in almost four decades. The surge in the cost of living triggered in large part by pandemic-related supply breakdowns and soaring demand for goods has proved longer-lasting than the administration, Fed or vast majority of economists anticipated. Fed policy makers are now phasing out their bond purchases and have signalled they will start raising interest rates as soon as March. The recalibration plans have sent Treasuries sliding, pushing up bond yields and driving down equities this month. Biden has seen his approval ratings tumble as a result, with a recent News poll finding that nearly two thirds of Americans believe the US is ‘doing badly’ on managing Covid, with Joe Biden’s pandemic handling at the lowest point of his presidency.

Conservative MPs are starting to “step back” and think twice about a leadership challenge against Boris Johnson. The Prime Minister has faced a defection and a demand to quit from one of his most senior MPs during a dramatic day in Westminster, with even allies of the prime minister warning the current situation cannot go on. The prime minister vowed to battle on in No 10 and his supporters insisted he now had the breathing space for a fightback, with many MPs awaiting the outcome of the Sue Gray inquiry. But Johnson faces a growing clamour from Tory backbenchers to buy their support in any confidence vote by ditching a £12bn-a-year tax rise this spring. A senior Conservative backbencher has warned his colleagues that they face a “year of agony” unless they trigger a vote of no confidence in Boris Johnson. Despite these major setbacks to his leadership, it appears that Mr Johnson’s position is safe for now at least, with many Tory MPs said to be reluctant to act before the findings of the lockdown party’s investigation are published.

Markets

GBP

Sterling is stronger against the dollar and weaker against euro this morning. England’s Plan B measures are to end from next Thursday, with mandatory face coverings in public places and Covid passports both dropped, Boris Johnson has announced. The prime minister also said the government would immediately drop its advice for people to work from home. Britain must learn to live with COVID-19 as it may be with us forever, health minister Sajid Javid said on Thursday, adding that Britain was moving ahead of other countries as the government lifted coronavirus measures. The health secretary has said COVID could be with us forever, but he hopes all restrictions can be lifted by March. UK households are feeling the squeeze from high rents and rapid house price growth, but the pandemic has dampened demand in London. The price of the average UK house increased 10% in the year to November 2021 to more than £270,000, according to data from HM Land Registry.

EUR

Euro is stronger against most major currencies overnight. The US State Department has cleared Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia to send US-made missiles and other weapons to Ukraine, three sources familiar with the decision said, as President Joe Biden predicted Russia would move on Ukraine. Under export control regulations, countries must obtain approval from the State Department before transferring any weapons they received from the United States to third parties. Finland does not plan to join NATO soon but is ready to stand with its European allies and United States by imposing tough sanctions on Russia if it attacks Ukraine, Finland’s Prime Minister Sanna Marin said on Wednesday. The French far-right presidential challenger, Eric Zemmour, said he would seize back control of France’s borders from Europe, block European Union free trade negotiations and prevent any further enlargement of the bloc to the east. German prosecutors have opened an investigation into leaders of the co-governing Greens, Robert Habeck and Annalena Baerbock, over alleged special coronavirus payments.

USD

The dollar is weaker than most major currencies in the early morning trade. The president, Joe Biden, appeared to slip up when he replied to a question by saying the US and its allies have yet to agree on how to hold Moscow accountable over “a minor incursion.” White House aides were quick to clarify that any troop movement across the border would prompt a “swift, severe, and united response.” Biden and congressional Democrats suffered twin legislative defeats late on Wednesday in their push to toughen voting rights protections in the run-up to this November’s mid-term elections that will determine control of Congress in 2023. COVID-19 infections are reaching new peaks in the Americas with 7.2 million new cases and more than 15,000 COVID-related deaths in the last week. With democrats that elected him in 2020 unhappy, President Joe Biden has just a few months to try to chart a path out of the malaise or risk getting swamped in the looming midterm elections in which Republicans are seeking to regain control of Congress.

Ballinger & CO. Morning Report- 20th January 2022

Today’s Rates

GBP>EUR – 1.2007

GBP>USD – 1.3630

EUR>USD – 1.1352

GBP>CAD – 1.7029

GBP>AUD – 1.8850

GBP>SEK – 12.422

GBP>AED – 5.0047

GBP>HKD – 10.614

GBP>ZAR – 20.819

GBP>CHF – 1.2463

  Today’s Calendar           

·      8:00 a.m.: Germany Dec. PPI

·      8:45 a.m.: France Jan. manufacturing, business confidence

·      10:00 a.m.: Norway deposit rates

·      11:00 a.m.: Euro area Dec. CPI

·      12:00 p.m.: Turkey one-week repo rate

·      1:00 p.m.: Ukraine key rate

·      1:30 p.m.: ECB Dec. policy meeting minutes

·      5:00 p.m.: EIA U.S. oil inventory report

  Today’s Highlights

·       Forex Today: Dollar steadies after Wednesday’s correction, eyes on ECB accounts, US data

·       The US dollar has probably peaked for the year – Morgan Stanley

·       GBP/USD consolidates below 1.3650 as US dollar tracks yields higher

·       Japan PM Kishida: Expect BOJ to maintain efforts to realize 2% inflation target

 (https://frank-exchange.com/)



This document has been prepared solely for information and is not intended as an Inducement concerning the purchase or sale of any financial instrument. By its nature market analysis represents the personal view of the author and no warranty can be, or is, offered as to the accuracy of any such analysis, or that predictions provided in any such analysis will prove to be correct. Should you rely on any analysis, information or report provided as part of the Service it does so entirely at its own risk, and Frank eXchange Limited/Manor House Foreign eXchange Limited accepts no responsibility or liability for any loss or damage you may suffer as a result. Information and opinions have been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but no representation is made as to their accuracy. No copy of this document can be taken without prior written permission.

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