Daily Market Update 21/10/2022

“The UK leadership vote may delay the long-awaited fiscal plan that was due Oct. 31 amid Truss’s resignation, adding further pressure on the markets and the Bank of England. Investors, who dumped the pound and government bonds following Truss’s mini-budget plan, are increasingly becoming unsettled.”



Main Headlines

Investors now expect the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to 5 per cent next year, suggesting that it will need to hammer the brakes on the economy harder than expected to tackle high inflation. Traders have fully priced in the benchmark policy rate reaching 5 per cent in May 2023, up from 4.6 per cent before the latest inflation data released late last week. Expectations had ratcheted up after September’s consumer price index report showed an alarming acceleration in monthly price pressures across a broad array of everyday items and services.

Rishi Sunak, former chancellor, has emerged as the early favourite to become Britain’s next prime minister, after Liz Truss terminated a 44-day premiership marked by economic and political turmoil. Truss’s resignation made her the shortest-serving prime minister in Britain’s history; her time in Number 10 will be remembered for a disintegrating economic policy and a disastrous slump in Conservative party support. Sunak predicted correctly that his rival would set off panic in the markets if she pressed ahead with a massive package of debt-funded tax cuts.

Markets

Stocks dropped as Treasury yields held at the highest level since the global financial crisis and investors assessed companies’ resilience to economic headwinds in the latest earnings reports. Europe’s Stoxx 600 fell more than 1%, with Adidas AG plunging the most in seven months after the German sportswear maker cut its outlook for the year. US stock futures were lower. Shares of some Chinese chip-related stocks fell as the US was said to be considering new export controls that would limit China’s access to powerful computing technologies.

GDP

Sterling is weaker than most major currencies in the early morning trade. UK consumer confidence hovered around a 50-year low last month as Britons struggled against a backdrop of soaring inflation, political turmoil, and high borrowing costs. One of Britain’s biggest utilities has said that all energy companies should pay into a multibillion-pound fund to subsidise electricity and gas bills from April, when blanket UK government support ends. Tax experts have urged the UK’s new chancellor Jeremy Hunt to review the off payroll working rules, known as IR35, after he cancelled plans to repeal controversial reforms.

EUR

Sterling is weaker than most major currencies in the early morning trade. UK consumer confidence hovered around a 50-year low last month as Britons struggled against a backdrop of soaring inflation, political turmoil, and high borrowing costs. One of Britain’s biggest utilities has said that all energy companies should pay into a multibillion-pound fund to subsidise electricity and gas bills from April, when blanket UK government support ends. Tax experts have urged the UK’s new chancellor Jeremy Hunt to review the off payroll working rules, known as IR35, after he cancelled plans to repeal controversial reforms.

USD

The dollar is well bid against most major currencies overnight. Joe Biden issued a statement thanking UK Prime Minister Liz Truss for “her partnership on a range of issues” in response to the Conservative leader’s resignation after just six weeks in office. US health officials have launched an inquiry into a controversial study by scientists at Boston University who created an artificial form of Covid-19 in a laboratory. The head of the US Navy has warned that the American military must be prepared for the possibility of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan before 2024, as Washington grows increasingly alarmed about the threat to the island.

Ballinger & Co. Market Analysis– 21st October 2022

Today’s Rates

GBP>EUR – 1.1424

GBP>USD – 1.1136

EUR>USD – 0.9743

GBP>CAD – 1.5385

GBP>AUD – 1.7810

GBP>SEK – 12.631

GBP>AED – 4.0856

GBP>HKD – 8.0946

GBP>ZAR – 20.492

GBP>CHF – 1.1251

  Today’s Calendar 

·        8:00 a.m.: UK Sept. Retail Sales

·        8:00 a.m.: Denmark Oct. Consumer Confidence

·        8:00 a.m.: Sweden Sept. Unemployment

·        9:00 a.m.: Switzerland Sept. M3

·        11:00 a.m.: Euro-area 2021 Government Debt/GDP ratio

·        12:00 p.m.: Ireland Sept. PPI

·        12:00 p.m.: UK to sell bills

·        3:00 p.m.: Bank of Italy releases quarterly economic bulletin

·        4:00 p.m.: Euro-area Oct. Consumer Confidence!

  (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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