Why Did Euro Fall Sharply On Thursday?
By Grace Cheng on April 24, 2008 | More Posts By Grace Cheng | Author's Website
Thursday has been a day of strong US dollar rebound against the Euro based on weak German IFO numbers and technical dominoes on the charts. Even ultra-gloomy US home sales and durable goods data couldn’t stop the technical bearish momentum of the Euro. The start of the spring season didn’t encourage new property sales in the US: Sales of new US homes fell in March to the lowest level in 16 and a half years, dropping by 8.5% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 526,000 units, the slowest rate since October 1991. The average price of a new home in March also fell predictably, albeit by an astounding 13.3% compared to a year ago. This marks the largest year-over-year price decline since July 1970’s 14.6% plunge. Another strong indication of a current US recession is the latest US durable goods data which fell 0.3% in March, worse than consensus. The last time orders fell for three straight months was from February to April of 2001, when the US was on the verge of the last recession.
What’s Dragging Euro Down?
The German IFO business climate index fell to 102.4 in April, worse than the 104.3 reading expected, and a decline from a prior 104.8. Strong remarks against further Euro strength by Eurogroup chairman Juncker and ECB President Trichet also did no good to a Euro which failed to break successfully above 1.6000. Trichet said he notes more than ever that the US says a strong USD is in its interest, and said he is concerned about the implications of forex fluctuations for financial stability. Juncker said he would not like global forex reserve holders to shift currencies and the status quo is good. Europe’s largest business lobby, BusinessEurope, said Thursday they didn’t like EUR/USD above a rate of more than 1.4000. “We have passed the pain threshold at $1.40. We are alarmed at $1.50. We are still in the rate of the 50s, so we are still alarmed,” Secretary General Philippe de Buck said.
Forex Trading
Putting all these together, EUR/USD sentiment is looking quite bearish as Euro bulls should become reluctant to shoot for 1.6000 for the time being, especially after EUR/USD failed to hold the 1.6000 level. EUR/USD fell over 200 pips to the mid of 1.5600 on triggering of stop orders as the currency pair lost balance below its up trendline. Next bear target possibly around 1.5600. USD/CHF rose to a 6-week high, breaking above 1.0300, with next bull targets around 1.0370-1.0400, 1.0430.
Friday:
UK GDP 0830 GMT
U of Michigan confidence 1400 GMT
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