Economic
calendar (GMT0):
01:30 Australia National Australia Bank's Business Confidence May 6 7
01:30 Australia ANZ Job Advertisements (MoM) May +2.2% -5.6%
01:30 Australia Home Loans April -0.8% +0.3% 0%
01:30 China PPI y/y May -2.0% -1.5% -1.4%
01:30 China CPI y/y May +1.8% +2.4% +2.5%
05:45 Switzerland Unemployment Rate May 3.2% 3.2% 3.2%
06:00 Japan Prelim Machine Tool Orders, y/y May 48.7% 24.1%
06:45 France Industrial Production, m/m April -0.4% +0.3% +0.3%
06:45 France Industrial Production, y/y April -0.8% 0.0%
07:15 Switzerland Retail Sales Y/Y April +3.4% +3.5% +0.4%
08:30 United Kingdom Industrial Production (MoM) April -0.1% +0.4% +0.4%
08:30 United Kingdom Industrial Production (YoY) April +2.3% +2.7% +3.0%
08:30 United Kingdom Manufacturing Production (MoM) April +0.5% +0.4% +0.4%
08:30 United Kingdom Manufacturing Production (YoY) April +3.3% +4.0% +4.4%
The U.S.
dollar traded mixed against the most major currencies. The U.S. dollar was still
supported by Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report. The U.S. economy added 217,000
in May, missing expectations for a 218,000 rise, after a 282,000 gain in April.
April’s figure was revised down from a 288,000 increase.
The New
Zealand dollar rose against the U.S dollar in the absence of any major economic
reports. The kiwi was supported by expectations the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
will raise interest rates again this Wednesday.
The
increasing consumer price inflation in China supported the New Zealand and
Australian dollar. The Chinese consumer price index increased 2.5% in May,
after a 1.8% gain in April. Analysts had expected a 2.4% rise.
The Chinese
producer price index declined 1.4% in May, after a 2.0% decrease in April.
Analysts had expected a 1.5% fall.
The
Australian dollar traded higher against the U.S. dollar due to the
better-than-expected Australian business confidence data and the Chinese
consumer price inflation. The National Australia Bank released its business
confidence index for Australia. The index climbed to 7 in May, from 6 in April.
Job
advertisements in Australia fell 5.6% in May, after a 1.9% increase in April.
April’s figure was revised down from a 2.2% gain.
Home loans
in Australia were flat in April, after a 0.8% fall in March. March’s figure was
revised up from a 0.9% decline. Analysts had expected a 0.3% gain.
The
Japanese yen increased against the U.S. dollar ahead of the Bank of Japan (BoJ)
meeting this Friday. Investors speculate that the BoJ’s monetary policy will
support the Japanese currency.
Japan’s
preliminary machine tool orders decreased to 24.1% in May from 48.7% in April.
April’s figure was revised down from 48.8%.
Japanese
tertiary industry activity index dropped to -5.4% in April from 2.4% in March. Analysts
had expected the index to fall -3.3%.
EUR/USD:
the currency pair traded mixed
GBP/USD:
the currency pair climbed to $1.6815
USD/JPY:
the currency pair declined to Y102.35
The most
important news that are expected (GMT0):
14:00 United Kingdom NIESR GDP Estimate May +1.0%
14:00 U.S. JOLTs Job Openings April 4014 4040
23:50 Japan BSI Manufacturing Index Quarter II 12.5 14.1
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