StartOptions.com Market Weekly Outlook – February 8-12

After one of the wildest weeks that we’ve seen in quite a while, the upcoming week seems more quiet, at least at the beginning. The echoes of the Non-Farm Payrolls will be heard during this time. Later on, some major market moving events are due. Here’s the outlook for the second week of February.

Finance ministers of the G7 nations are meeting in the remote Canadian town of Iqaluit and may release important comments that might impact the opening of the markets. The final remarks by US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner are of high importance. He’ll speak more than 24 hours before the markets open, so there will be enough time to digest his words. Let’s review the week’s events:

  1. Swiss Retail Sales: Published on Monday at 8:15 GMT. Switzerland enjoys good fundamentals but the central bank doesn’t like it at all. The SNB intervenes in the markets, but usually this doesn’t have a long lasting effect. This important figure is expected to rise by an annual rate of 1.6%, double of last month’s number. There will action in USD/CHF around this release.
  2. British Inflation Report: Published on Wednesday at 10:30 GMT. This important quarterly event will address the rising inflation in Britain and the central bank’s measures against it. This report, accompanied by a press conference by Mervyn King goes beyond inflation and will deal with the whole economy, which is shaky.
  3. US and Canadian Trade Balance: Published together on Wednesday at 13:30 GMT. This double-feature event always shakes USD/CAD. The American deficit is predicted to squeeze from 36.4 billion to 35.5 billion, while the Canadian trade balance is almost balanced. It’s predicted to stand at 0.1 billion, and could also turn into a surplus.
  4. British NIESR GDP Estimate: Published on Wednesday at 15:00 GMT. After the disappointing official Q4 GDP, we’ll get an initial unofficial glimpse at the British economy in 2010. Last month’s release related to the whole of Q4, and showed a higher number than the official release, but lower than economists’ estimates. The Pound will need a more serious growth to rise.
  5. Ben Bernanke testifies: On Wednesday. Exact time currently unknown. The head of the Federal Reserve will lay out the plans for exiting the crisis, and the emergency measures. During this testimony, he’ll probably provide an updated overview of the American economy.
  6. Australian employment figures: Published on Thursday at 00:30 GMT. Australia enjoys a healthy job market, and it’s predicted to remain rather steady. Australian unemployment rate is predicted to edge up to 5.6% from 5.5% but the employment change is expected o be positive again, showing a rise of 15,000 jobs. This is less than last month’s nice 35,000 job gain.
  7. American Retail Sales: Published on Thursday at 13:30 GMT. Both retail sales and core retails sales disappointed last month with drop of 0.3% and 0.2%. These important consumer-related figures are expected to rise this time by 0.3% each. This release, together with jobless claims, will shake the markets.
  8. American Unemployment Claims: Published on Thursday at 13:30 GMT. This important weekly figure disappoints every week with a number that is higher than expectations. After reaching 480K, economists expect a drop to 455K. This will be the first job figure after the Non-Farm Payrolls.
  9. New Zealand Retail Sales: Published on Thursday at 21:45 GMT. Although more people are unemployed in New Zealand, the consumers continue buying. Both retail and core retail sales have risen by 0.8% last month, and this trend is expected to continue, helping the beaten kiwi dollar.
  10. German GDP: Published on Friday at 7:00 GMT. Europe’s largest economy is the first to release GDP data for Q4. This initial release is expected to show a modest growth rate of 0.3%, much less than 0.7% that was reported in Q3. Germany led the continent with nice growth already in Q2. Now it might lag behind.
  11. European Flash GDP: Published on Friday at 10:00 GMT. 3 hours after the German release, the figure for the whole continent is due. This is expected to be better than the German one, and show a growth rate of 0.4%. This European morning will be very volatile for EUR/USD. Note that French and Italian numbers are also released during this time, something that might add confusion.
  12. American Consumer Sentiment: Published on Friday at 14:55 GMT. The week ends with a strong note – the University of Michigan provides its preliminary consumer sentiment figure, which is doing quite well. After reaching 74.4, it’s predicted to edge up to 75.2 points. This will shake the markets before the weekly close.

It seems like another wild week in front of us with many macro events that  can help us get more insights about the economy recovery,
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U.K. Economy Shrinks Less Than Previously Estimated

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — The U.K. economy shrank less than previously estimated in the third quarter as a jump in construction and fixed investment brought the longest recession on record closer to ending.

Gross domestic product fell 0.2 percent from the second quarter, compared with a previous measurement of a 0.3 percent drop, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 24 economists was for a 0.1 percent contraction. The recession has now shaved 6 percent off GDP, the statistics office said.

The Confederation of British Industry yesterday raised its 2010 economic growth forecast and said the Bank of England may pause its bond-purchase plan in February. Policy makers have pledged to print 200 billion pounds of new money to stoke spending and shake off Britain’s longest recession on record.

“We’ll have growth returning in the fourth quarter, absolutely,” said George Buckley, chief U.K. economist at Deutsche Bank AG in London. “The bank will start taking back its policy accommodation next year. There won’t be any more bond purchases, and the first rate increase will be in August.”

The pound was little changed at $1.6046 as of 9:53 a.m. in London. The yield on the two-year government bond was up 1 basis point today at 1.185 percent.

Recession Damage

The economy contracted 5.1 percent from a year earlier, more than the 4.9 percent median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 21 economists.

The U.S. economy probably grew an annualized 2.8 percent in the third quarter, according to the median forecast of 62 economists. The Commerce Department will publish that data at 8:30 a.m. in Washington.

Construction jumped 1.9 percent, compared with a previous estimate of a 1.1 percent drop, the statistics office said. That offset bigger contractions in services and industrial production.

Travis Perkins Plc, the U.K. building-materials supplier that owns the Wickes home-improvement chain, said Dec. 17 it expects earnings for 2009 to be “at the upper end” of analyst estimates as spending on do-it-yourself projects aided sales.

Fixed investment increased 2.2 percent, instead of the 0.3 percent drop previously measured. Government spending rose 0.3 percent and consumer spending increased 0.1 percent, the statistics office said.

Election Looming

Prime Minister Gordon Brown is trying to revive the economy and rebuild support in time for an election which he must call by June. In an Ipsos-Mori poll published in the Observer on Dec. 20, the opposition Conservatives had support of 43 percent of voters, a 17 percentage point lead over Brown’s ruling Labour Party.

The economy may already be expanding again. Bank of England policy maker Kate Barker said in an interview last week that economic growth probably resumed in the fourth quarter. Unemployment unexpectedly fell in November for the first time since February 2008.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors today forecast house prices will rise as much as 2 percent in 2010. The CBI yesterday raised its 2010 growth forecast to 1.2 percent from a previous prediction of 0.9 percent. The group said the central bank will start raising the key interest rate from a record low of 0.5 percent in the second quarter.

Barker, speaking on Dec. 15, said that the economic pickup may still lapse in 2010.

‘Bumpy’ Recovery

“I’ve always been one of the people who thought that the path of this recovery was likely to be quite bumpy and uneven,” she said. “I wouldn’t rule out the possibility that we’d see another quarter of negative growth.”

The household savings ratio, which measures the proportion of income hoarded by consumers, rose to 8.6 percent in the third quarter, the most since the first quarter of 1998, the statistics office said.

The current account gap widened to 4.7 billion pounds in the third quarter, or 1.3 percent of GDP, from 4.4 billion pounds in the previous three months, the statistics office said in a separate report today.