The U.S.
dollar climbed against the most major currencies due to increasing U.S. treasury
yields, amid the release of Federal Reserve's meeting minutes and the speech
of Fed Chair Janet Yellen. Market participants are awaiting the Fed's view of
the economy. Recently published U.S. economic data was mixed and showed uneven
recovery of the U.S. economy.
The euro dropped
against the U.S. dollar. Further stimulus measures by European Central Bank and
the weak growth figures in the Eurozone weighed on the euro.
The current
account surplus in the Eurozone was 18.8 billion euro in March, after a surplus
of 21.9 billion euro in February. Analysts had expected an increase to 24.2
billion euro.
The consumer
confidence in the Eurozone was -7.1 in May, from a decrease of 8.6 in April.
Analysts had expected a decline of 8.0.
The British
pound rose against the U.S. dollar after the release of the
better-than-expected U.K. retail sales, but later lost a part of its gains.
U.K. retail sales increased 1.3% in April, from a 0.1% gain in March. Analysts
had expected a 0.4% increase.
On a yearly
basis, U.K. retail sales rose 6.9% in April, exceeding expectations for a 5.2%
increase. That was the fastest pace since May 2004. U.K. retail sales climbed
4.8% in March.
The retail
sales increase was driven by a supermarket price war between Morrisons, Tesco,
Asda and Sainsbury's. Food sales rose 3.6% in April from March and at annual
rate of 6.3%. That was highest annual growth since January 2002.
Bank of
England's minutes of its May meeting showed that the Bank of England
policymakers voted unanimously to maintain interest rates unchanged at record
lows this month. But some policymakers thought the arguments in favour of an
interest-rate hike were growing stronger.
The
Canadian dollar dropped against the U.S. dollar. No economic data was published
in Canada.
The New
Zealand dollar traded near 3-week lows against the U.S. dollar. Declining dairy
prices and the weak economic data in Australia had a negative impact on the
kiwi. Dairy prices at the GlobalDairyTrade auction declined. Market
participants speculate that the New Zealand dollar is overvalued as Reserve
Bank of New Zealand governor Graeme Wheeler warned this month. No economic data
was published in New Zealand.
The
Australian dollar decreased against the U.S. dollar after the release of the
weak economic data in Australia. The Westpac consumer sentiment in Australia
decreased 6.8% in May, after a 0.3% gain in April.
Wage prices
in Australia increased 0.7% in the first quarter (Q4 2003: +0.7%). Analysts had
expected a 0.8% rise.
The
Australian dollar also came under pressure due to the falling iron ore prices.
Iron ore is Australia's biggest export (about 20% of all exports).
The
Japanese yen hits 3.5-month highs against the U.S. dollar after the Bank of
Japan left monetary policy unchanged on Wednesday, but later lost all its gains.
The Bank of Japan will continue to increase the monetary base at a pace of ¥60
trillion to ¥70 trillion per year. Japan’s central bank expects a moderate
economic recovery.
Japan’s
trade deficit was ¥808.9 billion in April, compared to a deficit of ¥1,714.2
billion in March. Analysts had forecasted a deficit of ¥640.0 billion.
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