Currency Markets
The currency exchange market is an inter-bank or inter-dealer market that was established in 1971 when floating exchange rates began to materialize. Trading is not centralized, as is the case with many stock markets (i.e. NYSE, ASE, CME) or as the case for currency futures and currency options, which trade on special exchanges. Dealers often "advertise" exchange rates using a distribution network, then use the information "agree" to a rate and a trade.
Considering trading volume, the currency exchange market is the worlds largest market, with daily trading volumes in excess of $1.5 trillion U.S. dollars, which makes it is by far the most liquid market in the world today. Because of the volume in trading, it is impossible for individuals or companies to affect the exchange rates and even central banks and governments find it increasingly difficult to affect the exchange rates of the most liquid currencies, such as the U.S. dollar, Japanese Yen, Euro, Swiss Frank, Canadian Dollar or Australian Dollar.
The currency exchange market is a true 24-hour market, 5 days a week. There are dealers in every major time zone. Trading begins Monday morning in Sydney (which corresponds to 3pm EST, Sunday) and then daily moves around the globe through the various trading centers until closing Friday evening at 4:30pm EST in New York.
Today, over 85% of all currency exchange transactions involve a few major currencies: the U.S. Dollar (USD), Japanese Yen (JPY), Euro (EUR), Swiss Frank (CHF), British Pound (GBP), Canadian Dollar (CAD), and Australian Dollar (AUD). In the currency exchange market, most of the currencies are traded only against the U.S. Dollar. Trading between two non-dollar currencies usually occurs by first trading one against the U.S. Dollar and then trading the U.S. Dollar against the second non-dollar currency. Because of this, the spread in the exchange rate between two non-dollar currencies is often higher. (There are a few non-dollar currencies that are traded directly, such as GBP/EUR or EUR/CHF.) The following directly traded currency pairs make up the vast majority of the trading volume and are thus considered to be the most important ones: EUR/USD, USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, USD/CAD, EUR/GBP, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, and AUD/JPY.
Currency trading is always done with currency pairs, such as EUR/USD, and so it is useful to consider the currency pair as an instrument, which can be bought or sold."
2-8 August
EUR/USD: For the second consecutive week, EUR/USD dealers sent the pair to highs of 0.8340, finally closing nearby at 0.8318. The dealers may even try to go higher in the near future.
USD/JPY: USD/JPY bulls took in the 2-8 August week by sending the pair to 2-month highs (112.46) while closing on a very strong note (111.17) above the 38.2% fibs drawn from 103.42-114.85. The chart in Annex 1 shows a potential "head and shoulders" pattern taking shape
USD/GBP: Bears were busy this week offering the USD/GBP to 1-month highs (0.5530), but the pair closed slightly lower at 0.5492
The main event of the 2-8 August week was the release of the U.S. gross domestic product. U.S. Q2 GDP growth went at the slowest pace in over a year at 3.0%. Consumer spending unexpectedly slumped and caused most of the weakness in economic expansion. Consumption grew at its slowest pace in 3 years. Durable goods dropped 2.5% with auto production falling 5.2%. Persistently high energy costs are at he bottom of this slow growth. Gas prices on average held above the $2.00 level in June and the consumption release showed that in June, Personal Spending declined by 0.7% over May as consumers had to cope with higher energy bills. Greenspan stated that June would only to be a temporary lag in the U.S.'s economy. With that period behind, the economy has already showed signs of speeding up. Manufacturing activity also went up, as the Fed's beige book reported production increases in all 12 of the Fed's Bank districts.
June's preliminary releases of retail data in Japan continues to show a contracting trend in sales. Retail sales fell by 2.9% in June over the last year, further adding to its -2.2% growth in May. June's levels dropped 0.6% from May, with lower sales with food, autos, and electronics causing the fall. Department stores were severely hit as sales dropped by 5.7% over a year ago in June and by a -2.4% reading from May. Despite a small lift in Q1, the low levels of consumption strongly influence the economic conditions. The spike in energy prices has also undoubtedly afflicted retail by diminishing consumer spending. However, the overall picture is not so bad, notwithstanding...
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