Data released:
08:30 UK Retail sales (April) 1.1% 0.6% 0.2%
08:30 UK Retail sales (April) Y/Y 2.8% 2.1% 1.3%
10:00 UK CBI industrial order books balance (May) -2% -7% -11%
The pound fluctuated against the euro and the dollar after data showed retail sales climbed 1.1% from March, when they rose a revised 0.3%. The median forecast of economists was for a 0.8% increase. The pound fell earlier after an index of consumer sentiment declined.
Franc was under pressure as Swiss investor confidence dropped for the first time in three months in May as a worsening European debt crisis and an appreciating franc clouded the economic growth outlook.
An index of investor and analyst expectations fell to minus 11.5 from 8.8 in April.
The yen fell after Japan’s economy fell into recession in the first quarter as production and consumer spending were hit by the March earthquake and tsunami.
Gross domestic product fell by an annualised 3.7% in the first three months, after a revised fall of 3% in last quarter of 2010. Analysts had expected the economy to contract by just 1.9%.
EUR/USD earlier fell to the $1.4202 session lows before later recovered to $1.4295. But bulls failed to breng the rate above the $1.4300 and euro fell to $1.4250/60 on position-adjusting.
GBP/USD rose from $1.6130 to $1.6206 and retreated. Currently rate holds around $1.6184.
USD/JPY rose from Y81.50 to Y81.95, before set stable within the Y81.80/95 range.
Today's focus is on Jobless claims, Existing home sales and Philadelphia Fed index.
Almost as expected, initial jobless claims fell by 44k to 434k in the week ending 7 May. But they have remained elevated, partly because of production disruptions related to the Japanese disaster. We expect initial jobless claims to have fallen to 425k in the week ending 14 May.
Existing home sales rose a stronger than expected 3.7% mom in March, and given that forerunning pending home sales increased by almost 6% in the previous two months, we predict that existing home sales will have gone up again to 5.22m in April. However, the annual rate would still deteriorate from -6.25% to -10%.
Philadelphia Fed index plunged from an extraordinarily high level of 43.4 to a mere 18.5 in April. As manufacturing is still leading the upswing, we expect the index to recover to 22.0 in May.