After yesterdays relatively calm trading session, today the economic calendar is filled with high impact data that threatens to sow large volatility into the market. From the wide range of news reports, ForexYard advises its traders to pay special attention to the German Business Climate, the U.S Durable Goods Orders, New Home Sales, and Crude Oil Inventories.
The U.S currency extended gains on its Japanese and European counterparts Tuesday as optimism about a U.S. government plan to remove bad assets from banks’ balance sheets prompted investors to resume safe haven bets on the Dollar. The USD rose versus the Japanese Yen to 97.87 from 96.94 Yen and against the EUR to $1.3464, up from $1.3633 late Monday. The Dollar also gained support from a growing view among market players that the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing (buying U.S. Treasury debt that would massively expand the Fed’s balance sheet) would not undermine the valuation of the Dollar as many initially thought. The greenback however, slipped against the Pound, down to $1.4778, the lowest since Feb. 10th which was pushed up by an unexpected rise in U.K inflation.
The Fed’s plan that was announced on Monday by U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner has caused the Dollar to halt last week’s slide, prompted as the Federal Reserve said its massive balance sheet expansion would include buying government debt. But despite the fact that the initial reaction to Fed quantitative easing was to sell the Dollar, some market participants reversed their views. Perhaps the U.S. will lead the global economy out of an economic recession. Although quantitative easing could lead to inflation as the money supply expands, economists said the other option is not to do anything, which could have more dire consequences for the dollar due to deflation and economic stagnation. It appears that in the long run the U.S. recovery plan has been benefiting the Dollar against both the Yen and the EUR.
