Taheri Exchange Daily FX Report
Issue: # 227          www.taheriexchange.com   25th of March 2011

 

 

Technical Ranges 
CAD, USD, EUR, GBP & JPY
technical charts

USD/CAD

Support:  0.9709      Resistance: 0.9805

CAD/JPY

Support:  82.38    Resistance:  83.79

EUR/CAD

Support:  1.3712   Resistance:  1.3823

EUR/USD

Support:  1.4081  Resistance:  1.4173

GBP/USD

Support:  1.6024  Resistance:  1.6120

Want us to monitor the market 24 hours for your target rate? Learn more about       Overnight Orders 


Currency Commentary

EUR, USD, CAD, GBP , JPY

 

EUR:  The Euro recovery from 1.4050 low yesterday, was capped at 1.4220, and the pair has remained steady on Friday consolidating below 1.4200 , with downside attempts contained above 1.4140/50.

USD:   Positive results for GDP and Personal spending in the U.S.....if the Michigan Confidence report comes out positive as well...we may see the USD/CAD dip down to the lower 0.9700..all dependant on U.S. investors sentiment today. The U.S. data is giving strength to equity markets at present....

CAD:   Metals and oil remains in the same levels at present...the Loonie benefiting from strong U.S. data. Markets are putting aside the European, Japan situation and the conflict in Libya on hold...Can the bearish trend continue today for the pair? As I stated yesterday, the pair has had problems trying to break the 0.9650 range to head further south....it continues to remain in the lower 0.9700 to mid 0.9800 lvls...

Our clients have had the same order requests ..since the markets have been rather choppy...orders to buy for some in mid 0.9700..and for sellers 0.9800...

Today's range ..    possible lower 0.9700 to  0.9800


GBP:     The Pound attempted to trim losses on early European session, and stretched to 1.6140 session high , where it found sellers to pull about 60 pips lower, breaking below 1.6100 to a fresh week low at 1.6060.


   
JPY:    After trading practically flat ta 81.00 during most of US and Asian sessions, the Dollar Yen has broken higher on early European session, reaching fresh week highs above 81.30.


Want to lock in an exchange rate for the future? Learn more about

Forward Contracts

Follow our "tweets" and get up-to-date currency movements daily on Twitter @ http://twitter.com/taheriexchange
 

 

worldfx

" Japan crisis affects auto industry "....

" if you take 30 or 40 percent of th global automotive industry down, North America is going to be part of that... Canada is not immune to this   ".....

 

Shortages of critical Japanese-made components would shrink global automobile production by up to 40 per cent if idled plants in the country’s ravaged northeast fail to restart production by early May.

U.S.-based IHS Automotive outlined that worst-case scenario on Thursday, warning that a drop in output of up to 100,000 vehicles per day was possible if major supply disruptions out of Japan persist for up to eight weeks after the March 11 earthquake.

Michael Robinet, vice-president of global vehicle forecasts, estimates the industry’s daily production at roughly 280,000 to 310,000 vehicles.

The highly integrated nature of the global auto industry means the North American plants, including those in Canada, would be affected if key Japanese-made parts become scarce.

The timing couldn’t be worse – especially for U.S. auto giants General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC – which have recently turned the page on costly taxpayer bailouts.

“If you take 30 or 40 per cent of the global automotive industry down, North America is going to be part of that … Canada is not immune to this,” Mr. Robinet said.

The potential impact in Canada would be felt beyond Toyota Canada Inc. and Honda Canada Inc. – both of which have two assembly plants here – because U.S. auto makers also use Japanese parts.

That means Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd., Chrysler Canada Inc. and General Motors of Canada Ltd. could eventually see production suffer by the Japanese crisis, Mr. Robinet said.

The last thing any of the three auto makers need is even a minor crisis, said Canadian Auto Workers president Ken Lewenza, noting GM and Chrysler, in particular, are just pulling out of a crisis.

“The timing is terrible,” he said. “They are turning around the companies. They are doing incredibly well and we don’t need anything to stop that momentum.”

The specialized parts in question include electronic and specific powertrain components, suggesting Japan continues to play a critical role in North American production even if it only supplies a fraction of the parts.

“The industry needs to be prepared for a fairly widespread part-and-vehicle shortage here in Canada, across North America as well,” said Jeff Schuster, executive director of global forecasting at J.D. Power and Associates. “I think the extent of that, because things are so fluid right now, are just unknown.”

In February, North American production was 1.06 million units, marking a 15-per-cent increase from last year. Mr. Schuster’s 2011 production forecast remains at 12.9 million units, as lost volume will likely be made up this year.

Still, output is already being impacted by parts shortages caused by the Japanese crisis. Earlier this week, Honda cancelled overtime shifts at assembly plants in Alliston, Ont., and Alabama.

Toyota Motor Corp. has warned it expects to halt production at some of its North American factories, but doesn't know when or for how long. That may include a pickup truck assembly plant in Texas. Last week, it cancelled overtime at all its North American plants.

GM, meanwhile, has idled its plant in Shreveport, La.

Chrysler Canada said it has trimmed hours for some shifts this week at its Windsor, Ont., plant due to a parts shortage from an external supplier but stressed it was unrelated to the Japanese crisis.

In Japan, Toyota plans to resume production of the Prius and two Lexus hybrids on March 28.

Rival Honda said Thursday that the suspension of car production at its Saitama and Suzuka factories will be extended to April 3.

 

 

" USD-  GDP and consumer spending grew in the 4th quarter  "..

" Recent data suggests the expansion is alittle softer than anticipated  " ...

bulls-bears

 

The U.S. economy grew at a 3.1 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, led by a jump in consumer spending that will be hard to match early in the year as energy prices surge.

The revised increase in gross domestic product compares with a 2.8 percent estimate issued last month, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Earnings at financial firms led a 2.3 percent increase in corporate profits from October to December that capped the biggest annual gain in six decades.

Surging oil prices sparked by turmoil in the Middle East may erode consumers’ purchasing power, and supply constraints caused by the tragedy in Japan may slow the pace of recovery this quarter. At the same time, lean inventories and growing demand from emerging economies will probably keep benefiting companies like Caterpillar Inc. sustaining the expansion.

“We’re seeing the effects of rising gasoline prices and we’re going to see a negative impact from the earthquake start to show up because of bottlenecks in the global supply chain,” Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets Inc. in Toronto, said before the report. “Recent data suggests the expansion is a little softer than anticipated.”

 

Consumer spending, about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 4 percent pace last quarter, the most since the same three months in 2006, compared with 4.1 percent previously estimated and a 2.4 percent rate in the third quarter.

 Purchases added 2.8 percentage points to growth.

The upward revision to growth was paced by a bigger increase in business investment and a smaller slowdown in stockpiling than previously estimated.

Spending on equipment and software climbed at a 7.7 percent annual last quarter, up from last month’s 5.5 percent estimate.

Inventories last quarter were stocked at a $16.2 billion pace, compared with a previously reported $7.1 billion rate and down from a $121.4 billion rate in the third quarter.

 

 

Want to manage currency risk and increase revenue? Learn more about    Risk Management  

 


This email contains confidential information, is intended only for the named recipient and is privileged. Distributing or copying this email without express consent of Taheri Exchange (TE) is prohibited. If you are not the named recipient, notify us immediately and permanently destroy this email and all copies. Email is not private, secure, or reliable. TE is not liable for any errors or omissions in the content or transmission of this email. The information, opinions, estimates, projections and other materials contained herein are provided as of the date hereof and are subject to change without notice. Some of the information, opinions, estimates, projections and other materials contained herein have been obtained from numerous sources, and, notwithstanding TE. TE makes efforts to ensure that the contents thereof have been compiled from sources believed to be reliable and to contain information and opinions which are accurate. TE has not independently verified and makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, in respect thereof and takes no responsibility for any errors and omissions which may be contained therein. TE shall not be liable for any loss arising from any use of or reliance on the information, opinions, estimates, projections and other materials contained herein whether relied upon by the recipient or user or any other third party (including, without limitation, any customer of the recipient or user). The information, opinions, estimates, projections and other materials contained herein shall not be considered as investment advice or as a recommendation to enter into any transaction. TE, its affiliates, and/or their respective shareholders, directors, officers and/or employees may from time to time have long or short positions in any products.

unscribe/subscribe to: rick@taheriexchange.com

                                               5775 Yonge Street
                                              Toronto, ON Canada
                                                        M2M 4J1
                                                  T: 416-488-8822
                                                  F: 416-488-4022
                                                T: 1-888-712-999
Forward Contracts

Risk Management

Overnight Orders

Contact Us

Main USD/CAD data today:

1. USD - GDP, Personal Consumption & Univ. Mich. Conf. data.
2. CAD - No relevant data.
handshake
Customized Service.
Taheri understands your business, and can tailor foreign exchange services that satisfy your unique needs
View our archived FX reports
http://www.taheriexchange.com/news