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Consumers Further Erode Retail Payrolls

November 14, 2008 by Ashraf Laidi
(6 comments)
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The attached chart shows the deepening implications of falling retail sales on retail sector payrolls, highlighting the deteriorating role of the US consumer, especially as Democrats dampen hopes of any additional stimulus package before year-end.

US Retail sales fell 2.8% in October vs expectations of a 2.1% decline, following a revised drop of 1.3%. Sales excluding autos fell 2.2% against expectations of a 1.9% decline. The sales' decline marked the fourth straight monthly decrease, a pattern not seen in at least over the last 16 years. On a year-to-year basis, the decline is second straight annual decline, and only the fourth of such decline since 1992. Todays figures would highlight the dislocation of the US consumer, which was also borne in the 11th straight monthly decline in retail payrolls, surpassing the 8-month string of consecutive losses in 2001.


The higher than expected release of the preliminary November Univ of Michigan sentiment survey at 57.9 from Octobers 57.6 had a short-lived impact on appetite, even with the rise in the current conditions index to 61 from 58.4 and the marked decline in the 1-year inflation expectations index to a 2-year low of 2.9% from 3.9% . With stocks hovering between -2% and -1.2%, currencies are closely following the swing in risk pendulum.

EURUSD fails to break out of its $1.2730 trend line resistance charted from the Oct 29 high through the Nov 5 high. As long as stocks deepen their reversal from Thursdays gains, EURUSD is seen extending losses towards $1.2620s. One day after German growth was revealed to have slipped into recession by showing back to back quarterly declines, France escaped the recession by growing 0.1% in Q3, following a 0.3% contraction in Q2. But French payrolls did fall by 0.1% in Q3. Spain's Q3 GDP fell 0.2% after a 0.1% rise in Q2. Italy's Q3 GDP fell 0.5% following -0.4% in Q2, pushing the nation into its third recession in a decade.

GBPUSD retains composure after recovering from yesterdays latest 6-year lows of $1.4558, as sterling flexes its higher yielding muscle against USD, eyeing $1.4830. But the high expectations of further BoE rate cuts continue to limit sterlings gains, marking a clear resistance at $1.4920. USDJPY closely tracks equities, hovering within the 96-98 yen range, but overall resistance seen producing lower highs, limited at 98.20. Defensive flows are seen finding support at 96.60, with 96.20 providing a more solid foundation.

In the battle of high yielders, AUDNZD
maintains its bullish tone after the Aussie hit a 5-week high of 1.1796, partly due to golds recovery and the worse than expected declines in NZ retail sales earlier this week. These dynamics are prevailing despite Australian rates standing at 5.25% versus 6.50% in New Zealand. Prolonged gains in risk appetite are seen favoring the Aussie towards 1.1900. Prolonged selling in equities is seen dragging AUDNZD towards 1.1680.

 
    Comments By Users (6)   (View All Comments)    Post a comment

London, UK

November 19, 2008 00:18 ET
Francis, as I said in the IntradayThoughts, focus on the symmetrical triangle in the weekly chart. 95 support, 98.50 resistance. FX is now good for short-term momemtum traders looking to ride waves of rising risk appetite or risk aversion. It's more straighforward during the morning London session.
Ashraf
GuangZhou, China

November 18, 2008 23:20 ET
Hi Ashraf

The analysis is very precise, So looks like 95.45-96.20 Area was Confirmed Effective

Support yesterday, Even DJI Rise 150 but 97.35 Limited it Increase scope!

DJI at 8000 Place above As if Coming to a stop, if Stock market Return to warmer

weather, Then USD/JPY You thought can Looks at high one?

which is 98.75 or Higher.

Thanks
Francis
London, UK

November 18, 2008 16:51 ET
Thanks Sen. many more changes will come along the way. Everybody's feedback is appreciated. A
Sen
New York, US

November 18, 2008 15:48 ET
Wow!, very nice update to the website look. Adds quality to the already great analysis
London, UK

November 17, 2008 03:00 ET
Hi Francis,

My base case scenario is for yen to drop across the board and stocks to rally from mid November till mid January. under which 96 may hold up but id say 95.00 just to play it on the safe side. This scenario is more of a seasonal analysis that Im using rather than a change of fundamentals. If not mid November then maybe towards Thanksgiving.

Having said that, stocks are undergoing a severe loss of confidence, whereby each and every advance is followed by more than twice as much in declines. fundamentals are simply horrible and unemployment has yet to exceed 8.5% from the current 6.5%. so be careful.

Ashraf
GuangZhou, China

November 17, 2008 00:02 ET
Hi Ashraf

USD/JPY support at 96.20, what do you think until to Jan 2009!?

Thanks
Francis

   
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