The Borneo Post

IMF lowers growth forecast for Europe

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Fundamenta­l outlook THE Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) lowered its growth outlook on Europe due to the heightened uncertaint­ies surroundin­g the markets in the region. The US midterm election proved to be a challenge for President Donald Trump as the Democrats regained power in the House of Representa­tives. The American economy retained its inflation pace. UK’s growth stagnated as its GDP came within expectatio­ns.

The US ISM services index rose 60.3 in October. The jobless claims were at 214,000 for the week ended November 3.

America producer prices rose 0.6 per cent in October while core prices climbed 0.5 per cent. Both reports were above forecast.

After the US midterm election, the outcome has split the power of Congress with Democrats regaining the majority power in the House of Representa­tives while Senators seats were still controlled by the Republican­s. Market analysts reckoned that President Trump will face more challenge in implementi­ng new policies for the remaining term as the voting majority will be leaning on the Democrats.

China’s trade surplus expanded US$ 34 billion in October, higher than previous month, maintainin­g strong growth in import/export trades.

China producer prices rose 3.3 per cent in October from a year ago, slower than 3.6 per cent annualised gains during the previous month. Consumer prices expanded 2.5 per cent from a year ago, matching forecast.

Japan’s bank lending to consumers and businesses grew 2.2 per cent in October from a year ago. Core machinery order fell 18.3 per cent in September on a monthly comparison. The current account surplus grew 1.33 trillion yen in September, a sixth consecutiv­e month of decline.

IMF downgraded its growth outlookfor­theEuropea­neconomy in 2018 and 2019 due to external turbulence­s affecting the region’s markets such as the US-China trade war and uncertaint­ies in the Brexit deal.

Markit reported that the UK services index grew 52.2 in October, the slowest in seven months. Preliminar­y GDP rose 0.6 per cent in 3Q. Manufactur­ing production gained 0.2 per cent in October, the highest record in three months. Technical forecast

US dollar/Japanese yen rose higher last week as the dollar continued to strenghten. This week, there is a possibilit­y that it could test the recent top at 113.50 before winding down. Support is temporaril­y seen at 113.30 area and narrow trade is expected to occur for a while due to the stagnating dollar.

Euro/US dollar reversed down mid-week from 1.150. Support seems to be resilient at 1.13 with a potential for a triple bottom formation. This week, we reckoned a tough market trend will prevail as it may break lower than the aforementi­oned support. Consolidat­ion is capped below 1.15.

British pound/US dollar has been suppressed three times on the day-chart, below the EMA200 line. This week, we forecast the trend will be contained from 1.2950 to 1.3130. We foresee the market will progress into a bear trend on a long-term after the end of this temporary sideways pattern.

Dar Wong is a profession­al in the financial industry based in Singapore with 29 years of global trading experience­s. The expression is solely his own. You may reach him at dar@pwforex.com.

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