Euro At Multi-day Low Against Pound After Eurozone PMI
01 October 2015 - 3:12PM
RTTF2
The euro fell to a multi-day low against the pound in the early
European session on Thursday, after data showed that Eurozone
manufacturing activity grew at a slower pace as estimated in
September.
Data from Markit showed that the Eurozone manufacturing
Purchasing Managers' Index fell to a five-month low of 52 in
September from 52.3 in August. The reading came in line with flash
estimate.
Germany's final PMI dropped to 52.3 in September from 53.3 in
August. The flash score was 52.5. Data signaled slowdown in new
orders and production growth in September.
Output at French manufacturers increased for the first time in
three months. The French PMI came in at 50.6, up from 48.3 in
August. It was above the flash estimate of 50.4.
European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi will deliver a speech
in Washington at 9.30 am ET. Investors await his speech to hear
further about QE to help ward off deflation in the region and keep
the economy on track.
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde
predicted moderate growth in advanced economies this year but said
global growth will be disappointing and uneven amid the twin
prospects of rising U.S. interest rates and slowing expansion in
China.
In the Asian session today, the euro showed mixed performance
against its major rivals.
In the early European trading, the euro fell 3-day low of 0.7356
against the pound, from an early high of 0.7389. If the euro
extends its downtrend, it is likely to find support around the 0.72
area.
Data from the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply
and Markit Economics showed that the British manufacturing activity
expanded at the weakest pace in three months in September.
The seasonally adjusted Purchasing Managers' Index, or PMI, fell
slightly to 51.5 in September from 51.6 in August, which was
revised up from 51.5. Economists had forecast the index to fall to
51.3.
Meanwhile, the euro rose to 1.0909 against the Swiss franc, from
an early 8-day low of 1.0874, and held steady thereafter.
Data from the Credit Suisse showed that Switzerland's
manufacturing sector contracted in September after rebounding a
month ago. The procure.ch Purchasing Managers' Index fell to 49.5
from 52.2 in August. It was forecast to drop marginally to
51.8.
Against the yen, the euro advanced to 134.24, from an early low
of 133.78, and held steady thereafter.
Data from Nikkei revealed that the manufacturing sector in Japan
remained in expansion territory, with a final manufacturing PMI
score of 51.0. That was up from last month's preliminary score of
50.9, although it was down from the eight-month high reading of
51.7 in August.
The euro fell to 6-day low of 1.1135 against the U.S. dollar,
from an early high of 1.1178 and held steady thereafter.
Looking ahead, PMI reports for September from U.S. and Canada,
U.S. weekly jobless claims for the week ended September 26 and U.S.
construction spending data for August are slated for release in the
New York session.
At 9:30 am ET, European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi will
deliver a speech on the occasion of the awarding of the Atlantic
Council Global Citizens Award in Washington.
Subsequently, at 2:30 pm ET, Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco President John Williams is expected to speak about the
economic outlook in Salt Lake City, U.S.
Euro vs Yen (FX:EURJPY)
Forex Chart
From Apr 2024 to May 2024
Euro vs Yen (FX:EURJPY)
Forex Chart
From May 2023 to May 2024