UK trade deficit narrows in March

The UK’s trade deficit narrowed in March, driven in particular by stronger exports to the US, China and Russia.UK trade deficit narrows in MarchThe seasonally adjusted trade deficit in goods and services was £2.7bn, against £2.9bn the month before, the Office for National Statistics said.

Car exports in March were worth £200 million more than the previous month.

The deficit on seasonally adjusted trade in goods was £8.6 billion in March, unchanged on February.

The ONS said that the surplus on trade in services was estimated at £5.8 billion in March- up compared with a £5.6 billion surplus the month before.

The deficit in trade in goods with EU countries widened by £700 million to £4.5 billion in March, compared with the deficit of £3.7 billion in February. Exports were virtually unchanged at £13.2 billion, and imports rose by £800 million, or 4.4%, to £17.6 billion.

Trade in goods with non-EU countries reached record levels, with both imports and exports at an all-time high in March.

Imports to the UK of goods from non-EU states rose by £700 million, or 4%, to £17.3 billion, while exports rose by £1.4 billion, up 12.1%.

That left the overall deficit on goods trade narrowing by £800 million to £4.1 billion, compared with February’s deficit of £4.9 billion.

The value of chemicals exported to non-EU countries rose by £200 million in March. The shipbuilding sector also saw the value of exports rise by the same amount.

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Money markets fall on PIGS political worries

European money markets have fallen as the continuing political uncertainty in Greece and Spain undermines investor confidence.Money markets fall on PIGS political worriesGreek President Karolos Papoulias failed to form a coalition government through talks on Sunday and will continue discussions with political leaders on Monday evening.

Bank shares are worst hit, particularly in Spain and France, with Madrid’s Ibex index down 2.8% and the CAC down 2.3%. London’s FT 100 share index is down 1.7% and Germany’s Dax down 2%.

French banks were among the biggest fallers as investors worried about their exposure to other troubled eurozone countries. BNP Paribas was 3.4% lower, Societe Generale lost 3.3% and Credit Agricole fell 3.4%.

Spanish banks Banco Santander and Bankia were down 3.4% and 4.4% respectively, as they said they would set aside an extra £2.16 billion (2.7 billion euros) £1.68 billion euros respectively to meet new government requirements aimed at cleaning up the country’s ailing property market.

Meanwhile, both Spain and Italy carried out successful bond auctions on Monday.

Appetite for Spanish and Italian debt was more than strong enough, but the return demanded by investors in Spain’s debt was higher than in previous auctions, reflecting a dip in confidence.

The difference in the rate demanded by Spanish 10 year bond investors over the equivalent German bunds hit 4.83%, its highest level since the creation of the euro.

The yield, or interest rate, on Spain’s key 10 year bonds, which are traded on the market, jumped 23 basis points to a record high of 6.22%.

Greece’s lack of a government puts in doubt its ability to stick to austerity measures imposed as part of its financial bailout. Without holding to agreed cuts it will not get the rest of the support funds it needs to function.

Adding to the lack of clarity is the fact that anti-bailout parties did well in the elections.

Anti-austerity feeling may be growing in Germany as well as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party suffered a defeat on Sunday in an election in North Rhine-Westphalia, the country’s most populous state.

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Eu voters reject austerity in France and Greece

Voters in France and Greece joined their counterparts in Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands in forcing out leaders or ruling parties over the past two years. Eu voters reject austerity in France and GreeceChanges in leadership across the eurozone have generally been Euro negative in the immediate aftermath as the markets digest the change in leadership and the euro is pushing towards the key level of 1.30 against the Dollar in early trading this morning.

The French public elected Francois Hollande, the socialist candidate, and a key pledge was to renegotiate the ‘fiscal pact’ agreed by members of the single currency.

The money markets remain nervous of the possibility of renegotiation mostly because of the uncertainty it would create and how it would affect the strong ties forged between Mr Hollande’s predecessor and the German Chancellor.

Also adding to negative euro sentiment is the non-result from the Greek election.

No party secured enough of the vote to form a government.

New Democracy, who polled the most votes of all the parties has not been able to persuade other to form a coalition so it now falls to second place – the radical Syriza party – to try to form a government.

As many in the market have worried, an anti-austerity party in a position of power brings a Greek exit from the euro that much closer.

Away from Europe, the Bank of England meets on Thursday to decide interest rates and the asset purchase scheme. No change is expected to either.

We also have the GDP estimate on Thursday expected to show a return to growth, and also the PPI figures on Friday.

There is little important economic data from the US this week but in Australia we have the budget and employment data out later in the week and given the ACB cut rates last month may turn out to be softer than expected.

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US manufacturing boosts money markets

A surprise increase in the US ISM manufacturing survey yesterday evening was enough to push the Dow Jones industrial average to its highest level in four years, dragging European bourses higher this morning along with the high risk currencies. US manufacturing boosts money marketsDue to the May Day bank holiday in Europe, markets on the continent are playing catch up with the US and UK and are performing very strongly in early trading.

Chinese manufacturing PMI also showed a slight improvement overnight, but is still below the 50.0 level, signifying a contraction in manufacturing output.

This afternoon the ADP employment report is released in anticipation of the non-farm payrolls on Friday with expectations of 175K jobs created in April, not quite the numbers we saw in the first three months on the year but positive non-the-less.

Portugal goes to the market today, issuing six and twelve month treasury bills.

The target amount is only €1.25-1.5 billion, but the auctions will be closely watched as ever and expect overblown hysteria if we any signs of weakness.

Ahead of the auction the spread between the benchmark ten-year bonds is slightly higher, sitting at 902 bps in current trading.

The euro is marginally weaker this morning against the US Dollar and Sterling.

From the data just out, French and German PMI were broadly in line with the flash estimates but German unemployment rose in April and it is this that is leading the Euro weakness this morning.

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IMF raises over £250 billion- but is it enough?

The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) has raised an additional £268 billion ($430 billion) for the pot meaning another set of support for the eurozone when it will be required.IMF raises over £250 billion- but is it enough?However, several other uncertainties persist to bother markets signifying that any rally could be short lived.

There is plenty of data and events this week including central bank decisions in the US, Japan and New Zealand.

In addition, US corporate earnings will stay under the spot light while bond auctions in the eurozone will also provide market drive.

It is doubtful that the Fed meeting tomorrow and Wednesday will incite any change in the currently low FX volatility atmosphere given that strategy settings will stay unchanged, with the bulk of FOMC members likely to look for the first alterations at the earliest in 2014.

The Fed as a result is unlikely to stir the Greenback out of its daze and if anything a fall in durable goods orders, little change in new home sales and a pull back in consumer confidence will play in support to Dollar bears over the coming week.

Even a relatively firm reading for Q1 GDP will be seen as backward looking given the slowing expected in Q2.

Over to Europe and the single European currency will have to compete with political proceedings as it absorbs the outcome of the initial round of the French presidential elections.

The reality is that the political course will carry on to a second round on 6 May which will act as a limit on the euro.

A variety of ‘flash’ purchasing managers indices (PMI) readings and economic opinion gauges will present some primary direction for the Euro but mostly stable to softer readings suggest little stimulation.

As a result euro/ US Dollar will largely remain within its recent range although news from Spain and Italy and their debt markets will have the potential to bring into play larger moves against the euro.

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UK loans IMF £10 billion

The UK has offered just under £10 billion in loans to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help economies in trouble.UK loans IMF £10 billionIt is part of a global effort to bolster the fund’s lending capacity, which IMF managing director Christine Lagarde wanted to increase by £250 billion ($400 billion).

The UK is not alone in funding the lifeboat. Japan will contribute $60 billion, Australia $7 billion, Singapore $4 billion and the Republic of Korea $15 billion.

The IMF had already received commitments of $320 billion.

Finance ministers from the G20 group of leading economies discussed boosting the IMF’s resources at a meeting in Washington.

Mr Osborne said the loan was important to the UK: “It’s in Britain’s interest that we have a stable and strong world economy – that creates jobs in Britain.”

He added that any loan made would bring in a return in the form of interest.

He can lend up to £10 billion without parliamentary approval because Parliament has previously approved £40 billion of loans, of which only £30 billion has so far been committed.

But this latest pledge is unpopular with some members of Mr Osborne’s Conservative Party, who had been urging him not to sign up to an increase.

Backbench MP Peter Bone described the decision as “bonkers”, describing any efforts to prop up the eurozone as a waste of time.

The UK Independence Party leader, Nigel Farage, said: “[Mr] Osborne must tell the IMF that he will not donate one more penny piece to the failed euro bailouts.”

The Treasury says its contribution to the IMF is not public spending. All UK loans to the IMF are financed from the UK’s Official Reserves, remain UK assets and do not contribute to public sector net debt.

The IMF hopes that if private investors think that countries in trouble can be rescued if necessary, they will be more willing to lend to them and any funding problems will not escalate.

It has already warned that the eurozone’s debt crisis poses the biggest threat to the global economy, and warnings about Europe are expected to top the eventual communique from the meetings.

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Italian bonds turn to rise

Italian borrowing costs soared yesterday following new concerns about their ability to reduce its high levels of debt. Italian bonds turn to riseIn the latest auction the Italian government paid an interest rate of 3.89%- up from 2.76% last month and this has been against the recent trends but investors are becoming increasingly sceptical over Italy’s and Spain’s ability to reach deficit targets.

As a result newly elected governments in both countries have announced austerity measures to reach strict debt reduction targets.

Coupled with these figures, Greece published its latest unemployment data yesterday indicating a further rise with the overall rate pushed to 21.8% up from 14.8% at the same point last year.

Despite the bad news the euro remains towards to the higher of its recent trading range against the US Dollar currently trading in the high 1.31s and Sterling trades just above 1.21 at 1.2104.

So far this morning China has published its latest growth figures revealing the world’s second largest economy has grown at its slowest pace for nearly three years.

GDP increased by 8.1% down from 8.9% in the previous quarter and below expectations of 8.3%.

The numbers are being blamed on the fall in demand for exports from the Europe and the US and consequently we could see risk assets hit hard today.

To end the week we have the Michigan confidence figure, which assesses consumer confidence on personal finances, business conditions and purchasing power based on telephone surveys and provides a real time assessment of US consumer sentiment.

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Eurozone currencies still in danger zone

The eurozone is still heavily under the spotlight as Spanish and Italians’ debt interest rates are still dangerously high.Eurozone currencies still in danger zoneHowever sentiment that the ECB could resume emergency bond buying has helped to ease fears.

The euro still remains pegged toward 1.31 against the US Dollar and 1.30 remains a key support area for EUR/USD and given the consolidation at 1.31 we could see some recovery towards 1.3150 to 1.32.

The Pound on the other hand is going from strength to strength and has hit a one year high on a trade weighted index- that is the Pound as a measure against a basket of currencies.

The Pound initially edged higher against the euro in line with euro concerns and improved economic numbers from the UK.

Sterling however has not managed a sustained push higher against the euro. This suggests a lack of appetite to sell the euro too much as the market adopts a wait and see approach to the developments on Spain and Italy.

In other news the yen fell for a second day against the dollar and euro after Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa indicated further easing of monetary policy.

Later today we see further feedback from the US with initial jobless claims and the producer price index- with markets in risk off mode and following weaker than expected payroll numbers last week a good set of numbers is hoped for.

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Spotlight returns to risky Europe

The spotlight is returning to Europe after a brief period of calm. Spotlight returns to risky EuropeThe spread between the benchmark German 10 year bond and its Spanish and Italian counterpart’s widened on continued bearish data and rumours that GDP estimates across the southern Mediterranean countries will be sharply revised downwards.

The uncertainty remains whether the eurozone has enough left in reserve for when Spain or Italy need emergency rescue loans.

The worry is dragging down equity markets from recent highs along with risk currencies like Sterling and especially the commodity currencies which have been the main casualty of recent risk aversion.

There are several bond auctions in the eurozone today; Germany and Italy tap the well for smallish amounts of €3 billion and €5 billion respectively.

There will be strong demand for German debt as ever, but with the problems from last week’s Spanish auction fresh in the mind today’s offering from Italy will be closely watched for overall demand and also the price the market charges the Italian government.

The ECB meeting is on Thursday this week where it is unlikely that they will make any changes to interest rates or the special liquidity measures.

With risk sentiment waning, extra importance will be given to the Chinese GDP data due on Friday.

The data is expected to be around the magical 8% level, as it always seems to be.

Anything lower would be a real shock and compound the bearish trend we’ve followed this week.

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New eurozone firewall too small for purpose

Europe’s 17 eurozonegovernments have agreed to deliver €500 billion in a new bailout funds today in the hope of erecting a firewall big enough to contain the sovereign debt crisis and encourage the International Monetary Fund members to commit a similar sum to emergency reserves.New eurozone firewall too small for purposeBut the eurozone finance ministers, meeting in Copenhagen amid calls to erect the “mother of all firewalls”, ditched explicit earlier proposals to keep a further €240 billion (£200billion) in reserve for the next two years.

The deal conformed to German prescriptions for a minimalist bailout fund, a recipe that the European commission in advance described as inadequate to the challenges confronting the euro.

Ministers nevertheless endeavoured to impress the bond markets, the Americans, and the Chinese, trumpeting the agreement as worth “more than a trillion dollars” in the hope that this will press the big IMF donors into doubling the monetary fund’s reserves to a similar figure next month.

“We are now in a strong position for discussion on the IMF in April. It is a good signal,” said the French finance minister, Francois Baroin.

“All together the euro area is mobilising an overall firewall of approximately €800 bn, more than $1tn,” said a Eurogroup statement.

But that figure included €100 billion in bilateral loans to Greece from EU countries in 2010 as well as €200 billion to Ireland, Portugal and Greece from the temporary eurozone bailout fund which closes next year, although those three programmes will run their course until 2015.

The Copenhagen meeting degenerated into acrimony and some chaos when the Austrian finance minister, Maria Fekter, upstaged the eurozone leaders by first announcing an €800 billion firewall.

Jena-Claude Juncker, the veteran Luxembourg prime minister who has been chairing the eurogroup for eight years and whose term expires in June, threw a hissy fit and cancelled a media conference at which he was to unveil the decisions.

The new money comes in the form of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the permanent eurozone bailout kitty and embryonic European Monetary Fund which starts in July. The ESM’s launch has already been brought forward and ministers on Friday also agreed to speed up the process of paid-in capital to get the fund fully operational within two years.

Its lending capacity was capped at €500 billion, as has long been planned.

A draft statement yesterday said that the spare €240 billion would be held in reserve for emergency use, but was dropped today.

The permanent fund’s lending capacity hinges on €80 billion being paid in five instalments till 2014 in order to retain a triple-A credit rating, meaning that it could be two years before the fund is operating fully as foreseen.

But the parallel running of the current temporary and the future permanent funds will ensure a lending capacity of €500 billion, the ministers said.

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