{element name="top_login"}

 




Football Supporters – Get rid of your leftover Rand

June 29th, 2010

If you were fortunate enough to fly out to South Africa to follow the football, chances are that you will be arriving home today for all the obvious and painful reasons.

Since your holiday was cut so short, you may also have quite a bit more Rand leftover than you expected.  Rather than leaving your foreign currency hanging around your home (waiting for that next trip to South Africa that may never happened), why not exchange your foreign currency for Sterling.  No need to have a painful reminder of England’s defeat in the form of leftover Rand poking out of a drawer every time you open it!

Follow a few simple steps and receive your GBP posted to your home in just a couple of days.

While you are at it, it’s a good idea to have an extra look around your home to see if you have any other leftover foregin currency hanging around, (Euros from England’s defeat before last in Germany perhaps)? Apologies for mentioning Germany…

Enhanced by Zemanta

Pound Finds Its Feet as Euro Continues to Stumble

May 31st, 2010

Despite concerns about the Pound suffering under a coalition government, the Bank Holiday weekend has seen the UK currency strengthen against the Euro and both the U.S and Australian Dollars, as well the rest of the world’s most traded currencies.  After the recent stabilisation of the stock market, the strengthening of the Poud is considered partly due to investors being willing and able to take more risks.

(more…)


Pound appearing back

April 20th, 2010

The pound started yesterday under pressure after the Lib Dems’ poll spike and the fêting of Nick Clegg reached irrational levels. Clegg is apparently as popular as Churchill which can see be true.
It could believed the likelihood of a hung parliament is now nearly fully priced into the market and so future polls should be less volatile in their nature. The one caveat is the poll taken after the debate focused on the economy (due next Thursday).

The dollar was all over the place yesterday as speculators tried to figure out whether the reaction to Friday’s Goldman Sachs revelations were overdone or we were due for more downward movement. Equity markets were still under pressure at the London close yesterday however the DJIA and the S&P500 were able to eke out gains come the close of play. Goldman Sachs stood 1.63% higher come the close of play.

We start off the week of important UK data with the UK CPI reading. Inflation has been impressively sticky during the recession and the consensus estimates are 3.1 and 4.2% for CPI and RPI respectively. This data, alongside Thursday’s retail sales figures provide the best chance for sterling upside this week. They are due at 09.30. The other main piece of info comes in the form of German ZEW due at 10.00. whether this is hit by the dears over Greece remains to be seen; Germany is of course the main opponent to Greek aid at the moment.


Euro, Australian Dollar and Pound Race.

April 7th, 2010

Sterling shrunk a little yesterday as Gordon Brown announced the election is to be on May 6th. It was also a nice excuse for investors and speculators to fade the slight rally in sterling we saw towards the end of last week.

Further fears over problems in Greece including a renegotiation of the terms surrounding an IMF loan weakened the single currency pretty dramatically. The news that we covered yesterday of the Germans looking for higher interest charges on funds lent has also done the euro no favours.

In other news, the Aussie dollar continued higher yesterday after the interest rate increase early in the session.

The weekend has been kind to the pound as a Sunday Times/ICM poll showed a 10 point lead for Cameron’s Conservatives This is a winning majority and enough to prevent a hung parliament and his comment on Friday that an election with no clear winner would surely damage the economy has been looked on as prescient.

But nothing much has changed and I expect the pound to continue to trade awkwardly for the next month.

Germany has also angered other European countries by standing by its beliefs that the Greek should not pay a discounted rate of interest on any funds it is loaned by the EU. Most wanted to give Greece a rate of about 4%, Germany wants 6%. It’s as if your neighbours’ house is on fire and your haggling over the price of your garden hose.

Overnight the RBA have raised interest rates in Australia to 4.25%. This had long been predicted even against the poor retail sales figures released last week and we expect rates to rise to 5% by the end of the year.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Sterling Up On Growth

March 31st, 2010

As we know the market in general has been bearish on the pound over the past few months and have been ’shorting’ it i.e. Betting that it will fall. However we believe that we may see some of these bets be cancelled or ‘covered’ before month end and before Friday’s Non-Farm release. This equates to people buying the pound and therefore the pound rises. We also expect that we are coming up to the ISA deadline (April 5th, fact fans) and that therefore we will see a lot of unit trust and tracker fund buying in equity and debt markets over the coming week as investors try not to miss out on their tax-free allowance.

With sterling benefiting from those stronger growth figures it would have been just our luck for the EU to pull something good out of the bag and nix any upward movement. Luckily for the pound however they were unable to do this. Fears over Greece and Germany and rumours surrounding France all helped the euro lower across the board.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Europe Slows to a Crawl

February 15th, 2010

The new Euro coins
Image via Wikipedia

· German economy at a standstill
· Entire eurozone suffering due to slow Southern European economies
· China raises reserve ratio, risky assets fall
· Leading economists back Conservatives plan for fiscal consolidation

Investor sentiment continued to drift out of the eurozone as Friday’s ‘flash’ GDP figure showed that the union was slipping.

Growth for the entire region slowed to 0.1% with Germany posting a figure of 0.0% down from a Q3 figure of 0.4%. France continued to expand (0.6%) but the Spanish (-0.1%) and Greeks (-0.8%) weighed on the release. This is a sign that the recovery in the EU is not strong enough to sustain itself and must still rely on the government syringe. This was evident if we compare France and Germany. France’s positive figure was buoyed by consumer expenditure on items such as cars which have received a lot of government subsidisation; Germany has halted these subsidies and has suffered as a result

European GDP was expected to slip however given the problems they have had over there. One thing we didn’t see coming was the surprise announcement from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC)

In hiking their reserve ratio (increasing the amount that banks must keep in reserve and not lend) by 50bps they have tightened monetary policy. This caused a shift out of risky assets and into havens such as US treasury debt and the dollar.

It was another political weekend for the pound as a group of leading economists wrote an open letter to The Sunday Times backing the Conservatives plans for rascal reduction in a post-election Britain. It has however had little effect on sterling and it is very much in the same place as Friday’s COB.

Markets may be volatile today as it is President’s Day in the US and the subsequent lack of liquidity may see prices move violently. There is little other data apart from the Eurogroup meeting on Greece.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Subscribe RSS News Feed

Bookmark and Share

Registered at HM Customs and Excise – Money Laundering Reg No:12113754 for conducting Foreign Exchange Services. None of the information contained in this website constitutes, nor should be construed as financial advice. OnlineFX Data Protection Registration Z8307054 © Copyright OnlineFX Ltd - All rights reserved. Powered by: OnlineFX IT