qrops

qualifying recognised overseas pension schemes

27th August 2010 Pension Foreign Exchange Report QROPS & QNUPS

We continue our daily look at factors affecting currencies allowing some insight into market conditions affecting exchange rates. Cash and income timing for UK Pensions and QROPS should be considered to maximise the Pension, QROPS and investment income and benefits taken.  

Investment market volatility and currency exchange remains a challenge. Things are still very volatile and we are in unique global influencing territory.  In conjunction with investment returns, currency exchange continues to concern many expats with UK Pensions, QROPS and now QNUPS.

We saw stronger than expected UK retail sales survey on Thursday, which had little impact on sterling as Investors cautiously await the Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke’s speech and gross domestic product data later today.

The UK CBI survey showed UK retail sales growth at a three-year high, rising to +35 in August from +33 in July, well above forecasts of +20.

This surprisingly strong data suggests July’s surge in the official retail sales data was not a one-off and the recovery of the economy is seen to continue in the third quarter.

A surge in manufacturing and business services propelled growth to 1.1%, its fastest pace in four years.

A second reading is due today and will give a breakdown by expenditure. Societe Generale except a rise of 0.5% on the quarter after falling 0.1% quarter 1.

Sterling needs to get above the highs of this week at $1.5620 to sustain any rally, however, the pound remains vulnerable to any rise in risk aversion if investors feel that a US slowdown will mirror through to the global economy as a whole, leaving them inclined to seek the safety of the likes of the dollar and the Swiss franc. 

French president Nicolas Sarkozy, today called upon the 20  largest economies to work together in order to get the global monetary order in line.

“We must define a new framework for discussing currency movements”, Mr Sarkozy, adding that China would need to be included when talking about exchange rates, as they have accumulated huge FX reserves.

He also mentioned the need to reduce the dollars dominance as the reserve currency of choice, calling for a greater role for alternative currencies. 

Thursday also saw Gold steady on price, having hit its highest level in two months earlier in the day, after US employment data beat expectations, boosting the dollar and other risk-linked assets such as equities. 

The US Labour Department have confirmed that the number of people claiming jobless benefits for the first time fell by more than expected, taking the edge off some of the concern about the ability of the economy to generate jobs. 

Although this data provided a slight relief to the economy bulls, analysts claim that the overall macroeconomic backdrop remained uncertain enough to wet investor appetite for gold. 

Gold struck a lifetime high of $1,264.90 in June, partly due to the US economy slowdown and a cooling in several major engines of growth, such as China.

“Everybody was optimistic on the economic front back in midsummer, and hence gold was backing off as people were putting risk back on the books and unwinding safe-haven positions” said Scotia Mocatta. “That optimism has disappeared nearly as fast as it arrived. With a string of bad numbers out of the States and the Dow struggling to hold 10,000, the currency markets have become increasingly unnerved by it all” they said.

The dollar, which up until recently has acted as a refuge against volatility in other currencies, has come under pressure as cracks in the recovery of the economy have materialised.

Gerard Associates Ltd advises expats and people considering living abroad on the technical and currency options available for QROPS Pensions, QROPS, QNUPS and investments in a clear format allowing all customers to make an informed choice. Our service encompasses Pensions, investments, currency exchange and guidance on taxation in most popular ‘sunnier’ climates.   This with the re-assurance and security of UK authorised and regulated advice – essential tools for your security.

26th August 2010 Pension Foreign Exchange Report QROPS & QNUPS

We continue our daily look at factors affecting currencies allowing some insight into market conditions affecting exchange rates. Cash and income timing for UK Pensions and QROPS should be considered to maximise the Pension, QROPS and investment income and benefits taken.  

Investment market volatility and currency exchange remains a challenge. Things are still very volatile and we are in unique global influencing territory.  In conjunction with investment returns, currency exchange continues to concern many expats with UK Pensions, QROPS and now QNUPS.

Pushing off from a one month low on Tuesday, Sterling moved into a marginally more positive trading zone having been bolstered by a bout of short covering within the market. Data out from the US showed new single-family home sales fell sharply in July. This figure showed the slowest movement on record but with the pound and

US dollar moving in tandem, safe haven status remained associated with the Greenback. Shifting away from Tuesday’s low of $1.5373 the pound had progressed to 1.5455 by mid afternoon, but never really achieved the 1.56 levels that it enjoyed earlier in the week.

Sterling came off a little after the U.S. data, but the reaction to that was fairly muted and there are still no real trends or clarity in the market. 

There was no data or news to steer the pound and so by and large it was left to the other major currencies to influence its direction. The Euro was given a short-lived boost when the German sentiment survey came in above forecast (business morale at a three year high). This positive was soon negated with the concerns about the wider economic outlook of the main European countries.

The recent trend of moving into more traditional safe haven currencies (USD & CHF) has not done sterling any favours. The general economic climate in the UK has obviously influenced the Bank of England into making dovish monetary decisions and this does nothing to drum up support for a wavering pound.

The JPY was weakened across the board, on the rumour from central bankers that stimulus measures will continue to be followed so as to bolster the global recovery.

There was further negative movement when some Japanese companies came out in criticism of the strength of their currency, thus hindering exports and the economic strength of the country in general.

Gerard Associates Ltd advises expats and people considering living abroad on the technical and currency options available for Pensions, QROPS, QNUPS and investments in a clear format allowing all customers to make an informed choice. Our service encompasses Pensions, investments, currency exchange and guidance on taxation in most popular ‘sunnier’ climates.   This with the re-assurance and security of UK authorised and regulated advice – essential tools for your security.

 

25th August 2010 Pension Foreign Exchange Report QROPS & QNUPS

We continue our daily look at factors affecting currencies allowing some insight into market conditions affecting exchange rates. Cash and income timing for UK Pensions and QROPS should be considered to maximise the Pension, QROPS and investment income and benefits taken.  

Investment market volatility and currency exchange remains a challenge. Things are still very volatile and we are in unique global influencing territory.  In conjunction with investment returns, currency exchange continues to concern many expats with UK Pensions, QROPS and now QNUPS.

Yesterday saw sterling suffer, reaching a 1 month low versus the dollar and losing some of Monday’s gains against the euro.

Martin Weale, the latest member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee was mainly to blame for the pounds weakness. He mentioned in an interview with a UK newspaper that Britain faces potentially sliding back into recession, and also stated that the Central Banks growth forecast for the year may be too far-fetched.

These comments shunted the pound and saw GBP/USD fall to as low as $1.5373, its lowest since late July.

Against the euro sterling fell to as low as €1.2164, around a cent lower than when the

UK markets opened. The euro also gained around 0.3% on the day against the dollar and had reached an earlier day high of $1.2719, this was partly due to on par German GDP figures for quarter 2, as well as an unexpected increase in Eurozone Industrial New Orders which came in at 2.5%, a 1% increase on consensus.

Drastic US Existing home sales for July were also an aid for the euro. The figures showed that Home Sales were down to 3.83M units, a big spiral down from 5.26M units the previous month, and well below the 4.65M unit estimation. This indicated a -27.2% negative growth for July. This data is the sort that could lead the US into a double dip recession, as it does not support positive growth for the forthcoming months, and some investors opted out of the dollar.

Sterling gained some ground back after the data moving back towards its 200 day moving average of $1.5469, and finished up the day around 0.25% down almost 1 cent above the day’s low.

It is likely that the Bank of England will keep current interest rates at the 0.5% record low until well into 2011, which does not increase appetite for long term sterling investment and any future bearish comments from the Bank of England will add selling pressure to sterling.

Friday’s GDP revised figures will certainly be the key data for the UK this week whilst analysts still believe that the near term outlook for the euro remains bleak. 

Gerard Associates Ltd advises expats and people considering living abroad on the technical and currency options available for Pensions, QROPS, QNUPS and investments in a clear format allowing all customers to make an informed choice. Our service encompasses Pensions, investments, currency exchange and guidance on taxation in most popular ‘sunnier’ climates.   This with the re-assurance and security of UK authorised and regulated advice – essential tools for your security.

24th August 2010 Pension Foreign Exchange Report QROPS & QNUPS

We continue our daily look at factors affecting currencies allowing some insight into market conditions affecting exchange rates. Cash and income timing for UK Pensions and QROPS should be considered to maximise the Pension, QROPS and investment income and benefits taken.  

Investment market volatility and currency exchange remains a challenge. Things are still very volatile and we are in unique global influencing territory.  In conjunction with investment returns, currency exchange continues to concern many expats with UK Pensions, QROPS and now QNUPS.

Sterling hit its highest level in almost eight weeks against the euro yesterday after speculation that monetary policy in the euro zone would remain looser than in Britain.

Despite making gains against the euro, the pound fell against the US dollar which took broad gains against a basket of currencies as a slide in US shares suggested the markets were moving away from risky assets.

Analysts said weekly data showing a rise in bets against the euro suggested it would remain weak versus the pound. The Bank of England looks much less likely than the ECB to loosen monetary policy given a run of strong UK economic data.

The euro fell to its weakest level since late June, with the pound rising to a session high of €1.2275 after European Central Bank Governing Council member Axel Weber said late last week the ECB should extend its loose monetary stance.

The euro did make back some of its losses later in the afternoon after a lack of follow through selling later helped push the euro off its lows, traders said demand for the single currency around the €1.2270 level was met by offers around €1.2230, helping to keep the pair within a range.

Gains against the euro helped lift the pound to a fresh one-year high against a basket of currencies and its trade weighted index rose to 83.1 early on Monday, following a climb on Friday.

Technical analysts say the next level for the pound to reach is €1.2391, this is the June high and the highest the pound has reached since November 2008. If this level is broken the flood gates may well open with the pound potentially breaking the €1.25 mark.

Against the dollar the pound was slightly lower on the day at $1.5510, pulling away from a session peak of $1.5620.

The pound was sold off along with other perceived risky currencies as US shares fell. But it managed to stay above its 200-day moving average at $1.5476, and technical analysts said trend was likely to remain upwards as long as sterling continued to close above the 200-day average mark. For it to extend gains, however, it would need to sustain a move above $1.57, something it has struggled to do in recent days.

The euro traded fairly flat on the day against the dollar, it hit a session high $1.2725 at 9.00am in London and remained within 0.3% falling only as low as €1.2661 throughout the session.

Gerard Associates Ltd advises expats and people considering living abroad on the technical and currency options available for QROPS Pensions, QROPS, QNUPS and investments in a clear format allowing all customers to make an informed choice. Our service encompasses Pensions, investments, currency exchange and guidance on taxation in most popular ‘sunnier’ climates.   This with the re-assurance and security of UK authorised and regulated advice – essential tools for your security.

 

23rd August 2010 Pension Foreign Exchange Report QROPS & QNUPS

We continue our daily look at factors affecting currencies allowing some insight into market conditions affecting exchange rates. Cash and income timing for UK Pensions and QROPS should be considered to maximise the Pension, QROPS and investment income and benefits taken.  

Investment market volatility and currency exchange remains a challenge. Things are still very volatile and we are in unique global influencing territory.  In conjunction with investment returns, currency exchange continues to concern many expats with UK Pensions, QROPS and now QNUPS.

Last week was a fairly quiet week on the currency front with limited data and news out, with the majority of currencies trading sideways.

However, sterling fell against the US dollar to a three week low as risk appetite dried

up and investors sought safe haven currencies such as the dollar. The uncertain sentiment is likely to keep the pound under pressure against the US dollar with market opinion very uncertain and changing on an almost daily basis.

Concerns about the US economic stability will remain in the news this week with a series of key US economic figures in the pipeline. This week we have existing home sales on Tuesday and GDP data on Friday. With the US housing market a major source of investor concern the market is not likely to respond well to poor housing figures.

The US GDP figures could also be a surprise for the markets if there is a larger than expected downside revision. This potentially poor US data could however strengthen the US dollar as the paradox of poor US data driving strength in the dollar may continue as lack of risk appetite continues to give strength to safe haven currencies.

Against the euro things were slightly different with sterling hitting an 8 week high of €1.2279 this morning. This sustained push beyond the €1.22 level that had proved such a strong resistance level in the past was helped by European Central Bank

Governing council member Axel Weber who said the ECB should extend its loose monetary stance.

In the UK this week the main focus will be on the second quarter estimate of GDP that is expected to be revised up. Also British bankers association lending for July is out on Tuesday.

Gerard Associates Ltd advises expats and people considering living abroad on the technical and currency options available for Pensions, QROPS, QNUPS and investments in a clear format allowing all customers to make an informed choice. Our service encompasses Pensions, investments, currency exchange and guidance on taxation in most popular ‘sunnier’ climates.   This with the re-assurance and security of UK authorised and regulated advice – essential tools for your security.

 

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