Germany’s recession confirmed, Ireland would like to have OMT support, Britain’s PM moves his speech earlier to
next Friday. EURUSD broke below its narrow trading range, signaling furher weakness. USDJPY correction also still underway. As I've said for the past couple of weeks, the silence in Europe was a bit premature.
Roundups &
Commentary
Frontrunning – ZH
Overnight: First Leg Of German Recession Now Official,
As Yen Collapse Ends – ZH
The Lunch Wrap – alphaville
/ FT
Emerging N.Y. headlines – beyondbrics
/ FT
Today’s front pages – presseurop
Daily press summary – Open
Europe
Morning MarketBeat: Fed Won’t Pull Back on Stimulus
Any Time Soon – WSJ
Broker Note Briefing – WSJ
Yen Bounce Featured in Consolidative Session – Marc
to Market
Roundup – Kiron
Sarkar / The Big Picture
EUROPE
The Irish
website TheStory.ie got its hands on the new European Commission report on the
Irish bailout, which makes clear on page 44 that Dublin is in discussions with the troika
about whether the ECB’s bond-buying programme – known as Outright Monetary Transactions
– can be accessed
You cannot define business opinion on Europe in terms of ‘Eurosceptics’ vs
‘Europhiles’ – The
Telegraph
Speech: The global financial crisis – 5 years
on – ECB
Constâncio,
Vice-President of the ECB, China-Europe Economists Symposium, Beijing, 12 January
2013
UK
UK's Cameron faces tightrope EU
speech, shuns exit vote – Reuters
Cameron EU
speech brought forward to avoid diplomatic row – euobserver
Cameron's
EU speech: The only way is up? – Open
Europe
A
"Brexit" is considered a real possibility for the first time in four
decades. But just how economically damaging would UK withdrawal be, asks Ben Chu
GERMANY
German
economy contracts – Nordea
German
economy contracted 0.5 percent in fourth quarter – Reuters
German
Growth Slowed as Debt Crisis Dampened Investment – BB
NORDIC
PIIGS
Italian elections may yet shake euro zone – MacroScope
/ Reuters
Berlusconi Gains in Polls as Italians Swayed by
Media Blitz – BB
UNITED STATES
The US retail sales figures for December
will be out later on Tuesday and we’ll use the occasion as an excuse to take a
look at the wider picture for the American consumer this year.
OTHER
Morning Briefing (EU/US): What we have here is
failure to communicate – BNY
Mellon
The market
appears unmoved by South Korea’s growing concerns about the KRW.
This may have to change
We enter
these data points recommending being long risk. The industrial data from the US will reignite the cyclical hopes,
together with CPI there could be grounds for the USD to strengthen (we are strategically
neural the USD for the time being).
Commodity volatility, where art thou? – alphaville
/ FT
Goldman
Sachs put out a research note this week clocking that things have got awfully
quiet of late. Almost strangely so.