| The Korean situation will be watched closely and the Japanese currency will lose support if there is any further military action. Domestically, confidence in the Japanese economy will remain fragile and there will be pressure for yen gains to be resisted. Given an underlying lack of confidence in the dollar and Euro, the yen should still be well placed to avoid substantial selling pressure, especially with potential capital repatriation and the dollar is likely to advance only slowly. The dollar spiked higher to above 83.80 against the yen on Tuesday following news of an exchange of artillery fire between North and South Korea. The US currency maintained a generally firm tone during the week, although dollar ranges were relatively narrow. There were further tensions surrounding the Korean situation with North Korea threatening to declare war over the South's military exercises with the US this weekend. The simmering dispute will remain a negative yen factor, although the impact should be measured unless there is an escalation of the situation. The trade surplus for October was slightly higher than expected, but there was a further slowdown in exports and the government remained generally pessimistic over the economic outlook. There was a headline rise in consumer prices in the year to October, primarily due to the impact of higher taxes and there was a continued decline in core prices. There will be continued pressure for yen gains to be resisted. Sterling: Monetary policy will remain an extremely important focus in the short-term. There will be further divisions within the Bank of England and market expectations are liable to shift frequently which will also trigger Sterling volatility. The bank is likely to be broadly neutral in the near term, but expectations that a tighter fiscal policy will undermine growth will tend to limit the scope for any strong-buying support. Sterling will gain some protection from the lack of confidence in the Euro, although caution is required as only a small shift in sentiment could trigger very sharp Sterling losses given the underlying debt profile. Sterling weakened against the dollar for the week as a whole and tested four-week lows against the US currency, although this was a function of dollar gains rather than aggressive Sterling selling and the UK currency pushed to a two-month high beyond 0.8425 against the Euro. The latest mortgage approvals data was weak with a decline to the lowest level since March 2009 which will maintain fears over the housing sector. GDP for the third quarter was unrevised at 0.8% which provided some degree of relief, but the impact was limited. In testimony to the Treasury Select Committee, Bank of England Governor King remained generally cautious over the economic outlook and also stated that a considerable amount of spare capacity within the economy would tend to hold down inflation. King also stated that there could be further quantitative easing if stronger exports failed to offset the impact of subdued domestic demand. The other MPC members broadly maintained their approach to policy, although Posen did criticise the virtual endorsement of the government's fiscal policies by King. The generally dovish central bank stance pushed Sterling to lows below 1.5730 against the dollar and it was unable to secure much of a recovery |
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