The U.S. dollar re-entered the upward path against its key rivals on Wednesday after better-than-expected U.S. international trade data and U.S. government budget forecasts eased concerns over so-called twin deficit in the world's largest economy. May foreign trade deficit came in at $55.35 billion, below economists' forecast of a $57 billion gap and down from April's revised $56.9 billion shortfall. In addition to this, the U.S. government cut its fiscal year 2005 budget gap prediction by almost $100 billion in the wake of surprisingly large tax revenues in recent months. The White House now forecasts a deficit of $333 billion for the fiscal year ending September 30. Today, the market will pay attention to U.S. June retail sales and CPI data.
The Czech currency slid to fresh six-week lows against the euro in late Wednesday's session, pulled down by poor regional sentiment. Neither domestic economic data helped the crown, with May industrial output rising by softer-than-expected 4% on a y-o-y basis.
FX RATES |
USD/CZK |
25.080/120 |
USD/GBP |
1.7617/20 |
EUR/CHF |
1.5565/81 |
EUR/CZK |
30.290/310 |
USD/YEN |
111.78/81 |
EUR/GBP |
0.6846/51 |
EUR/USD |
1.2070/75 |
EUR/YEN |
134.83/93 |
STOCK MARKETS |
NIKKEI |
11764.26 |
+104.42 |
EUROSTOXX 50 |
3260.67 |
+24.34 |
FTSE 100 |
5245.9 |
+28.7 |
DAX 30 |
4679.89 |
+26.86 |
S&P 500 |
1223.29 |
+1.08 |
NASDAQ |
2144.11 |
+0.96 |
PX 50 |
1237.2 |
–1.3 |
GOLD |
424.00/+424.70 |
- |
DEPOSIT RATES |
|
CZK |
USD |
EUR |
YEN |
ON |
1.67-1.77 |
3.24-3.27 |
2.06-2.09 |
--- |
3M |
1.64-1.74 |
3.56-3.59 |
2.08-2.11 |
-0.02-0.03 |
6M |
1.64-1.74 |
3.78-3.81 |
2.10-2.13 |
--- |