The U.S. dollar could face increased volatility on Wednesday as economists predict the consumer price index to slip to 4.0% from 4.9% in September. In addition, the core measure of inflation is anticipated to follow suit as market participants projected the rate to fall 0.1% in October to 2.4% from 2.5%.
Trading the News:
Time of release: 11/19/2008 13:30 GMT, 08:30 EST
Primary Pair Impact : EURUSD
Expected: 4.0%
Previous: 4.9%

September 2008
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The headline reading for inflation fell to 4.9% from 5.4% in August due to a significant decline in oil prices. The breakdown of the report showed that energy costs fell 1.9% as crude oil prices slipped below $75 a barrel, followed by a 0.6% decline in gasoline expenses. Meanwhile, the core measure for inflation held steady at 2.5% for the third consecutive month, which suggests that price pressures may have peaked over the past two months. Lower living costs would certainly help consumers to cope with the slowdown in the economy, and may give the Fed the green-light to lower the benchmark interest rate further over the coming months as the world’s largest economy teeters on the brink of a recession. Moreover, the U.S. dollar may continue to reap the benefits of its safe haven status as the flight to safety continues. |
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August 2008
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Prices pressures in the |
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July 2008
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The |
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How To Trade This Event Risk
The U.S. dollar could face increased volatility on Wednesday as economists predict the consumer price index to slip to 4.0% from 4.9% in September. In addition, the core measure of inflation is anticipated to follow suit as market participants projected the rate to fall 0.1% in October to 2.4% from 2.5%. The drastic downturn in the economy paired with lower commodity prices led firms to curb their outlook for inflation as the ISM prices paid index slipped to 37.0 from 53.5 in September. Furthermore, fading demands for commodities led the Jefferies/Reuters CRB
Mounting growth fears have led policymakers to push inflationary concerns to the backburner, but an unexpected spike in prices could lead the Fed to hold a neutral policy stance as price pressures resurface. Therefore, a CPI reading of 5.0% or above paired with an unexpected rise in the core rate would favor a long dollar position (short EURUSD), and we will look for a red, five-minute candle following the release to generate an entry on two lots of the euro-dollar. We will place our initial stop at the nearby swing high (or reasonable distance), and this risk will determine our first target. Our second target will be based on discretion (with a mind to major resistance in the vicinity) and to preserve profit we will move the stop on the second lot to break even when the first half of the trade reaches its target.
Conversely, growth fears have dragged on economic activity throughout the second half of the year, and has certainly helped to taper price pressures throughout the real economy. As a result, a inline print or a headline reading below 4.0% will favor a bearish dollar trade (long EURUSD), and we will follow the same strategy for the short as the long dollar position mentioned above, just in reverse.
