The dollar is little changed overall against its major competitors at the start of the new trading week. With U.S. equity and bond markets closed today for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, there has been little news to drive trading.
Investors will be watching for a batch of U.S. housing data later this week. The housing market index for January is due on Tuesday and housing starts for December are slated for Wednesday. Finally, existing home sales for December are scheduled for Friday.
The European Central Bank will hold its next monetary policy meeting on Thursday. Investors are expecting the ECB to announce further quantitative easing measures at the meeting, likely including government bond purchases.
Investors will also be watching for the result of the Greek elections on Sunday. Concerns over a potential Greek exit from the Eurozone have subsided, but investors are now worried that the Syriza party will roll back austerity measures if it proves victorious.
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde cautioned that there would be consequences to Greece restructuring its debt after January 25 election.
“Collective approaches are always good at the European level,” she told the Irish Times in an interview.
“As a principle, collection endeavours are welcome but at the same time a debt is a debt and it is a contract,” Lagarde said. “Defaulting, restructuring, changing the terms has consequences on the signature and the confidence in the signature.”
The dollar has pulled back from around $1.1550 against the Euro this morning, to around $1.1610 in the afternoon. The U.S. currency is slightly off an 11-year high of $1.1459, which was set on Friday.
Eurozone construction output fell slightly in November, after rising in the previous month, figures from Eurostat showed Monday. Production in construction dropped 0.1 percent monthly in November, in contrast to a 1.1 percent increase in October, which was revised from 1.3 percent. In September, output dropped 1.1 percent.
Eurozone’s current account surplus for November declined from a year ago, figures from the European Central Bank showed Monday. The current account surplus decreased to EUR 18.1 billion from EUR 19.5 billion in the same month last year. In October, the surplus was EUR 19.5 billion.
The buck has been hovering around the $1.5150 level against the pound sterling Monday. The U.S. currency reached a low of $1.5178 and is currently trading around $1.5125.
Property prices in the U.K. recovered in January, after declining in the previous two months, as the recent stamp duty changes made homes cheaper for some first time buyers, figures from property-tracking website Rightmove showed Monday.
The average asking price for a house in the United Kingdom rose 1.4 percent from the previous month. The average price climbed to GBP 273,275 from GBP 269,477.
That follows the revised 2.2 percent contraction in December, lesser than the 3.3 percent decline estimated earlier. In November, prices had dropped 1.9 percent.
The greenback slipped to a low of Y116.921 against the Japanese Yen Monday, but has since bounced back to around Y117.590.
Consumer confidence in Japan increased more than expected in December, figures from the Cabinet Office showed Monday. The consumer confidence index rose to 38.8 in December from 37.7 in the previous month. Economists had forecast the index to rise to 38.5.
Japan’s industrial production declined less than initially estimated in November, final figures from the Ministry of Economy and Trade and Industry showed Monday. Industrial production dropped a seasonally adjusted 0.5 percent month-on-month in November, revised from a 0.6 percent fall. In October, production grew 0.4 percent.