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FX Rates
November 11, 2022Rates are not real time. Rates are today's indicative mid-market rates as of time of publishing, which may vary. Please contact SVB for a current quote.
Source: BloombergGBP/USD 1.1754 GBP/EUR 1.1427 EUR/USD 1.0287 USD/CAD 1.3295 EUR/CHF 0.9850 EUR/SEK 10.7460 EUR/NOK 10.2514 EUR/DKK 7.4381 USD/ILS 3.4385 AUD/USD 0.6679 NZD/USD 0.6058 USD/SGD 1.3777 USD/JPY 139.55 USD/CNH 7.0970 USD/INR 80.7776 EUR/ILS 3.5370 GBP/ILS 4.0416 USD/ZAR 17.2467
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GBP
The BoE has signalled that it will move cautiously in selling the £19 billion of gilts acquired during its emergency bond market intervention.
The chancellor is allegedly planning a spending freeze after Britain’s next general election to plug about half of the UK’s £50 billion fiscal hole. The chancellor may reduce planned public spending growth to 2% or lower.
EURThe Eurozone faces a grim winter as recession bites just as double-digit inflation grips the region and war rages nearby, according to the European Union. EU officials slashed their growth forecasts for next year, predicting very little expansion. The see the economy currently in recession and it see contraction continuing through the first quarter.
USDUS CPI through Oct. printed softer than expected triggering volatility across FX markets. As inflation cooled, markets quickly adjusted their expectations of the Fed, consolidating around a 50-bps hike in December. This served to undo much of the dollar strength seen in recent weeks, as the dollar trades 3% weaker since the CPI print. However, Services inflation could disrupt expectations moving forward matching Federal Reserve comments that although the pace of tightening may be slowing, the terminal rate is expected to be the same.
ASIA/PACIFICChina’s daily Covid infections topped 10,00 for the first time since April, Cases in Beijing jumped as leaders targeted virus restrictions. Meanwhile the PBOC is expected to offer a $139 trillion dollar medium term lending facility to boost the economy.
ILSUSDILS slipped by over 3% through yesterday, following the CPI which saw a rapidly weakening dollar. USDILS had traded above 3.5 since the end of October.
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Source: Bloomberg | |
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