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The US trade deficit shrank 3% in July to $57.94 billion from a revised $59.49
billion (initial $58.82 billion) in June. Imports fell 0.7% to $164.2 bln,
while exports barely edged up 0.41% to $106.2 billion.
Notably, the trade gap fell in the face of the second monthly increase in
oil imports because exports posted their best percentage margin over imports
since April 05. The chart below shows the US bilateral deficit improved with
Mexico (+26%), Japan (+5%), while worsening with Canada (+15%), UK (+11%),
Eurozone (+5%). The change in the trade gap with China was negligible. On a
year to year basis, the bilateral deficit widened by 20% with China, by 47%
with OPEC and by 6% with the Eurozone and Canada.

The 3% retreat in the trade deficit makes for a positive contribution to Q3
GDP. A continuation of this trend into the subsequent 2 months should maintain
the positive contribution of net trade to GDP. Next exports lifted Q2 GDP growth
by 1.2%, posting the first increase since Q3 03. The question remains whether
other sectors of the economy would weigh on GDP in Q3. The August data should
be free from the effects of Hurricane Katrina, but the last month of the quarter
should reflect the erosion in industrial output, retail sales, services activity
and mounting layoffs.
Another aspect worthy of notice in the GDP data is the personal consumption
expenditure. Its contribution to Q2 GDP slowed to 2.12% from 2.44%, the lowest
contribution rate since Q2 04. As the consumer cylinder makes up over 2/3 of
the US economic engine, its steady slowdown over the past 4 quarters is not
anathema could bring challenges to the Federal Reserve's insistence to tighten.
Fed Still to Dollar's Rescue?
The dollar retains its upward tone amid optimism from post Katrina-reconstruction
spending, preliminary figures showing the 10K casualty estimates were an overshoot
as well as a retreat in oil prices. Crude prices dropped to a 3-week low of
$63.18 per barrel yesterday a combination of an expected decline in US oil
demand and increased Saudi supply to Europe for next month. Dollar bulls may
also be bracing for Thursday's CPI data which could come in line with last
week's hawkish speeches by the Fed's Moscow and Yellen. But markets still see
a rate hike this month as a toss up. Dollar bull may find reason to cheer by
inflationary data, but an expected 1.4% decline in August retail sales, a drop
in the Sept Empire and Philli Fed surveys could calm matters down.
As for the Fed, last week's comments from Chicago Fed's Michael Moscow and
San Francisco Fed's Chief Janet Yellen bolstered the Fed's hawkish rhetoric
by noting that rising oil prices may be partly passed through to core inflation
and that monetary policy cannot reduce the fallout from Hurricane Katrina,
were a an important tonic for the US currency.
Yet both Moscow and Yellen acknowledged that the Fed may need to make
some complex choices and that further tightening may not be as instilled
in the FOMC's mindset as it was over the past 15 months . Moscow stated
the Fed is facing a "number of judgment calls" in assessing the Hurricane
impact while Yellen posited that monetary policy is at a "challenging phase".
This means that the easy consensus might no longer prevail in the Fed's Open
Market Committee's tightening campaign.
Accordingly, the euro extended its sell-off amid the cusp of further Fed tightening
helps remove 2/3 of the euro's 2 week gains. The currency has also retraced
more than 61.8% of its 3-week gains versus the yen as rising possibilities
in next week's German elections would result into "grand coalition" which would
hamper labor reforms and might even impact Chancellor Schroeder's tax cuts
on cross shareholdings sales.
Currency traders must also begin mulling the trend in house prices due
to the effect of home equity on consumer demand. Fed Chairman Greenspan said
last month : "The surprisingly high correlation between increases in
home equity extraction and the current account deficit suggests that an end
to the housing boom could induce a significant rise in the personal savings
rate, a decline in imports and a corresponding improvement in the current
account deficit". With long yields serving as the more effective driver
of housing prices, only a steepening of the curve would do it. And just as
we deem a halt in the Fed's tightening as the key to "normalizing" the yield
curve, we believe that further Fed hikes would RE-flatten the yield curve,
fail from pushing long-term rates and prolong further deficit widening according
to Greenspan's words.

The dollar's resilience to rally against the Japanese continues unhindered
by the overwhelming election victory by PM Koizumi, a 4-year high rally in
the Nikkei and the first increase in bank lending in 7 years. But the technical
picture seen above suggests (by the MACD) that the pair is likely to give off
steam at the trend line resistance of 110.90-00. Given those fundamentals,
the chart below suggests a dollar retreat back to 110.40, followed by 109.70s.
Key support to crop up at the 100 day MA of 109.30. The 109 figure acts as
the subsequent target-- 38% retracement of the 101.75-113.71 move. A breach
above 111.00 would be confirmed by a breach of 111.20 - the 50% retracement
of the 113.71-108.74 decline.
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