Fridays US payroll release has given helicopter Ben the ideal
wait and see release and plays right into policy makers current
way of thinking. Despite a net +115k jobs being created last
month, the final print has still managed to undershoot the
streets expectations by -53k. Chairman Bernanke has been very
open and rather vocal with the market on how the US recovery has
been painfully slow. Perhaps we should not be surprised with the
outcome? Even the March and February upward revisions by a
combined +53k, providing a zero sum game for the past
three-months, has not stopped risk aversion trading strategies
currently being implemented. The release neither raises nor
lowers the bar for QE3. If anything, until there is more proof of
an economic substance, expect investors to endure further range
trading in the short run.
Below are some other highlights of the week:
Americas
- CAD: Februarys GDP headline print dropped an unhealthy -0.2%,
m/m, after a +0.1% advance in January. The release leaves the
Canadian economy tracking well below Governor Carneys quarter
release of +2.5%. Growth for the Q1 will likely come in at +2% or
less, even if there is a rebound in March. This will be viewed as
a potential U-turn in renewed interest rate hike thinking that
came about after the market got itself all bulled up after the
hawkish comments from Carney last week. The Canadian economy has
some ways to go to adhere to the BoC recent forecasts.
- USD: Regional factory surveys suggest an April slowdown.
However, it seems that National ISM reports are trumping them.
ISM Manufacturing PMI rallied to 54.8 last month (53) and was
able to drag other sub-components, like production and
employment, higher.
- USD: During the midweek, the US data was not so hot. ADP
release of its estimates for US private sector payrolls growth
for April came in at +119k positions created, well below
expectations of a +175k print.
- USD: Another sign of uneven US recovery this week was new
bookings for factory goods falling -1.5% in March as expected
(largest fall in three years).
- USD: Economic activity in the non-manufacturing sector grew
in April for the 28th consecutive month. The non-manufacturing
ISM registered +53.5% in April, -2.5% points lower than the +56%
March print.
- USD: The highly anticipated NFP report did not disappoint the
market, it gave us volatility and that is something that forex
asset class requires after five weeks of complacency. However,
the underlying data is disappointing. April's weaker +115k NFP
print adds worries to the US outlook. Analysts were looking for a
+175k print. The unemployment rate falling to +8.1% provided some
good optics; however, the mathematics for the fall is not good
reading. There were +522k counted out of the US work force last
month-How is this good? Over the last year there were +2.74m
pushed or left out of the workforce while +975k went into it.
- CAD: A weaker than expected Ivey PMI release (52.7 vs. 61.0
expectation) is finally capable of pressurizing the loonie
outright. Obviously the week ending in full risk-off mode after
NFP is helping its northern neighbors currency to test some key
support levels as the big dollar heads towards parity.
Europe Week in FX ASIA Week in
FX
WEEK AHEAD
- Week starts with the ever important Greek and French
Elections
- AUD and CAD deliver building data
- Trade data is released in CNY, AUD, CAD and USD
- Inflation numbers are presented in CHF, CNY, GBP and USD
- Employment numbers are released in AUD, USD and CAD
- GBP has rate and manufacturing announcements
- NZD and AUD has annual budgets to present
- The CHF have foreign currency reserves to disclose
- JPY delivers its Current Account
- USD ends the week with Consumer sentiment
Get OANDA's exclusive weekly Market Pulse FX
Email
Address: Preferred Format: HTML Text
view original article