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Making Sense Of USD Rally, Dow Selloff Post NFP

Published 08/02/2020, 07:44 am
Updated 09/07/2023, 08:31 pm

Daily FX Market Roundup 02.07.20

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director Of FX Strategy For BK Asset Management

Many investors are scratching their heads about why U.S. stocks fell sharply after Friday morning’s nonfarm payrolls report. Some media outlets blame the move on concerns about China’s economy and profit taking after a strong week. However a deeper look into the details of the jobs report quickly reveals underlying weakness. The unemployment rate was expected to stay at 3.5% but it rose to 3.6% and most worryingly, wage growth missed expectations. With the Chinese economy slowing, this is the first sign of similar trouble ahead for the U.S. economy. Federal Reserve officials have expressed little concern about the impact of coronavirus but fear can be a powerful driver of consumer and business demand.

Currency traders on the other hand drove the U.S. dollar higher against all of the major currencies with the exception of the Japanese yen, which held at pre-NFP levels. The dollar rises when there is risk aversion so the move is consistent with the sell-off in stocks. However the relative stability of USD/JPY is a sign that while investors are worried about the global impact of coronavirus, they believe the U.S. economy will fare better than others. For now, the jobs number changes nothing. Monetary policy will remain unchanged as the Fed waits to see how world growth is affected. According to the White House, based on the past and what they are seeing, a drop of 0.2% is expected. It's likely to be far more than that, but with strong Q4 earnings, it could take Q1 warnings to cement the top in stocks and turn USD/JPY.

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The most important report on next week’s calendar will be U.S. retail sales. If consumer spending slows, red flags will be up and investors could be scared into deeper profit taking. After hitting record highs this week, we look for a steeper pullback in equities in the second week of February. For currencies, this means a near-term top for pairs like USD/JPY and USD/CAD.

The currency hit hardest is the Australian dollar, which fell to a 10-year low Friday. Investors were not pleased by China’s decision to delay trade data – a sign that the numbers could be too ugly to publish. Even if it is only moderately weaker, the government could be worried that it will trip further selling. Dovish comments from RBA Governor Lowe didn’t help. The central bank lowered its GDP forecast in response to the bushfires and coronavirus to 2% from 2.5% for the year ending June 2020. Lowe said if the economy were to hit a rough spot, easing is an option. The New Zealand dollar fell in sympathy as investors look forward to similarly cautious comments from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand next week.

Meanwhile, USD/CAD is flashing signs of a top. Unlike the U.S., job growth doubled expectations in January with an increase of 34.5K compared to 17.5K forecast. The unemployment rate also dropped to 5.5% instead of rising to 5.7% as expected. Wage growth jumped to 4.4% from 3.8%. IVEY PMI rose to 57.3 from 51.9, a sign of improvement in manufacturing. Despite the central bank’s cautious outlook, these are very good numbers and given USD/CAD’s recent rally, profit taking is due. There are no major Canadian economic reports to threaten this move in the coming week, making it a low-risk trade.

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Euro and sterling both extended their losses. German trade and industrial production numbers were very weak while sterling fell victim to a rising dollar. Fourth-quarter GDP numbers are due from both in week ahead (EU, UK), so EUR and GBP will be in play.

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