USD: Hard to get bored in markets these days
July was a very eventful and volatile month for global markets, and we doubt we’ll navigate much calmer waters in August. The switch to a fully data-dependent approach by the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank means that incoming data releases will have a magnified impact on most asset classes, and there are still geopolitical and virus-related threads that can have major implications for the global outlook and should keep uncertainty elevated.
After the rather grim 2Q GDP numbers in the US last week, markets are now actively seeking evidence of how much of this technical recession is “real”. The main gauge to watch is the unemployment rate, as a fully-fledged recession needs to see a weakening of the labour market. Friday’s US non-farm payrolls will therefore be the main highlight of the week. Our economics team is forecasting a 200k increase, with the numbers still being held back by labour shortages, and the unemployment rate staying at 3.6%. If a worsening outlook suggests 75bp increases are now off the table, a 50bp move would still be warranted against this still good labour-market backdrop.
Some focus will also be on activity surveys, starting with today’s ISM Manufacturing index, which we expect to fall to 51.5 (consensus 52.0) from 53.0 last month. Once again, this should all but endorse the narrative of a slowing US economy, which should warrant a slower but not a stop to Fed tightening in autumn.
We’ll also start hearing from Fed speakers again this week, and expect the market’s sensitivity to be quite elevated in this case, too. While no FOMC members are scheduled to speak today, one dove (Charles Evans) and two hawks (Loretta Mester and James Bullard) are due to deliver remarks later this week.
On the FX side, the repricing lower in rate expectations sent equities higher and generated the perfect environment to unwind some of the quite extensive dollar longs last week. Our view for the coming days is that we’ll not see the dollar entering a broad-based downtrend, and we could instead see only some selective strength in G10 against the greenback.
For example, the recent rebound in oil prices may keep the likes of Norway's krone and Canada's dollar supported, while lower yields and the re-pricing lower in rate expectations may help USD/JPY test 130.00. We suspect European currencies (like the euro and Swedish krona) may struggle to find sustained support given Europe’s gas troubles and worsening outlook. The pound is facing the risk of a dovish re-pricing after the Bank of England meeting, while the Australian dollar may receive some support (although external factors should still dominate) as the Reserve Bank of Australia may hike by 50bp tonight.
In our view, DXY should be able to hold above 105.00 by the end of the week. Although volatility is set to remain quite elevated.
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