This is a big week for currencies, but so far, we’ve seen nothing but consolidation. In today’s trade, the greenback strengthened against the New Zealand dollar and Swiss Franc, weakened versus sterling and the Canadian dollar, and was unchanged against the euro and the Japanese Yen.
The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book report confirmed what investors already knew – which is that the economy grew at a faster pace in April and May. There was little response to this report because the main focus is non-farm payrolls on Friday. The economy is improving, but job growth slowed significantly in April. If hiring fails to pick up in May, currencies and equities will be in trouble.
The hesitation in stocks is a sign of overall investor concern. U.S. equities ended the day unchanged, extending a multi-day consolidation that could mark a top. For that to happen, the jobs report would need to be ugly. Earlier this week, we learned that manufacturing activity accelerated, but the U.S. dollar fell because manufacturing job growth expanded at a slower pace. Tomorrow, the ISM non-manufacturing report will be released. If the service sector fails to report a meaningful pickup in jobs, traders could sell U.S. dollars in fear of weak NFPs. If ISM is good, we could see renewed demand for U.S. dollars as traders position for a strong rebound in jobs on Friday.
The U.S. jobs report is one of many important releases this month that could set the stage for big FX moves. Updated economic projections are scheduled for release from the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. Upgrades are expected for inflation and growth forecasts, but what investors are really watching for are hints of taper. The Bank of England, Bank of Canada and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand have made their first moves, either in the form of fewer asset purchases or projections for an earlier rate rise. The U.S. economy is expanding just as much if not more quickly than the UK and Canada, but the Fed has been reluctant to alter its forward guidance.
The Reserve Bank of Australia is in a similar position. The economy is improving, but the RBA maintained its dovish bias because of mixed data. First-quarter GDP growth was stronger than expected, but the contraction in retail sales was deeper. Interestingly enough, while the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is less dovish than the RBA, the New Zealand dollar was the worst performing currency. Lower dairy, import and export prices contributed to the move. The Canadian dollar was the best performer, thanks to a smaller decline in building permits and fresh 2.5-year highs in oil. Weaker German retail sales prevented EUR/USD from trading higher, but strong housing numbers lifted GBP/USD. Looking ahead, revisions to Eurozone and UK PMIs are due for release tomorrow.