Abstract:The Yen and Dollar may rise as stocks drop, triggering a break of key support for the bellwether S&P 500 index, if Aprils US employment data falls short of expectations.
TALKING POINTS – YEN, DOLLAR, US JOBS DATA, S&P 500, UK PMI, EUROZONE CPI
Yen and Dollar may rise as stocks fall on soft US jobs data
Risk aversion may push S&P 500 through key support level
UK PMI, Eurozone CPI data may not prove market-moving
Aprils US jobs report is likely to take top billing through the end of the trading week. Baseline forecasts call for broadly on-trend results. A 190k rise in payrolls is expected to be flanked by a steady unemployment rate at 3.8 percent, a reading just a hair above the 50-year low of 3.7 percent clocked in November. Wage inflation may tick up a bit within the recent range of values, rising 3.3 percent on-year.
US economic news-flow has deteriorated relative to analysts projections over recent months, implying their models are too rosy and setting the stage for disappointment. That seems to be reinforced by leading activity survey data. The markets might have hoped that a soft result would spur on stimulus, but the Fed seems to have ruled out as much, at least in the near term. That sets the stage for a risk-off response.
The anti-risk Japanese Yen may outperform in this scenario. The similarly-minded US Dollar may likewise rise, albeit after some characteristic seesaw volatility in the releases immediate aftermath. Indeed, if the soft result does not meaningfully imply a dovish shift in the policy outlook, there seems to be relatively little to standing in the way of the Greenback capitalizing on heightened liquidity demand amid de-risking.
UK PMI and Eurozone CPI data headline the European economic calendar. Improvements are expected on both fronts. However, neither result is likely to be particularly market-moving absent wild deviations from baseline forecasts considering that ECB and BOE monetary policy is firmly anchored. That cuts off the speculative drive that might have produced volatility under alternative circumstances.
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CHART OF THE DAY – S&P 500 AT MAKE-OR-BREAK SUPPORT BEFORE US JOBS DATA
The benchmark S&P 500 stock index recoiled from critical resistance below the 3000 figure, as expected. The barrier is marked by the 2018 swing top, the upper bound of a bearish Rising Wedge chart pattern, and the underside of support-turned-resistance established from February 2016.
Prices are now idling at the Wedge floor, with an indecision candle implying the barrier has been recognized by markets. This means that a break below it – confirmed on a daily closing basis – just might have scope for lasting follow-through.
A soft US jobs report may well push the index over this ledge, establishing a double top and setting the stage for broader risk aversion across financial markets. That probably bodes well for USD and JPY while the sentiment-geared commodity bloc currencies like AUD and NZD suffer outsized losses.
Global markets face volatility with significant declines in US and Asian stocks due to central bank rate decisions and economic uncertainties. JPMorgan's recession forecast, and Cathie Wood's tech stock acquisitions. Additionally, geopolitical tensions, market shifts in New York and Thailand, and rising energy prices in Europe highlight the diverse factors influencing the global financial landscape.
The highly anticipated Fed’s interest rate decision was disclosed yesterday, hammering the dollar’s strength lower as Fed Chief Jerome Powell explicitly signalled that a September rate cut is possible. The U.S. central bank is balancing both inflation and recession risks, with interest rates adjusted to curb inflation while maintaining a solid labour market.
Global markets face significant changes. China's financial sector caps salaries under Xi Jinping's "common prosperity" policy, affecting the yuan and major financial stocks. India's entry into the JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index boosts investment and strengthens the rupee. Nike's weak outlook suggests a U.S. economic slowdown. Japan's yen nears a 40-year low, prompting potential stabilization efforts. Hong Kong faces judicial concerns, impacting its financial stability.
Global markets face significant changes. China's financial sector caps salaries under Xi Jinping's "common prosperity" policy, affecting the yuan and major financial stocks. India's entry into the JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index boosts investment and strengthens the rupee. Nike's weak outlook suggests a U.S. economic slowdown. Japan's yen nears a 40-year low, prompting potential stabilization efforts. Hong Kong faces judicial concerns, impacting its financial stability.