Daily Tips

Friday, February 1, 2013

Nonfarm payrolls to encourage or halt USDJPY runaway train?

US employment report and USDJPY / EURUSD
USDJPY took out another figure overnight, trading at new highs snice early 2010 (the highest level that year was 95.00 on the nose) as US treasuries settled weaker yesterday, keeping yields elevated and carry traders/JPY sellers happy for now. As I mentioned recently, a strong US payrolls report and/or drop in the unemployment rate could see a deeper sell-off in treasuries and yet another boost to this USDJPY move, but the fact that it has moved so aggressively before the actual employment report raises the risk that considerable good employment news is already in the price, i.e., the bar has been raised considerably for the upside surprise.
So we likely have a binary situation - either another big jump or a slight jump and a large reversal or simply a large reversal (note that all of the recent Fridays have seen USDJPY ending with another flourish higher with consolidation coming early the next week - this pattern may have become too easy...) An ugly report or even one that is just a bit weaker than expectations could see a pop in the bond market and finally kick off a volatile correction sequence in USDJPY and EURUSD (with EURJPY the highest-beta play as usual of late). I expect a stronger than consensus payrolls level, but not sure I have a feel for how the market is positioned. A drop of 0.1% in the unemployment rate would be interesting as well, as would be a 0.1% rise (all possible due to participation rate effects and the volatile household employment survey in the US.)
Manufacturing surveys out today as well
Don’t forget that we have the other manufacturing surveys out today (note the weak Chinese manufacturing survey out overnight!), including the final Euro Zone and the UK surveys this morning and the US ISM survey up 90 minutes after the employment report. The Chicago PMI threw a wrench in the expectations for an exceptionally weak ISM, but stay tuned.
Footnote from yesterday: it appears the massive US personal income bump in December was due to large dividend payouts in December that were timed in anticipation of new higher taxes this year. Don’t expect a repeat.
USD pair levels
EURUSD first support is 1.3590, with 1.3500 a bigger line in the sand and near the first (0.382) Fibo of note. USDCAD needs to find support very soon above 0.9950 and rally strongly again if the rally is to remain alive – bulls really need 1.0060+ to reinvigorate hopes there. AUDUSD likewise needs risk off and fresh lows below 1.0380 to reinvigorate the bearish argument. For GBPUSD, the focus is on whether the 200-day moving average holds as resistance (just below 1.5900).
ECB and then G20
Don’t forget that we have the ECB meeting next week that will also see the market increasingly nervous about pushing EURJPY higher ahead of a possible rate cut from the ECB or the beginnings of verbal intervention against the move or a change in language on how the ECB might use the OMT or similar. Beyond that, the G20 meeting set for February 15 is the most important event risk in the calendar as we will get a test of how global leaders are dealing with the entire issue of competitive devaluation, a.k.a., the global currency wars.
Commodity dollar smackdown
The weakness in Aussie is very noteworthy here if we look at not only conditions in general, but its commodity dollar comrades, the kiwi and the loonie. AUDCAD features compelling technical arguments for bears to get active again, as the entire sequence that took the pair up above 1.0400 recently has been wiped away. The problem there is that we have merely seen mean reversion in the parity to 1.0500+ range for the almost two years as no new real trend has developed. I have long expected for a new bear trend to get underway there that takes the pair well below parity. Will 2013 finally be the year? Speaking of mean reversion, for those looking at the exotic extremes of the G8 currencies, NZDCAD is poised for fresh 7-year+ highs. There may be some more room to move to the upside, but that pair should eventually mean revert over the next 12-24 months, as it has since the mid 1980’s.

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