World currencies rallied against the dollar last week as a number of hard hit markets showed signs of stabilisation, particularly oil.
Investors were in a buoyant mood until Friday, when Trump's lashing out against China combined with thin holiday markets in most of the world sent global equities lower. World currencies mostly held their own, and the dollar ended down against every G10 currency and most emerging market ones.
The focus this week will be squarely on the US payrolls report for April, out on Friday afternoon. This data will allow us to gauge precisely the damaged wrought on the US labour market by the pandemic, after a series of dismal but perhaps less accurate weekly jobs reports. The other key question will be to see whether the rally in risk assets has got ahead of itself, given the dreadfulness of the economic data so far.
GBP
Soft retail sales data out of the UK did little to move sterling last week, which mostly tracked closely the euro moves against the dollar.
The main event this week is the Bank of England meeting on Thursday, where the MPC is universally expected to hold rates at the de facto zero bound. The market will be looking to the minutes of the meeting to measure members expectations for the depth of the economic contraction. Beyond that, further details on PM Boris Johnson's’ plans to reopen the economy gradually after 7th May will be key. Given the still relatively high number of new daily cases of the virus in the UK, this unwinding of lockdown measures is likely to be a very gradual one.
EUR
Eurozone economic growth in the first quarter came out at a truly dismal -16.8% in annualised terms. This rate of contraction dwarfs so far the US equivalent, which came out at -4.8%. We think this is mostly due to the late timing of the US confinement orders relative to Europe during the month of March, and expect that the gap will close in the second quarter. The good news is that unemployment ticked up only slightly, as various state schemes to support employment in spite of low activity kicked in.
The ECB announced a new financing program, PELTRO, intended to support banks through loans that have even lower interest rates and more attractive terms than the existing TLTROS. The euro put in a surprisingly good performance, and it seems the market is coming around to our view that the programmes put in place by the ECB are sufficient to ensure no systemic euro risks arise while individual states deal with the crisis.
USD
The U.S. Federal Reserve announced some tweaks to its recently announced lending programmes, and Chair Powell committed to keeping extraordinary measures in place as long as necessary. Aside from that, however, no market-moving news came out of the Fed meeting last week.
We now turn our attention to Friday's payrolls report, which is expected to show eye-popping jumps in job loss and unemployment. We are more negative than the consensus, expecting a 20% number reflecting the brutal losses in jobs over the past few weeks. With attention now shifting to reopening plans for the different economies, the stubbornly high contagion and death numbers out of the US lead us to expect that the US rebound will lag the Eurozone, putting a floor under the euro.
CHF
The Swiss franc ended last week slightly lower against the euro, although was actually the best-performing safe-haven currency, with the EUR/CHF pair crossing the 1.06 level on two occasions for the first time since early-April. Recent franc weakness can be linked to both improved global sentiment as well as the SNB’s actions. The SNB’s sight deposits increased sharply again last week by 13.1 bn CHF versus 13.4 bn CHF the week prior. This suggests that the SNB recently stepped up its interventions to limit franc strength as the EUR/CHF pair started approaching the 1.05 level.
Economic data from Switzerland hasn’t been particularly good of late, unsurprising given the measures in place to limit the spread of the coronavirus. Retail sales dropped by a record 5.6% YoY in March. Economic sentiment also turned sour: the KOF leading indicator posted its largest monthly drop on record, coming in at 63.5, very close to the 2009 low.
While they may not influence the exchange rate in the short term, this week will bring a host of economic readings, which will allow us assess the scale of the damage to the Swiss economy as a result of the pandemic. In addition to April’s manufacturing PMI, which dropped less-than-expected to 40.7, we’ll receive inflation and unemployment data for the same month. The CPI print is expected to show a big drop, dragged down by lower oil prices, while unemployment is set to jump - economists’ expect an increase from 2.9% in March to 3.4% in April.
AUD
Last week’s worst performing major currency was the Australian dollar, in large part due to the eruption of US-China trade tensions.
Focus this week will be squarely on Tuesday’s RBA meeting. We don’t expect too many surprises, with interest rates to remain at the bank’s effective lower bound 0.25%. We don’t foresee negative rates in Australia and expect Governor Lowe to reaffirm the bank’s pledge to keep the cash rate unchanged until progress is made towards full employment and on-target inflation, i.e for the foreseeable future.
The main point of contention will be regarding the bank’s recently introduced quantitative easing programme. We expect it to remain unchanged, although there is a chance that they indicate a smaller and less frequent pace of asset purchases. This would be a hawkish surprise that could support AUD this week.
CAD
The Canadian dollar had a rather topsy-turvy week, rallying sharply in the first half of the week before falling just as violently in the second half to end it as the second-worst performing G10 currency. President Trump’s threat of more tariffs on China has negative implications for CAD, given China’s hefty oil consumption and the Canadian economy’s heavy reliance on the production of the commodity. The currency also felt the full force of last week’s much worse-than-expected manufacturing PMI, which fell to its lowest level on record (33 versus 41.5 expected).
We think that the Canadian economy will suffer from a similar problem to that of the US - a much sharper increase in unemployment than much of the rest of the developed world. We expect the country’s weaker job retention schemes to be reflected in a worse-than-expected jobs report for April, out this Friday. Should this be confirmed, we may see a bit of weakness in CAD towards the end of the week.
Please Like, Comment & Share if you found this article insightful.