The sole exception was the Japanese yen, which suffered as increasing risk appetite drove traders out of safe-havens. Equities and credit markets worldwide continued to rally in celebration of the signing of the phase 1 trade agreement between the US and China. Emerging market currencies turned a mixed performance, but are generally up strongly so far this year.
We expect currency market volatility to return this week as critical PMI activity surveys are released in the UK, the US and the Eurozone. We expect a strong release in the latter that should, we believe, buoy the euro. The ECB meets on Thursday, but no policy actions or significant changes in its outlook are expected.
GBP
Sterling resilience in the face of decidedly weak economic data last week is remarkable. Industrial production, inflation and retail sales were all weaker-than-expected. As a result, markets are now starting to price in a cut at the next Bank of England meeting at the end of the month.
In spite of this dovish backdrop, sterling ended up nearly flat against both the dollar and the euro. This week, the latest PMI data (Friday) and employment report (Tuesday) are both expected to be relatively strong, which should ease a bit of the negative sentiment around UK fundamentals and be supportive of the pound.
EUR
Our view for Eurozone economic outperformance relative to consensus will be tested this week. The early PMI surveys of business activity for January will be released Friday. We expect a significant improvement across the board on the back of the financial market rallies and general optimism about trade conflicts. This upside surprise in the PMI release could provide a significant boost for the common currency this week.
While the ECB meeting on Thursday is unlikely to generate market-moving headlines, investors will be paying close attention to any comments regarding the launch of the bank’s strategic review, the first such conducted by the central bank since 2003. The debate is expected to cover the topics regarding the structure, timeline and agenda of its future policy meetings.
USD
Aside from the signing of the US-China phase 1 trade deal, the most important news out of the US last week was a softer-than-expected CPI inflation report. Inflationary pressures in the US remain muted, though inflation remains close to the Fed’s target. This means the Fed will not be moving rates any time soon.
This week, the Markit PMI release on Friday should be the main focus for dollar traders. Aside from that President Trump, along with a number of other politicians and central bank heads, will be speaking at the Davos Economic Forum in Switzerland.
CHF
Last week was a good one for the Swiss franc. The currency climbed by around 0.8% against the euro and around 0.5% versus the US dollar.
One of the key factors behind the rally was the US government’s announcement that it was adding Switzerland to its currency manipulators watchlist, while also calling for looser fiscal policy in the country. This is a pretty unexpected move but not necessarily unreasonable given the regularity of the Swiss National Bank’s FX intervention designed to prevent the franc from becoming too strong. As the SNB reiterated in its recent statement, “[interventions] are not aimed at bringing an advantage for Switzerland by making the franc undervalued”. While adding the country to the aforementioned watchlist does not entail any sanctions, investors ramped up CHF buying, believing that it could potentially limit the SNB’s willingness to intervene in the FX market.
This week will not bring any key data prints from Switzerland, with attention likely to be focused on the Davos event.
AUD
The Aussie dollar has begun this week as it ended the last one, posting losses against the USD. The currency has extended its year-to-date sell-off to over 2%, in large part due to the ongoing bushfires and heightened expectations for RBA policy easing. Amid relatively soft economic data, futures markets are now placing a near as makes little difference 50/50 chance of another interest rate cut from the central bank as soon as the bank’s February meeting.
Looking ahead, Thursday’s Australian labour report for December is likely to shift the Aussie dollar this week. Investors are eyeing a fairly weak job creation number around the 15k mark, which would be a bit of a step down on the 40k net jobs added in November. An underwhelming reading here would no doubt heap additional selling pressure on AUD, as investors further ramp up their already lofty expectations for RBA rate cuts.
CAD
The Canadian dollar spent much of last week largely rangebound against the dollar. With no real major domestic macroeconomic or central bank announcements of note, the USD/CAD pair ended the week roughly where it started it.
Attention this week will be firmly on the Bank of Canada’s monetary policy announcement on Wednesday. The BoC is almost certain to keep interest rates unchanged this week, with the central bank remaining one of the few in the G10 to not take a dovish stance in the face of rising global uncertainties. This resolve will be tested once again this week, particularly given the mixed nature of recent data. In our view, last month’s solid labour report, which showed a rebound in job creation to a net 35k in December does, however, ensure we expect a steady as she goes approach from the BoC this week. Given the nervousness surrounding central bank easing, this could provide some assistance to CAD this week.