A much weaker-than-expected labour report broke the string of positive economic surprises out of the US and sent the Dollar tumbling versus almost every major currency worldwide.
Bond yields fell and commodities soared once again, dragging upwards commodity dependent currencies. In the G10, the Australian, New Zealand and Canadian dollars, together with the Norwegian krone, topped the tables, rising a massive 1% against the US Dollar. In emerging markets, the Brazilian Real, exploded upwards by nearly 4%, as the COVID wave there starts to break.
This week we will be paying very close attention to the US inflation report for April. Another strong inflation print after the increase in March would be an unpleasant coda to the weak payroll report last week, indicating perhaps that supply constraints are becoming a serious concern for the short term at least. As this is written, Scottish election results do not seem to have made much of a dent on Sterling, indicating perhaps that independence is not seen as a medium-term risk for the UK.
GBP
The Bank of England decided to slow down the pace of bond purchases, but this seemingly hawkish measure was dampened by the decision to leave both the expected end date of the purchases and the total purchase amount unchanged.
Scottish election results were released over the weekend and traders seemed to be unmoved by the results during Asian trading hours. While there will be a clear pro-independence majority in the Scottish parliaments, markets seemed to take heart at indications from Boris Johnson’s Government that any immediate push for a new referendum will be vetoed.
EUR
What little news there was out of the Eurozone was generally positive. German retail sales surprised to the upside, suggesting that the much awaited catch up with the US and UK economies as the lockdowns are lifted may finally be here. Also, though somewhat under the radar, progress was made on the political front and the EU's pandemic programmes moved closer to launch, which should provide a tailwind to the Eurozone's growth prospects starting in the second half of the year.
The common currency reacted mostly to the weak payrolls report out of the US and rose strongly for the week, a trend we expect to continue over the medium-term.
USD
A very weak payrolls report out of the US contrasted with the string of positive news elsewhere and, particularly, the price pressures that continue to develop along strained supply chains. It is possible that generous unemployment benefits and business reluctance to offer the higher wages warranted by a heating economy are slowing down hiring temporarily. If so, this issue should resolve itself over the next few months.
We remain very positive on US economic developments in the short and medium term, but will pay very close attention to indicators of labour market health over the next few weeks. Meanwhile, our view that the path of least resistance for the US Dollar is down received some strong validation last week.
CHF
Despite positive global sentiment, the risk-sensitive Franc continued to appreciate last week. The Franc ended the week around the middle of the G10 performance dashboard, doing much better than its safe-haven peers that trailed the pack. The overall strength of the Swiss currency seems to show just how important the behaviour of US yields is for the low-yielding assets. The outperformance compared with the Dollar and the Yen can be linked to a difference in newsflow: the news from Switzerland, and more broadly - Europe - has been particularly positive of late.
We don’t think that the appreciation of the Franc is a sustainable phenomenon and expect the currency to show weakness later in the year should US yields return to an upward trend and market sentiment continue to improve. In the short-term we’ll be focused mostly on outside news, as the domestic economic calendar for this and the coming week is nearly empty.
AUD
The broad sell-off in the US Dollar sent AUD sharply higher last week, with the currency up around 1.5% to its strongest position since late-February.
Interestingly, the Aussie Dollar didn’t receive too much support from last week’s Reserve Bank of Australia meeting, despite the RBA continuing to strike an upbeat tone over the state of the recovery. The bank raised its GDP projections and is now pencilling in growth of more than 9% in Q2, and nearly 5% in December 2021. Governor Philip Lowe did, however, stress that it will be ‘some years’ before wage growth is fast enough to lift inflation to target and that rates hikes were unlikely until at least 2024. The RBA’s continued insistence that policy will remain accommodative for the foreseeable future despite a strong rebound in economic data presents somewhat of a downside risk to AUD in the medium-term. That being said, investors are so far mostly focusing on the positives, and the Dollar looks well placed to post additional gains should risk sentiment continue to improve.
CAD
The scorching rally witnessed in the Canadian Dollar continued last week, with CAD once again sitting pretty at the top of the G10 FX performance tracker. We attribute the extent of the move to the hawkish policy stance adopted by the Bank of Canada, which last month became the first major central bank to begin normalising monetary policy since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Canada’s vaccination programme is also now going rather well, with the pick-up in oil prices also providing solid support for the currency.
It will be interesting to see whether much of this positive news is now already priced in to the value of CAD, which could lead to a modest retracement in the recent rally. Recent macroeconomic news has been mixed and persistently high new virus case numbers suggest that an unwinding of restrictions may take place at a slightly slower pace than elsewhere. Last week’s labour report was particularly poor, showing a 207k contraction in jobs and a move higher in the jobless rate to 8.1% from 7.5%. If this is an indication of things to come, then we may well see a reversal in the recent appreciation in CAD in the near-term.
CNY
A very strong set of trade data out of China last week triggered both a sharp move higher in the Yuan and provided solid support for emerging market currencies in general. Export growth came in less than expected, although still accelerated in April, with imports growing by a massive 32.2% year-on-year in CNY terms versus the 12.6% consensus. This suggests that domestic demand is holding up very well in China, which bodes well for domestic activity and indeed global growth as a whole.
The Yuan has rallied by around 1% versus the US Dollar in the past few sessions off the back of the data, which is a rather violent move for a currency that is kept within a narrow range by the country’s central bank. All eyes will now be on the People’s Bank of China, with investors interested to see whether policymakers comment on the currency’s recent appreciation during upcoming communications. A strong Yuan is a negative development for the country’s export competitiveness and the recent appreciation will therefore test the central bank’s tolerance for a lower USD/CNY exchange rate.
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