AUD And NZD Rush Higher On Jobs data; BOE On Tap

 | May 09, 2013 07:02AM ET

Both of the Antipodeans report much better than expected job growth, catching the short-term market off guard and squeezing shorts. But for Australia in particular, the significance of the data is questionable.

The Australian jobs report was far stronger than expected. Looking back over the data series, we can clearly see these spikes on occasion, but it has been a while since one occurred. On virtually every occasion, the following month’s data mean reverts, either with a barely positive reading or an outright ugly negative one. To take the most recent example, the February payrolls growth was +72k to be followed by March’s -31k. In other words – the long term implications for the Australian economy are nil - but don’t tell that to folks (like me) that were shorting the Aussie into the data. As for the unemployment rate, it remains on an upward trend.

The market had gotten rather short of Aussie as key local support (trend-line and local flat-line) taken out, so the news saw a nasty gap squeeze higher as stops were tripped all the way up through 1.0250. This isn’t a game changer for the Aussie, but does make the local technical situation far more muddled if we hold higher here rather than slipping back lower quickly today, since the 1.0220 area was rather important resistance. If we stay up here, then the risk rises of an ugly range-fest back toward 1.0400, just below which we have the 200-day moving average.

Chart: AUDUSD
The rally suggests the massive longer-term range channel remains the key structure of note after the trend-line and local flat-line support breaks failed to follow through (so far, at least).