FX This Week: Coin Flips And The NFP

 | Aug 29, 2016 01:55AM ET

As the Jackson Hole fallout takes shape, it’s clear the Federal Reserve Board was attempting some measure of damage control to repair their failing report card. The Federal Reserve Board’s credibility comes under the light time and time again, whether it’s from their constant misdirections or from their divisive policy debates that rage on in the public domain.

After a week of guessing, Dr. Yellen left little to the imagination when she stated that the case of a Fed rate hike had strengthened, but remain very much data dependent. Given the proximity of the grandaddy of all Fed data, the Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP), it is without question that this week’s print will take on more importance than usual.

While there’s never a shortage of hyperbole leading up to NFP, this week’s highly anticipated event may be a chart topper in that regard.

After all was said and done, we are still left pondering the most fundamental question: when will the Fed lift off? As it stands, the market is still in a monetary no man’s land, putting us back to a coin flip leading up to this week’s US payrolls data.

The USD is a touch higher in early trade on limited follow through from Friday’s NY close.

Will there be a September rate hike?

While Janet Yellen was rather non-committal to rate hike timing, her wingman Stanley Fischer drew most of the markets attention.

When asked whether we should be “on the edge of our seat” for (1) a rate hike as soon as the September FOMC meeting; and (2) more than one rate hike this year, Fischer replied, “I think what the Chair said today was consistent with answering yes to both of your questions, but these are not things we know until we see the data.”

With Traders positioned for a December lift off, the repricing of a September probability will now take center stage.

However, whether Fed Fischer’s comments are simply another in a long list of Fed editorials, or are conveying the FOMC’s intentions, lies another debate. Nonetheless, the odds of September rate hike will increase, and commodity and EM currencies will probably feel the brunt of that discussion.

The market closed Friday with a September hike now at 42% probability and a December 2016 hike 65% chance up from 32% and 57% the day before.

Australian Dollar

When the dust settled on Jackson Hole, the Australian dollar was one of the casualties.

While Friday’s Non-Farm Payrolls outcome could ignite the next significant USD dollar trend, local traders will have a busy economic diary to wade through, including Building Permits, Retail Sales and CapEx numbers, which could influence RBA policy bets and add another layer of intrigue to the shifting divergent interest rate policy debate.

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The Chase for Yield may go on the near-term back burner. I suspect Hard Commodities, Oil and China will come back into focus, and there is an eerie calm in the RMB complex that has investors on edge leading up to this week’s chain PMI readings.

At the end of the day, post–Jackson Hole, the RBA is possibly applauding a weaker AUD, especially given that the their domestic monetary policy action has been ineffective at curbing the currency’s strength.