Demand For U.S. Dollar Tied To Yields And NFP

 | May 05, 2015 07:05AM ET

The mighty dollar took advantage of thin holiday trading conditions yesterday and rallied against the single currency. That trend continues this morning with the sell off in U.S bonds pushing the U.S. 30-Year yield (+2.86%) back to highs last seen in December, a move, which seems to be solidifying a bid tone for the buck against G7 currencies.

Some investors seem content to book profit on the recent gains for the EUR ahead of the nonfarm payrolls release on Friday. In the past three-week’s the EUR has appreciated +5% outright, supported by a spate of weak U.S data (business investment, GDP and jobs) and on some early positive signs that the ECB’s QE program is providing dividends.

With the Greece situation remaining on front burner, Greek risk is again fueling and supporting fresh EUR short positions. Investors should expect Greece headlines to continue to flourish ahead of tomorrow’s +€200m payback to the IMF and next week’s +€750m payback.