Dollar Bulls Rely On A Strong NFP

 | Aug 05, 2016 06:34AM ET

Friday August 5: Five things the markets are talking about

Investors continue to look for signs that the U.S. economy remains on solid ground, and today’s ‘granddaddy’ of all fundamental releases, nonfarm payrolls (NFP), will provide another glimpse of the health of the U.S economy.

Last month’s employment print showed that the U.S added a whopping +287k jobs in June, signaling renewed momentum in the U.S labor market. Today’s July report (forecast +180k, +4.8% unemployment rate) is expected to quash May’s disappointing +38k headline as an outlier print.

This week’s U.S ADP report rose by +179k in July, evidence that the U.S. labor market remains strong even if job creation is moderating as the economy approaches full employment.

Also boosting market optimism for today’s headline is yesterday’s U.S weekly claims. Despite rising slightly last week, it remains at a level consistent with steady hiring (+269k).

A strong print will have dealers revaluating the likelihood of a Fed rate hike this year, by default, this will have an impact on the strength of the dollar index, and thus set the tone for foreign exchange trading next week. A weak print and the dollar index will renew this week’s downward trajectory.

All will be revealed at 08:30am EDT.

1. Investors digest BoE’s “hammer” action

Unlike other central banks of late (RBA, RBNZ, BoJ and ECB), the Bank of England (BoE) has managed to overwhelm markets by pulling every stimulus lever available to them to counteract the shock of Brexit and in the process, made it abundantly clear that the MPC could yet pull these levers even harder.

Carney and his fellow policy makers cut interest rates to an all-time low of +0.25%. In addition, the BoE announced a range of other measures to stimulate the economy, including a +£100B scheme to force banks to pass on the low interest rate to households and businesses. It also pledged to buy +£60B of U.K government bonds and +£10B of corporate bonds. Governor Carney, in his press conference, told markets there was scope to cut interest rates further. Actions that suit the record “short” sterling positions currently in the marketplace. This has put the pound (£1.3139) on the back foot and has 10-year gilt yields plunging to a new fresh record low (+0.641%).