Dollar Longs Looking For A Sign, Euro Seeks Support

 | Mar 09, 2015 07:38AM ET

Historically the first full-trading day after a U.S payrolls release tends to be the quietest trading day of the month. So far, the start to this week in Capital Markets is rather anticlimactic when compared to last five-business days. The initial euphoria witnessed after last Friday’s better than expected non-farm payrolls report (+295k and +5.5% unemployment rate) has been replaced with caution. Investors are beginning to fret that the reality of higher U.S rates will stymie the relative free ride that the market has come to expect from today’s global low rate environment.

In the overnight session, global equities are managing to track the sell-off in the U.S after Friday’s positive jobs report further fueled expectations that the Fed will commence a tighter monetary policy sooner rather than later.

A percentage of the market is already pricing in a Fed June rate hike, however, that meeting may come too soon. Nevertheless, expect investors to focus on next weeks FOMC meet on 17-18 March. Will Ms. Yellen and her fellow policy makers get to alter the Fed’s current language? Even though the Fed Chair indicated that she would not adhere to any time table for future rate hikes, dropping “patience” will have a higher percentage of investors turning their attention to a June hike rather than further out the curve.