Euro Breaks 1.13, USD/CAD Eyes 1.34: What To Expect From Bank Of Canada

 | Mar 05, 2019 07:51PM ET

h2 Daily FX Market Roundup March 6, 2019h3 Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management./h3

With stocks stabilizing after yesterday’s slide, the US dollar traded higher against all of the major currencies. Part of the strength can be attributed to a larger-than-expected rise in non-manufacturing activity. Service-sector activity expanded at its fastest pace since November according to ISM and the business-activity index rose to its highest level in 13 years. But there was weakness underneath the surface with the employment index falling to an 8-month low and the prices index slipping to its lowest since 2017. In other words, job growth and inflation are slowing. These reports show the vulnerability of the US economy and the likelihood of a weaker NFP on Friday. New home sales rebounded in December but the improvement was offset by a revision to the January report that erased nearly half the gain. ADP will be released Wednesday along with the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book and while some of the Fed districts could report some improvements related to confidence, the only thing that matters this week are jobs. If ADP (NASDAQ:ADP) comes in decent, which means anything greater than 175K, the dollar could hold onto its gains with USD/JPY prime for a stronger break of 112. However if ADP reports job growth less than 150K or NFPs rise less than 150K on Friday, the gains we’ve seen in USD/JPY could evaporate quickly.

EUR/USD, which had been holding above 1.13, finally broke through this support level to fall to its weakest level in 2 weeks. This was despite an upward revision to EZ PMIs and the rebound in consumer spending. The problem for the euro is that despite these data improvements, the European Central Bank is still thinking about more stimulus and increasing the supply of cheap money. A new targeted long-term refinancing operation is expected sometime in the next 2 to 3 months and the sooner they commit to it, the more pressure there must be to boost growth.

The focus shifts to the Canadian dollar with the Bank of Canada making a monetary policy announcement Wednesday. The Bank of Canada also has a lot to consider this month because while the labor market is strong the rest of the economy is weak. When the central bank last met, it lowered its GDP and inflation forecasts. These changes were validated by the latest reports, which showed quarterly GDP growth slowing to 0.4% from 2%. Annualized CPI growth also dropped to its weakest level in more than a year. At the same time, oil prices are recovering and the Federal Reserve appears to be slowing its pace of tightening. We don’t expect the Bank of Canada to change its policy stance but having raised interest rates 3 times last year, it is in no position to do so at this time again. USD/CAD is trading at its highest level in more than a month ahead of the rate decision and a dovish outlook could send it to 1.34. The IVEY PMI report will be released alongside the Bank of Canada’s rate decision and this report takes on increased importance ahead of Friday’s employment report.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App