Forex Report: Kiwi Climbs

 | Feb 10, 2014 05:36AM ET

On Friday, the U.S. dollar weakened against the majority of its Forex counterparts following the publication of Non-Farm Payroll reports. Analysts say that on the surface, they appeared to denote that the U.S. economy is cooling off, but after digesting the news, many economists believe the numbers were not as bad as initially thought. While the release showed that employers added 113,000 payrolls, missing forecasts for a hike of 180,000, the news also confirmed that Household Employment climbed in January, and job creation benefitted individuals of prime working age. Furthermore, the fact that industries such as construction and manufacturing contributed to the creation of payrolls was taken as a sign that the weak employment level could just be temporary. However, all this did not stop investors from speculating on the Federal Reserve’s next move. Most market traders now believe the Fed may not taper stimulus as quickly as predicted. Gold Prices rose, given the possibility of a slowdown for the Fed tapering plans. Futures for delivery in April managed to rally to $1,272.00 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and dipped to $1,262.90 at closing time on Friday.

The euro traded mixed, climbing the most since the end of January against the U.S. dollar following the release of lackluster Non-Farm Payroll numbers, and dipping as the German Court announced it would defer the ruling on the european Central Bank’s bond-purchasing plan to the european Court of Justice. The shared currency gained versus the yen even as demand for safe harbor currencies increased. The British Pound depreciated for a second week versus the greenback on metrics suggesting the Services and Manufacturing segments contracted in January, supporting a case for the Bank of England to maintain the key cash rate at the present lows. The Sterling lost the most in one week against the euro upon news that the central bank left the cost of borrowing money at 0.5 percent.

In Japan, the index of indicators confirmed that the nation sustained the most economic growth in five years. The yen slipped versus the U.S. dollar once the latter recovered subsequent to the publication of disappointing Jobs metrics. Today, Japan will report on the Current Account, Consumer Sentiment and Bank Lending.

Lastly, in the South Pacific, the Australian dollar received a boost following announcements by the Reserve Bank indicating a new position on monetary policy, though many speculators believe the currency is slated to weaken, given the lackluster economic fundamentals issued out of China recently, signaling that the South Pacific nation may face some challenges in the coming months. The New Zealand dollar advanced versus its U.S. peer and remained strong on the possibility that the Reserve Bank may raise the benchmark interest rate.

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

EUR/USD: German Court Won’t Intervene

The EUR/USD traded up and down; it dipped as the German Court stated that the european Central Bank abused its standing by pledging to engage in the unlimited buying of bonds from indebted nations. However, rather than rule on the matter, it decide to leave the decision to the european Court of Justice. The euro gained as the central bank’s President, Mario Draghi, said that policy makers aren’t worried about the low inflation numbers, even though the rate dipped to 0.7 percent. The EUR/USD gained as Mr. Draghi stated that the bank wouldn’t expand on stimulus at this time, and policy makers will wait until March to decide on whether to boost the key cash rate.