From The Floor: Aussies Out Of Work

 | Feb 12, 2015 05:32AM ET

"That's not a knife, this is a (falling) knife"

Speaking live from Saxo Bank's Asian desk in Singapore, Christoffer Moltke-Leth tells us that Australia's shocking employment report has sent the Aussie dollar into a tailspin and has prompted a new round of speculation about further Reserve Bank of Australia interest rate cuts.

After falling to 6.1% in December, Australia's unemployment rate surged to 6.4% in January with the country lost over 12,000 jobs – twice as many as had been forecast.

The Aussie then plunged over half a cent against the USD, hitting 0.7650 in the Asian session.

Elesewhere, Moltke-Leth says that headlines regarding the ongoing Greek stalemate hit Asian markets early, causing a minor, 13-point retreat in EURUSD. Conversely, USDJPY currently sits at the top of the Ichimoku cloud – a bullish sign for the yen.

Following the From the Floor call, the Bank of Japan issued a statement ruling out "extra stimulus" that impacted USDJPY as head of forex strategy John Hardy notes here and here.

USD bears: an endangered species
The US dollar, meanwhile, is looking strong, says Hardy, but its rally is not yet "a full-court press" as it remains relatively soft

against the European majors.
Hardy says that there may be some reluctance to trade EURUSD in light of the unresolved nature of the Greek debt talks, which are now scheduled to roll into Monday.

Concerning the talks' effect on the euro, Hardy says that there are "no new signs of nervousness", adding that EURCHF now sits around 1.05 after briefly heading north of that level.

Today will see two important events in the European forex sphere, with Sweden's Riksbank meeting this morning and the Bank of England releasing its quarterly inflation report as well.

As of press time, the Riksbank has announced that it will cut its repo rate and launch a government-bond buying programme worth SEK 10 billion.

We will see how markets react to the news.

Over on Threadneedle Street, Hardy says that there is some speculation about a hawkish Bank of England statement, but adds that given Britain's low inflation rate could limit the bank's latitude in that regard. Looking at the pairs, Hardy says that EURGBP tried new cycle lows today while the Cable traded in a higher range.

The Bank statement presents a two-way risk, says Hardy, adding that he sees EURGBP as a sell on a sterling-positive result and the Cable as a sell on a sterling-negative one.

Finally, Hardy says that the Australian jobs report confirms the AUD downtrend and opens the possibility of AUDUSD trading below .75 and beyond.