FX Update: Incoming Data To Drive USD Action

 | Apr 01, 2015 04:59AM ET

For some reason, the market continues to get excited about fractions of points of surprise in Chinese activity surveys, as overnight we saw a bigger reaction in JPY crosses to the suspect official Chinese surveys than we did to quarterly Tankan surveys. The latter generally showed disappointing manufacturing readings and better than expected service-sector readings, extraordinarily ironic given that the entire Abe- and Kuroda-nomics effort has been aimed at crushing the yen in order to boost manufacturing, while it has been most successful at boosting tourism and therefore the service industry instead.

Today we have the rest of the world reporting its various manufacturing PMIs, and the US release is far more interesting now that we have seen yesterday’s extremely weak Chicago PMI print. Normally, that survey is quite closely correlated with the overall ISM manufacturing survey. Last month’s Chicago PMI was also very weak, while the ISM survey showed relative resilience. Can we have this kind of divergence for two months in a row? Today’s ISM manufacturing will tell us, though it is less important than Monday’s ISM non-manufacturing release, which is shaping up to be a strong one , if we're to believe the Markit survey.

I suspect the US dollar will only be vulnerable tactically if both today’s ADP employment change print for March is weak and the ISM manufacturing survey also proves weak. Key levels regardless of data surprises are 1.0800 in EUR/USD and 119.50 in USD/JPY, with the latter tested overnight. Then it will be up to Friday’s US employment report to set up next week’s action. Note that we have a mere 60 bps of Fed hikes priced in through June of next year, so fairly soon, to talk about dovish Fed surprises beyond marginal ones, we’re going to have to start talking about the Fed scrapping the idea of ever hiking rates. I don’t think we’re ready for that just yet…

Chart: USD/CAD
USD/CAD saw an orderly consolidation within the range on yesterday’s slightly stronger than expected Canada January GDP print. The focus remains higher here as long as we have weaker oil prices and the US data doesn’t surprise too negatively.