iFOREX Daily Analysis : December 06, 2016

 | Dec 06, 2016 05:16AM ET

On Monday demand for the dollar continued to be underpinned after a solid U.S. jobs report on Friday cemented expectations for a rate hike by the Federal Reserve at its meeting next week.

Stateside, market participants celebrated the continued expansion in the service sector with activity hitting a one-year high. In a report, the ISM said its non-manufacturing PMI rose to 57.2 last month, from 54.8 in October. That was the 82nd consecutive month of growth and its highest reading since October 2015; while analysts had only expected the index to increase to 55.4.

The data was just another piece of the economic puzzle lending support for the Fed to move ahead with a rate hike at its December 13-14 meeting.

According to the Fed Rate Monitor Tool, 100% of traders expect the Fed to raise interest rates next week.

Today in the euro zone Germany is to report on factory orders; Canada is to produce a report on the trade balance; while the U.S. is also to release trade data, along with reports on nonfarm productivity and factory orders.

EUR/USD

The euro climbed against the dollar on Monday, jumping above $1.07 for the first time since mid-November, after hitting 21-month lows when Italy's prime minister conceded defeat in a referendum on constitutional reform and said he would resign.

The single currency initially slumped after Italian voters rejected a referendum on constitutional changes backed by the government, prompting Prime Minister Matteo Renzi to step down. Concerns over the financial health of the Italy’s ailing banking sector mounted, amid fears that Renzi’s bank bailout program could be scrapped. Italy’s banks are weighed down by bad loans and could possibly require a full-blown bailout from the European Central Bank.

But the euro quickly recovered as the referendum outcome had been largely priced in by markets.

Markets were also reassured after the ECB said last week that it was prepared to temporarily step up purchases of Italian government bonds should the referendum results drive up borrowing costs. European stock markets also retraced early losses as investors bet against immediate elections in Italy.