Market Remembers How It Is Supposed To React To Bad News

 | May 03, 2012 03:36AM ET

A string of awful European PMI’s today has the market in a lousy mood and the USD back on top where it belongs. Let’s see if the next couple of days accelerate the move or keep us tied up in range purgatory.

Yesterday’s US ISM Manufacturing data coming in at an oddly strong reading (given the weakening evident in all of the regional surveys for April) touched off a steep rally in risk appetite out of proportion to the import of the news, and out of proportion to the reaction in the short end of the yield curve in the US, as 2-year swaps reacted all of half a basis point to the news.

Overnight, and particularly today in Europe, we got a string of horrific PMI data from the eurozone economy, first with HSBC’s China Manufacturing PMI continuing to show a sub-50 reading, and then with Italy and Spain registering sub-44 Manufacturing PMI’s. Then we had Germany with by far the worst payrolls release since mid-2009 and the overall March eurozone unemployment rate coming in at a heady 10.9%.

The market reacted fairly swiftly to the ugly European data, taking EUR/USD well through the short-term key support at 1.3200/10 and EUR/GBP was down probing close to the 2010 lows. EU peripheral bond spreads were a bit wider, but not alarmingly so.

Chart: EUR/USD

The sickly, grinding rally of late in the EUR/USD has been dealt quite a blow today, but we’re still in the range and we need to see that 1.300 level taken out to get a better indication that there is real directional momentum potential in the pair. The next few days are critical, given the event risks.