Markets Have Bigger Troubles Than NFP

 | Jan 06, 2017 06:50AM ET

Friday January 6: Five things the markets are talking about

U.S jobs growth remains strong, but is slowing, which is certainly not a surprise when the world’s largest economy approaches full employment.

Today, all eyes are on December’s nonfarm payroll (NFP) report, the “granddaddy” of U.S economic indicators. The market anticipates a headline print of +175k and an unemployment rate of +4.7%, while the average hourly earnings are expected to rebound with a +0.3% rise.

Unless we deviate too far from expectations, the markets reaction should be rather moot to the headline expectations. A weaker number could prompt the Fed to pull back on its rate-raise trajectory.

Note: Some markets are closed in Europe as they observe the day of the Epiphany.

With a headline number there or there about, investors will return to Trump Twitter watching and try to map out the potential fall out of U.S President-elect’s “protectionist” stance following his remarks yesterday on Toyota Motor's (NYSE:TM) plant construction in Mexico.

Will Chinese authorities retaliate to Trump’s trade war by increasing their scrutiny (antitrust and tax probes) of U.S companies with major China operations? Don’t expect them to step down, even Mexico is on full alert as they try and protect their own currency in overnight trading.

1. Stocks at the mercy of dollar moves

“Big” dollar moves are having an impact on equities overnight. In Japan, shares fell amid yen strengthening (¥115.95) as traders’ wait for this morning’s U.S. jobs data for clues on Fed actions.

The Nikkei Stock Average declined -0.4%. In Australia, the ASX 200 was flat despite stellar trade data overnight suggesting that their economy could bypass a recession. Singapore’s FTSE Straits index added +0.3%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained +0.4%.

In Europe, equity indices are mostly trading lower as market participants await payrolls. Financial stocks are weighing on most of the indices across Europe, particularly the Euro Stoxx. On the FTSE 100, commodity and mining stocks are trading notably lower.

U.S markets are set to open small down (-0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.4% at 3,301, FTSE -0.1% at 7,192, DAX -0.3% at 11,556, CAC 40 -0.5% at 4,877, IBEX 35 -0.3% at 9,457, FTSE MIB -0.7% at 19,515, SMI -0.2% at 8,374, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%