New Highs For Gold And Yen As Dollar Struggles

 | May 02, 2016 06:56AM ET

Monday May 2: Five things the markets are talking about.

It’s a bank holiday shortened trading week for some (China, Singapore, Taiwan, U.K and Ireland), but for others it’s expected to be a busy week.

The Reserve Bank of Australia meets this coming week – no change in the overnight rate is expected, nevertheless, the odds have fallen since last week’s tepid inflation report.

Elsewhere, manufacturing and composite PMI’s for April will be released and digested around the globe.

Dealers and investors will sign off the week with the U.S’s and Canada’s April jobs reports. Can both economies continue with such a stellar monthly print?

1. China PMIs slow slightly but remain in expansion

China official PMI’s were a mixed bag – both were down slightly from March’s levels, but remained in expansion.

China April Manufacturing PMI (government official: 50.1 vs. 50.3 – second straight expansion; non-manufacturing (services) PMI: 53.5 vs. 53.8 prior.

Amongst the key ‘manufacturing’ components – new export orders matched the headline with 50.1 vs. 50.2 m/m, employment continues to remain under pressure at 47.8 vs. 48.1 m/m, while input prices hit multi-month highs of 57.6 v 55.3 m/m.

A positive for both commodity sensitive currencies and commodities, analysts note that inventories of raw materials fell to a new five-month low of 55.3 vs. 57.6 m/m, suggesting perhaps we have peaked in oversupply?