NFP Could Lift Dollar Higher

 | Aug 03, 2018 07:13AM ET

h3 Friday August 3: Five Things The Markets Are Talking About

President Trump’s unpredictability on trade is keeping capital markets on the back foot and a theme that is not expected to change anytime soon.

The ‘big’ dollar remains better bid ahead of this morning U.S jobs report (08:30 am EDT), supported mostly by the markets confusion surrounding the escalating Sino-U.S trade conflict.

Nevertheless, this morning’s NFP report is forecasted to show a healthy labor market, with +193K new jobs and an unemployment rate of +3.9%. Many will focus on wage growth, a print of +2.8% could support another dollar leg up as the market prices out four rate increases this year.

The only thing that seems certain is that China will be expected to retaliate if President Trump follows through on a threat to increase tariffs to +25% from +10% on +$200B in Chinese imports.

Worries over protectionism has this week punished global stocks despite a stronger earnings season, supported lower sovereign yields and pushed G10 currency pairs to new weekly lows outright. The Chinese yuan is on track to complete an eighth week decline – its longest losing streak in 25-years.

Elsewhere, Turkish assets and lira remain under pressure after the U.S imposed sanctions on two government ministers over the detention of an evangelical pastor.

In commodities, oil prices have touched a new two-week low on U.S crude inventories supply concerns, while gold prices remains choppy.

1. Stocks close out the week mixed

In Japan overnight, the Nikkei managed to make a small gain partly due to a sharp rise in Suzuki Motor (T:7269) motors (+8.6% on earnings). The Nikkei average ended +0.06% higher, while the broader Topix fell -0.54% to a three-week closing low on Sino-U.S trade tensions.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed out lower, pressured by the latest exchange of trade threats between the U.S and China, a major market for Australia’s resources exports. At close of trade, the S&P/ASX 200 was -0.10% lower. In S. Korea, the KOSPI was +0.77% higher.

In Hong Kong and China, stocks edged lower, dragged down by fears of slowing growth on the mainland, a vaccine scandal that weighed on healthcare shares and persistent worries over the Sino-U.S. trade war. The Hang Seng index fell -0.1%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) Index lost -0.4%. In China at the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -1%. For the week, the index lost -4.6%, its worst performance in five months, while the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index was down -1.65%. It lost -5.9% for the week.

In Europe, regional bourses trade sideways despite misses in macro-data. Geopolitical concerns continue to be main theme, with concerns on trade and Brexit negotiation. Market focus turns to nonfarm payrolls (NFP).

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

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.3% at 3,479, FTSE +0.4% at 7,609, DAX +0.4% at 12,601, CAC 40 +0.2% at 5,473; IBEX 35 +0.2% at 9,713, FTSE MIB +0.3% at 21,476, SMI -0.1% at 9,149, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%