Strong U.S. Jobs Data Good News For Yen: Feb, 2018

 | Feb 05, 2018 02:50AM ET

Market sold riskier assets like US stocks after solid NFP - sell USD/JPY?

US job growth surged in January and wages increased further, recording their largest annual gain in almost 9 years. This bolstered expectations that inflation would push higher this year as the labor market hits full employment. US stocks and bonds slid after the data was announced while the dollar steadied on.

Nonfarm payrolls jumped by 200,000 jobs last month after rising 160,000 in December, according to the data showed last Friday. Unemployment rate was unchanged at a 17-year low of 4.1%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% in January to $26.74 which boosted the year-on-year increase in average hourly earnings to 2.9%. This was the largest rise since June 2009 which was higher than 2.7% in December. However, weather effect must be considered as workers put in fewer hours last month likely due to the bitterly cold weather. The average weekly hours fell to 34.3 hours, the shortest in four months.

In general, the robust employment report underscored the strong momentum in the economy, raising the possibility that the Federal Reserve could be a bit more aggressive in raising interest rates this year, especially the likelihood that more hawks could join the FOMC Committee as voters. The Fed had forecast three rate increases this year after raising it three times in 2017.

Fed officials on Wednesday expressed optimism that inflation would rise towards the central bank’s target this year. Policymakers described the labour market as “having continued to strengthen” and economic activity as rising at a “solid rate.” So far future markets have priced in a rate hike in March. The prices for US Treasuries fell, with the yield on the benchmark United States 10-Year hitting a four-year high as investors are worried about a high inflation. The dollar traded steadier versus most of the G-10 currencies after the jobs data and US stocks plunged amid higher longer tenors’ Treasurers’ yield.

There were worries that the Trump administration’s $1.5 Trillion tax cut package passed by the Republican-controlled US Congress in December, the biggest overhaul of the tax code in 30 years, could cause the economy, which is already operating near full capacity, to enter an overheating scenario. As the labor market is strong, and the tax cuts have yet to kick in, the current market could underestimate the pace of Fed’s normalization. Many say that Powell’s policy will be an extension of Yellen’s, but it seems difficult to reconcile as they took the chair in different economic cycles. When Yellen took the chair, the global economy was still pretty weak. Thus, Yellen’s policy strategy is gradually removing the crisis management to a more neutral policy. But given the current US economy and the fact that its capital market could be close to “overheating,” Powell may need to stay vigilantly ahead of the curves to analyse the upcoming inflation and growth trend, especially on the impact of the upcoming $1.5 Trillion tax reform package. From the current backdrop, we think that a drastic move is unlikely given the flattening US curves. Without a solid inflation growth, more aggressive hiking will further flatten the US curves, and this is not a good sign for the economy. However, the situation could change next year if the tax reform has more visible impact to inflation and growth.

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The market is also also worried that any improper unwinding of Fed mega-sized bond purchases, with QE being one of the key contributors to the low volatility in the financial market, may bring some unwelcome shock to the financial market.


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