USD/JPY: Stay Short For 111.60

 | May 17, 2017 06:31AM ET

EUR/USD: Investors shrugged off strong manufacturing data from the U.S.
Macroeconomic overview: U.S. manufacturing production recorded its biggest increase in more than three years in April, bolstering the view that economic growth picked up early in the second quarter despite a surprise decline in homebuilding.

The broad strength in factory output reported by the Federal Reserve on Tuesday added to labor market data in suggesting the growth slowdown in the first quarter was temporary. That may allow the U.S. central bank to raise interest rates next month.

Manufacturing production jumped 1.0% last month, the biggest increase since February 2014, after falling 0.4% in March, the Fed said. The surge, which outstripped economists' expectations for a 0.3% gain, reflected a 5.0% rebound in the production of motor vehicles and parts. There were also healthy increases in the output of machinery, fabricated metal products, appliances and furniture, business equipment and chemical products.

Manufacturing accounts for about 12% of the U.S. economy. Its recovery following a prolonged slump is being driven by a revival of the energy sector, which is spurring demand for machinery and other equipment.

In a separate report on Tuesday, the Commerce Department said housing starts dropped 2.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.17 million units, the lowest level in five months, hurt by persistent weakness in the construction of multi-family housing units.

While the weakness in residential construction implies a slowdown in homebuilding investment, the Atlanta Fed is forecasting gross domestic product increasing at a 4.1% annualized rate in the second quarter. The economy grew at a pedestrian 0.7% pace in the first three months of 2017.

Interest rate futures showed the market was still pricing in a nearly three in four chance that the Fed will implement a June hike, but that was down from over 80% a week ago. Investors were pricing in slightly below an even chance for two or more rate increases in 2017, despite central bankers' stated view that they will hike two more times this year.

Data on Tuesday showed the Eurozone economy expanded 0.5% on quarter in the first three months of 2017, the same as in the previous period and in line with the preliminary estimate. Year-on-year, the Eurozone economy expanded 1.7%, easing from a 1.8% growth in the previous period and in line with earlier estimates.

Today’s data showed that Eurozone inflation was 1.9% yoy in April 2017, up from 1.5% in March. Core inflation amounted to 1.2% yoy. The data were in line with preliminary readings.
European Central Bank Executive Board member Benoit Coeure said the bank is not concerned by a recent rise in euro zone bond yields as they reflect improved growth prospects, receding fears of deflation and increased risks from outside the bloc.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

The June meeting is going to be significant as investors are looking for changes in forward guidance. Possible changes in the forward guidance likely in June include dropping the "or lower" reference to rates and adjusting the "well past" language to just "past" reference to when rate hikes will happen after net asset purchases end. It will not be until September that the ECB reveals its tapering plans for 2018 but the June meeting will provide insight into possible future communication changes.

Technical analysis: The 61.8% fibo of May 2016 to January 2017 drop is close (1.1127) and this is a key resistance now. The pair is above the weekly cloud and the top of the cloud at 1.1067 has flipped to support.