What to watch this week

The 85k drop in US non-farm payrolls in December was obviously disappointing given hopes/expectations/rumours of a positive reading over the month.  There was a small silver lining however, as November payrolls were revised to show a positive reading of +4k, the first monthly gain in jobs since December 2007.  Overall, the US labour market is still gradually improving as the trend in jobless claims and other indicators show. 

The fact that the market took the drop in US payrolls in its stride highlights the fact that recovery is becoming more entrenched despite the occasional set back.  More significantly weaker US jobs disappointment has been countered by strong Chinese trade data, which showed both strong imports and exports growth in December.  Whilst the data, especially the strength in exports, will support calls for a stronger CNY, it also highlights China’s growing influence on world trade and the important role that the country is providing for global economic recovery.

Market resilience in the wake of the drop in US payrolls and positive reaction to Chinese trade data will maintain a “risk on” tone to markets this week.  In particular, the USD is set to start the week on the back foot and despite data last week showing that Eurozone unemployment reached an 11-year high of 10% and growing evidence that the Eurozone economy is falling behind the pace of recovery seen elsewhere, EUR/USD held above technical support (200 day moving average) around 1.4257, and is setting its sights on the 16 December 2009 high of 1.4591 helped by renewed Asian sovereign interest.  

The main event in the Eurozone is the ECB meeting on Thursday no surprises are expected, with the Bank set to keep policy unchanged whilst maintaining current liquidity settings.  The bigger concern for European markets is ongoing fiscal woes in the region, with press reports warning of a ratings downgrade for Portugal and still plenty of attention on Greece and its attempts at deficit reduction.  Fiscal concerns are not going to go away quickly and will clearly act as a restraint on market sentiment for European assets. 

In a holiday shortened week in the US as markets close early on Friday ahead of the 3-day MLK holiday, there are a number of data this week that will shed further light on the shape of US recovery. The main event is the December advance retail sales report on Thursday, which is expected to record a reasonable gain, helped by firm autos sales. 

Preceding this, tomorrow there is expected to be a renewed widening in the US trade deficit in November whilst on Wednesday the Fed’s Beige Book as well as various Fed speakers this week including Bullard, Lockhart, Fisher, Plosser, Evans and Lacker, will give important clues ahead of the January 27 Fed FOMC meeting.  Bullard sounded dovish in his comments in Shanghai, as he highlighted that US interest rates will remain low for some time. 

At the end of the week there will be a heavy slate of releases including December CPI, industrial production, capacity utilization, January Empire manufacturing and Michigan confidence. The outlook for these data is generally positive, with gains expected in both manufacturing and consumer confidence, whilst hard data in the form of industrial production is likely to record a healthy increase and CPI is set to reveal another benign reading.

All eyes on US payrolls

Happy New Year.  Markets are likely to struggle for direction ahead of the key US December non-farm payrolls data though the end of the year ended on a softer note for equity markets in the US, whilst Asian stocks were somewhat firmer.  The USD has taken a firmer tone at the start of this week but is likely to face renewed pressure into the new-year.  The fact that USD/Asian FX has failed to build any momentum on the upside also highlights risks to the USD from current levels. 

Ahead of payrolls look for EUR/USD technical support around 1.4177, with strong resistance around 1.4459 whilst USD/JPY will find support at 91.00 and resistance around 94.08.   I favour a firmer bias for the USD at the beginning of the week but this may not last too long and would look to take profits on long USD / short risk currency positions into next week. 

2010 is set to be a year of two halves for currency markets and whilst the USD is to eventually recover, the rally seen at the end of last year is likely to prove unsustainable, especially now that a lot of short USD positions have been covered.   If anything the pull back in various risk currencies provide better levels to take long positions, especially in the AUD and NZD as well as many Asian currencies where renewed appreciation in the months ahead is likely.  I particularly like the IDR and KRW, two of last year’s winners. 

The US jobs report will provide some evidence of a normalisation in economic conditions, with December likely to have marked the best month in two years for payrolls (Bloomberg consensus forecasts a 1k drop in payrolls). Although hiring is unlikely to pick up quickly and wage pressures are set to remain subdued, the data will mark an encouraging shift in job market conditions following the loss of 7.2 million jobs since the US recession began.  The unemployment rate is likely to remain stubbornly high, however.

Ahead of the jobs data markets will be able to garner some clues to the data from the jobs component in today’s release of the December ISM data.  The ISM is likely to remain in expansion territory though is unlikely to register much of a gain from last month’s 53.6 reading.   The eurozone and UK also release their manufacturing PMIs today and although both will remain above the 50 boom/bust mark, neither are set to register much improvement from November’s reading. 

There will also be some attention on central bank thinking this week, with the release of the December 16 meeting FOMC minutes as well as the BoE rate decision to digest.  The minutes will likely acknowledge some signs of improvement in the economy but there will be no indication that the Fed is shifting its “extended period” thinking even if the Fed wants to reassure markets that it has an exit strategy in place.   The BoE meeting will be a non-event for markets, with more interest on the outcome of the February meeting.