USD
The US dollar returned some of its latest trading gains at the start of the week as forex traders booked profits off key levels.
USDJPY retreated below the 121.00 handle while GBPUSD recovered above 1.5600. The US labor market conditions index came in at 2.9, down from the previous 3.9 reading, which was already downgraded from 4.0. This indicates that other labor components might not have seen such strong improvements as the NFP report indicated. For today, only the JOLTS job openings report and wholesale inventories are up for release.
EUR
The euro was able to make a sigh of relief against the dollar yesterday, with a bit of strength in euro zone data. The Sentix investor confidence reading improved from -11.9 to -2.5, outpacing the consensus at -9.9 and indicating that pessimism is no longer as bad as before. German and French trade balance are up for release today and these might not have such a huge impact on euro movement.
GBP
The pound was able to recover in recent trading, despite the lack of data from the UK economy. For today, the manufacturing production report is up for release and it might show a bleak 0.2% gain, lower than the previous 0.4% increase. Weaker than expected data could lead to a return of pound weakness while strong figures could lead to more gains.
CHF
The franc took advantage of dollar weakness while consolidating to the euro as usual. Data from Switzerland was mostly weaker than expected, as the CPI stayed flat while retail sales marked a smaller than expected 0.3% uptick. This was far below the estimated 0.9% annualized gain. Swiss unemployment rate is up for release today and it might print no change at 3.2%.
JPY
The yen recovered against most of its forex counterparts, thanks to profit-taking at key levels. The final GDP reading revealed that the economy contracted worse than expected at a 0.5% decline in growth versus the initially reported 0.1% drop. Preliminary machine tool orders data is due today but this might not push yen pairs around so much, with market sentiment likely to play a key role in price action.
Commodity Currencies (AUD, NZD, CAD)
The comdolls were unable to take advantage of dollar weakness, as the Aussie, Kiwi, and Loonie continued to edge lower to the Greenback. Canadian housing starts and building permits data were both weaker than expected, as the former logged in a 196K increase versus the projected 201K gain while the latter indicated a 0.7% uptick versus the projected 2.1% jump. In Australia, NAB business confidence fell from 5 to 1, reflecting a downturn in optimism. No other reports are due from the comdoll economies today.
By Kate Curtis from Trader’s Way