USD
The US dollar failed to draw support from upbeat data in recent trading. US ISM manufacturing PMI posted a stronger than expected expansion in the industry, as the index surged from 53.7 to 54.9, outpacing the consensus at 54.3.
Personal spending and income also showed stronger than expected results, while the core CPI price index showed a 0.2% uptick. Initial jobless claims, on the other hand, came up short of expectations. For today, the non-farm payrolls release might be the biggest mover in dollar price action and the economy is expected to show a 216K gain in employment.
EUR
The euro remained steady to the dollar in recent trading, unable to sustain its rally past the 1.3875 mark. Euro zone banks were on a Labor Day holiday, which explains why the shared currency was unable to draw additional support. Spanish and Italian manufacturing PMI are due today, along with the euro zone jobless rate. Stronger figures could keep the currency supported throughout the day but EUR/USD’s longer-term direction could depend on the NFP result.
GBP
The pound continued to edge higher against most of its counterparts, reaching a new 4.5-year high to the dollar. UK manufacturing PMI was much stronger than expected at 57.3, up from an upwardly revised 55.4. This indicates a rebound in the industry, which could be enough to result to a higher than expected Q2 2014 GDP reading later on and push the BOE to tighten. UK construction PMI is up for release today and another strong result could lead to more pound gains.
CHF
The franc consolidated for the most part of yesterday’s trading since Swiss banks were on a Labor Day holiday. There were no reports released from Switzerland then as USD/CHF movement hinged on US data. Swiss SVME PMI is due today and a rebound to 55.1 from 54.4 is expected, which might provide support for the franc.
JPY
The yen lost ground to major counterparts in recent trading as risk appetite picked up. The Nikkei logged in a 1.27% gain for the day as a news report revealed that the government is coming up with a timeframe for corporate tax cuts. This could compensate for the potential slack that could be caused by the sales tax hike. Data from Japan was stronger than expected, with household spending rising by 7.2% and unemployment holding steady at 3.6%.
Commodity Currencies (AUD, NZD, CAD)
The comdolls showed signs of weakness in recent trading as gains in commodity price levels appeared to be subdued. Earlier today, Australia printed a stronger than expected PPI increase for the quarter while New Zealand showed a 4.0% decline in ANZ commodity prices. No other reports are due from the comdoll economies today.
By Kate Curtis from Trader’s Way