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USD: All eyes on ISM after job openings drop
The rapid repricing in Federal Reserve rate expectations in the second half of March had very little to do with data but was driven by fears of a deeper slowdown in the US economy because of the financial turmoil. In the run-in to yesterday’s US JOLTS data, markets had refined their views on the Fed’s policy path, thanks to the abatement in banking concerns and some hawkish comments by Fed officials, which had ultimately allowed some dovish bets to be gradually scaled back.
The reaction to the 630k drop in US job openings in February (much more than expected) saw a sudden resurgence of those easing bets: markets are currently pricing in around 80bp of cuts by year-end, compared to around 60bp before the JOLTS data. The implied probability of a May rate hike dropped from 65% to 47% after the release. We think this is a testament to how Fed expectations remain highly volatile – in our view, due to the Fed’s unclear communication. This is especially true considering that despite the large drop in job openings, there are still 1.67 jobs available for each unemployed person in the US: this ratio was 1.2 before the pandemic, when the US labour market was in a strong position.
In FX, the dollar took another hit, and its outlook for the rest of the week still looks quite binary. Markets are clearly attaching more recessionary risks to the dollar, but – we want to reiterate this point – it appears that the Fed has not provided any solid anchor to rate expectations so more subdued readings in key releases can definitely bring more downward pressure to the dollar. On the contrary, above-consensus readings could prompt a rapid rebound in the very volatile Fed funds pricing and trigger a dollar correction.
Today, the ISM services index will be the big market mover, and the consensus is looking for a decline from 55.1 to 54.4. Back in December, a one-off drop below 50 sparked recessionary panic and crippled the dollar. Now, the combination with yesterday’s decline in job openings could mean that even prints in the 52-53 area could have a similar effect, as markets see more than one high-frequency piece of data moving in the direction of economic slowdown. With that in mind, we think the balance of risks is skewed to the downside for the dollar today. ADP jobs numbers will also be examined quite closely. Despite not being statistically a very good predictor of official payrolls, they will probably be watched more closely today after yesterday’s JOLTS data put the focus on jobs.
Francesco Pesole
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