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FX Daily: Dollar Resilient Post-JOLTS, Euro Faces Headwinds

FX Daily: Dollar Resilient Post-JOLTS, Euro Faces Headwinds
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  1. FX Daily: Hard to buck the euro downtrend
    1. USD: Showing resilience

      FX Daily: Hard to buck the euro downtrend

      The dollar has shown resilience after disappointing JOLTS job openings data yesterday, leaving EUR/USD under pressure as the euro’s idiosyncratic negatives fuel bearish momentum. Today, the Bank of Canada may deliver a hawkish hold despite worsening growth, giving some help to the Canadian dollar.

       

      USD: Showing resilience

      The larger-than-expected drop in October’s JOLTS job openings has offered new reasons to speculate on more rate cuts from the Federal Reserve next year, but the stronger ISM services figures in November have worked as an offsetting factor in terms of FX impact. AUD and NZD are rallying this morning, helped by stronger fixing for the yuan from the People's Bank of China (PBoC) after yesterday’s downgrade of China’s outlook by Moody’s. However, the dollar has remained rather supported across the board even after the disappointing JOLTS figures, a signal that markets are taking a less aggressive stance in FX following non-conclusive evidence of deterioration in the US outlook.  

      Speaking of non-conclusive evidence, it’s worth noting that the ADP payrolls being released today have no predictive power for actual payrolls. Still, markets have often moved on out-of-consensus ADP numbers. Today, expectations are 130k. MBA mortgage applications, final third-quarter labour cost data, and October trade balance figures are also on the calendar today but should not move the market.

      We suspect markets are holding a more cautious stance as we head into the key US payroll figures on Friday and the Fed meeting next week, where there is a good probability the FOMC will deliver a protest against rate cut bets – especially if data fails to turn lower. When adding the soft idiosyncratic momentum faced by the euro, we remain modestly bullish on the dollar into the FOMC.


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