Advertising
Advertising
twitter
youtube
facebook
instagram
linkedin
Advertising

Mixed Job Data Leaves CAD and USD Awaiting Clarity

Mixed Job Data Leaves CAD and USD Awaiting Clarity
Aa
Share
facebook
twitter
linkedin

Table of contents

  1. Canada’s economy sheds jobs
    1. US nonfarm payrolls slips below 200K
      • Canada added a negligible 1700 jobs in July
      • US nonfarm payrolls almost unchanged at 187,000

      The Canadian dollar is showing limited movement on Friday. In the North American session, USD/CAD is trading at 1.3360, up 0.06%. Canadian and US job numbers were soft today, but the Canadian dollar’s reaction has been muted.

      Canada’s economy sheds jobs

      After a stellar job report in June, the July numbers were dreadful. Canada’s economy shed 6,400 jobs in July, compared to a 59, 900 gain in June. Full time employment added a negligible 1,700 jobs, following a massive 109,600 in June. The unemployment rate ticked up to 5.5%, up from 5.4%.

      Perhaps the most interesting data was wage growth, which jumped 5% y/y in June, climbing from 3.9% in May. The rise is indicative of a tight labour market and will complicate the Bank of Canada’s fight to bring inflation down to the 2% target.

      US nonfarm payrolls slips below 200K

      It was deja vous all over again, as nonfarm payrolls failed to follow the ADP employment report with a massive gain. In June, a huge ADP reading fuelled speculation that nonfarm payrolls would also surge, and the same happened this week. Both times, nonfarm payrolls headed lower, a reminder that ADP is not a reliable precursor to the nonfarm payrolls report.

       

      Advertising

      July nonfarm payrolls dipped to 187,000, very close to June reading of 185,000 (downwardly revised from 209,000). This marks the lowest level since December 2020. The unemployment rate ticked lower to 3.5%, down from 3.6%. Wage growth stayed steady at 4.4%, above the consensus estimate of 4.2%.

      What’s interesting and perhaps frustrating for the Fed, is that the jobs report is sending contradictory signals about the strength of the labour market. Job growth is falling, but the unemployment rate has dropped and wage growth remains strong. With different metrics in the jobs report telling a different story, it will be difficult for the Fed to rely on this employment report as it determines its path for future rate decisions.

      .

      USD/CAD Technical

      • There is resistance at 1.3324 and 1.3394
      • 1.3223 and 1.3182 are providing support

       

       

      Advertising

      mixed job data leaves cad and usd awaiting clarity grafika numer 1mixed job data leaves cad and usd awaiting clarity grafika numer 1


      Kenny Fisher

      Kenny Fisher

      A highly experienced financial market analyst with a focus on fundamental analysis, Kenneth Fisher’s daily commentary covers a broad range of markets including forex, equities and commodities. His work has been published in several major online financial publications including Investing.com, Seeking Alpha and FXStreet. Based in Israel, Kenny has been a MarketPulse contributor since 2012.


      Advertising
      Advertising