| Strong payrolls overshadowed by credit fears |
|
05:27 2007/11/05 |
New Zealand dollarNZD recovers despite soft equities. Carry trade currencies managed to finish last week on a positive note despite every major stock market losing ground by the NZ close on Friday. The NZ dollar bounced off a two-week low at 0.7572 early Friday morning, bucking the recent trend of tracking broad stock market moves. The NZD bounce was more of a slow grind higher, led by the AUD with notable demand out of Asia. The high traded at 0.7665 during the NY trading session despite a very strong Non Farm Payrolls number in the US. We begin the week at 0.7640. Australian dollarAUD rallies off two-week low. The AUD benefited from the renewed demand for carry currencies on Friday and rallied steadily from 0.9110 to 0.9250. Although resistance was met at 0.9190 and profit taking instigated a minor selloff, it was short lived and provided better levels to buy USD/AUD before a rally to the highs ensued. Gold rallied to another all time high at 807, assisting the AUD in its recovery and pushing NZD/AUD down to 0.8280, a 27-month low. The AUD opens at 0.9215 and 0.8295 against the USD and NZD respectively. Major currenciesStrong payrolls overshadowed by credit fears. Further credit fears hit the market overnight and as a result not even the strongest non-farm payrolls report in five months could prevent the USD slumping to record lows against the euro and a basket of other major currencies. Payrolls gained by 166k in October compared to forecasts of 88k but any gains for the USD were shortlived thanks to a 1.5% drop in financial stocks on Friday. Most notably the euro hit a fresh all time high of 1.4526 against the USD while the Sterling was up 0.6% on the day to close around a new 26-year high of 2.0870. Economic data and events US payrolls jump 166k in Oct. Payrolls posted its largest (and first >100) monthly gain in five months in October. But the headline result was pretty much the best part of the release. Revisions, albeit modest, were to the downside (??“10k to Aug-Sep). The separate household survey jobs measure was down 250k, its third loss in four months for a three month average of ??“34k in Aug to Oct, way down from 107k in May to July. The jobless rate climbed by nearly a third of a point to just over 4.70% for the first time since July last year although rounding kept the published rate steady at 4.7%. September hourly earnings growth was revised down by a couple of cents and the October gain was the slowest since April at just 0.2%. That, coupled with the third consecutive month of just modest 0.1% growth in hours worked, means that household income growth will have posted a below trend gain in October. |
| © Copyright 1998-2005 MaBiCo.com - forex news guide, business, financial news |