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U.S. Dollar Shrugs Off ISM & ADP In Fear Of Ugly Jobless Claims

Published 04/01/2020, 10:28 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 PM
If the first day of April is a taste of what’s to come, it will be a very rocky second quarter. After falling more than 24% between January and March, the Dow Jones Industrial Average opened down more than 700 points. Currencies have been taking their lead from equities, so it was no surprise to see euro, the CAD/USD, AUD/USD and NZD/USD dollars fall another 1% against the greenback. The strongest currencies continue to be the U.S. dollar and Japanese Yen – which absorbed all of the gains in the first quarter.
 
However, the supremacy of the greenback will come into question in the weeks ahead. Investors have been buying dollars on the premise that the rest of the world will be stuck in recessionary conditions longer than the U.S. because there can’t be a global recovery without a U.S. recovery. While that may be true, we’ve seen data turn south for many countries weeks ago. In the U.S., we’re only beginning to see the COVID-19 impact on national data and in some cases, the numbers are still dated. Take this morning’s ADP report for example, economists were looking for private payrolls to fall by 150,000 but to everyone’s surprise, only 27,000 jobs were shed. The only explanation is that the data ran to March 12 and states like New York did not close schools until Monday, March 16, and issue a stay at home order until March 20. It may feel like eternity for many families, but economic activity in the U.S. ground to a halt no more than two weeks ago. The manufacturing ISM number was also better than expected, falling to only 49.1 from 50.1 versus a forecast of 44.5. FX traders understand this delay, which explains why USD/JPY shrugged off this good number.  
 
As we look ahead to Friday’s non-farm payrolls report, the data also runs to March 12, which explains why economists only see a 100,000 drop. Could it be worse? Yes. And if it is, strong investors will take it with a grain of salt like they did ADP (NASDAQ:ADP) this morning. In many ways tomorrow’s jobless claims report will be more telling and more market-moving. The current forecast is 3.5 million, which sounds about right but the underlying numbers are probably much worse. According to the New York State Labor Department, between March 23 and March 28, the agency received more than 8.2 million calls compared with just 50,000 in a typical week. Of course, many of those calls are redundant, but with just one state receiving that many requests, we can only imagine how many claims are being requested and filed nationally. Thursday could be a bruising day for the dollar.
 
Another reason why investors sold stocks and USD/JPY was because of the grim news out of the White House. Social distancing rules will be extended to April 30, which delays the return to normal business activity. President Donald Trump also warned of 100,000 to 240,000 deaths as the White House denied that a Phase 4 stimulus package is in the works. Instead, the government wants to focus on executing the $2-trillion plan passed last week.
 
With the exception of the Japanese Yen, all of the major currencies are lower against the greenback. We’ve been looking for EUR/USD to decline for some time and it finally dropped below 1.10. Despite an unexpectedly strong increase in German retail sales, Eurozone PMIs were revised lower. UK PMI was also revised lower.  Although manufacturing activity increased in March, according to Australia’s PMI report, the RBA minutes were very dovish. According to the central bank, a very material contraction is expected in Australia with significant job losses over the months ahead. The Australian dollar sold off aggressively in response but know for now, RBA members had “no appetite for negative interest rates.”
 
We continue to look for more risk aversion the rest of the week, which will be bearish for USD/JPY. With the focus on U.S. data this week, a disappointing jobless claims or non-farm payrolls report could also send the dollar reeling against other currencies.

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