AUD/USD struggles to extend the week-start gains as the Aussie traders flirt with the 0.6900 threshold amid a risk-off mood during Monday’s Asian session. That said, the Sino-American tension over Taiwan joins recently hawkish bets over the Fed appear to challenge the pair buyers, due to its risk barometer status. However, recently firmer trade data from China appeared to have favored the Aussie pair.
While portraying the mood, the S&P 500 Futures drop 0.33% intraday while tracking Friday’s downbeat performance of Wall Street. The US 10-year Treasury yields also remain pressured around 2.827% after rising 14 basis points (bps) the previous day.
The risk-off mood gained major strength from Friday’s strong US employment report for July. That said, the headline Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) rose to 528K versus 250K expected and 398K upwardly revised prior. Further, the Unemployment Rate also inched lower to 3.5% compared to 3.6% expected and previous readings.
Following the data, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said during the weekend that the Fed is far from done in combating inflation. The policymaker also added, “50 bps increase is definitely in play. We need to keep an open mind.”
Elsewhere, the escalation in the US-China tussles surrounding Taiwan keeps the traders on their toes while also supporting the US dollar’s safe-haven demand. Reuters came out with the news suggesting that China is up for ‘regular’ military drills east of the Taiwan Strait median line. That said, the dragon nation’s Foreign Ministry announced on Friday that they will sanction US House of Representative Speaker Nancy Pelosi over the Taiwan visit. On the other hand, Taiwan's Defense Ministry reported 66 Chinese aircraft conducting activities in the Taiwan Strait as of 5:00 PM local time on Sunday. Further, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken mentioned that China's provocative actions were a significant escalation.
On the other hand, firmer trade numbers from China seem to challenge the AUD/USD bears. It should be observed that China’s trade numbers for June marked upbeat results with the Exports rising the most in the year. That said, the headline Trade Balance rose to $101.26B versus $90B forecasts and $97.94B. Further details suggest that Exports increased by 18% compared to 15% expected and 17.9% prior whereas the Imports eased to 2.3% compared to 3.7% expected and 1.0% prior.
Looking forward, inflation data is the key during this week as the US and China are up for publishing the latest price pressure numbers. The figures become more important after the US NFP-led hawkish bias for the Fed.
AUD/USD seesaws between the 50-DMA and the 100-DMA, respectively around 0.6880 and 0.6960, while bearish MACD signals tease sellers.
The US dollar and yields rallied on Friday, recovering from the sharpest daily drop in more than two weeks, following the Nonfarm Payrolls blockbuster report.
The US jobs report showed a 528,000 gain in payrolls for July, beating estimates for an increase of 250,000, compared with the 398,000 increase in June. On top of that, the Unemployment Rate fell to 3.5% vs. estimates of 3.6%. Meanwhile, the average hourly earnings were up 0.5%, stronger than an upward revised 0.4% increase in June, keeping the adjusted year-over-year rate at 5.2% compared with expectations for a slowdown to 4.9%. Overall, this leaves the Unemployment Rate back to its pre-pandemic low while hourly earnings are surging. Markets are therefore revising their Federal Reserve bets higher with sharper odds of a 75bp Fed hike.
The US dollar index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, rallied to a high of 106.93 after sliding 0.68% on Thursday, the largest fall since July 19. It remains around 2.5% below its mid-July high. The chart below illustrates the prospects of a further move higher from the neckline of the W-formation on the hourly chart:
Meanwhile, the US 10-year treasury yields have rallied from the daily chart's broadening formation's support as markets reprice Federal reserve interest rate expectations following the NFP report:
The curve continues to be more inverse. 2-year government bond yields rose from 3.06% to 3.26%, and 10-year government bond yields rose from 2.68% to 2.82%. This week's US Consumer Price Index could be key in this regard.
The AUD/JPY pair is displaying back and forth moves in a 30-pips range after a vertical upside move from a low of 92.40 on Friday. On a broader note, the cross has moved significantly higher after printing a two-month low of 90.50.
A perpendicular upside move after slipping below the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement (which is placed from May 12 low at 87.30 to June 8 high at 96.85) close to 91.00 has defended the downside bias. The responsive buying action has pushed the cross above the 38.2% Fibo retracement at 93.20, which has now strengthened the antipodean against the yen bulls.
The asset is oscillating between the 50-and 200-period Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) at 93.17 and 93.50 respectively, which indicates a consolidation ahead.
Also, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) (14) is oscillating in the 40.00-60.00 range, which indicates that the cross is waiting for a fresh trigger for a decisive move.
Should the asset oversteps Aug 4 high at 93.81, aussie bulls will get strengthen further and will drive the asset towards 23.6% Fibo retracement at 94.60, followed by July 27 high at 94.70.
Alternatively, the yen bulls could regain strength if the asset drops below 50% Fibo retracement at 92.10. A downside move may further drag the asset towards a 23.6% Fibo retracement close to 91.00. A slippage below 23.6% Fibo retracement will unleash the yen bulls for a downside move towards the psychological support of 90.00.
Silver price (XAG/USD) stays softer around $19.80, extending the previous week’s pullback from the 50-DMA amid Monday’s initial Asian session.
In addition to the failures to cross the 50-DMA, the recent retreat of the RSI (14) and the MACD’s failure to stay firmer also tease sellers.
However, a one-month-old horizontal area surrounding $19.50 appears to challenge the short-term XAG/USD bears.
In a case where the silver price remains weak past $19.50, the previous resistance line from April 18 and the yearly low marked in July, respectively around $18.60 and $18.15, will be important to watch.
Meanwhile, the 50-DMA level surrounding $20.35 guards the precious metal’s recovery moves ahead of the monthly peak near $20.50.
Even so, XAG/USD bulls need sustained trading beyond the low marked during early May, surrounding $20.65-50, for conviction.
Following that, a run-up towards June’s low of $20.90 and the $21.00 threshold should lure the buyers.
Overall, silver prices are likely to witness further downside but the $19.50 appear to restrict the short-term south-run.
Trend: Further weakness expected
WTI crude oil prices remain depressed at around $87.50, retreating towards the six-month low, as markets brace for this week’s key US inflation data. Also exerting downside pressure on the black gold is the US dollar’s strength amid fresh hopes of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) aggression. However, geopolitical tensions surrounding Taiwan and China’s latest trade data appeared to have challenged the oil bears of late.
The US Dollar Index (DXY) marked the first weekly gain in three after Friday’s strong US employment report for July renewed hawkish bias for the Fed. That said, the headline Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) rose to 528K versus 250K expected and 398K upwardly revised prior. Further, the Unemployment Rate also inched lower to 3.5% compared to 3.6% expected and previous readings.
Considering the data, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said during the weekend that the Fed is far from done in combating inflation. The policymaker also added, “50 bps increase is definitely in play. We need to keep an open mind.”
Recently, China’s trade numbers for June marked upbeat results with the Exports rising the most in the year. That said, the headline Trade Balance rose to $101.26B versus $90B forecasts and $97.94B. Further details suggest that Exports increased by 18% compared to 15% expected and 17.9% prior whereas the Imports eased to 2.3% compared to 3.7% expected and 1.0% prior.
Alternatively, the recently escalated US-China tussles over Taiwan and the OPEC+ producers’ lower than the US-backed production increase should have helped the black gold prices. However, fears of recession join the hawkish hopes from the US central bank to exert downside pressure on the energy benchmark.
It’s should be noted that the S&P 500 Futures drop 0.33% intraday while tracking Friday’s downbeat performance of Wall Street. The US 10-year Treasury yields also remain pressured around 2.827% after rising 14 basis points (bps) the previous day.
Moving on, geopolitical headlines and recession could join Fed concerns to direct short-term WTI moves. However, major attention will be given to Friday’s US Consumer Price Index (CPI) for July.
Unless providing a daily closing beyond the 200-DMA, around $94.25 by the press tie, WTI crude oil prices are declining towards the October 2021 peak surrounding $85.00.
Italian politics are a focus for the start of the week in the run-up to the September 25 election and the news that an Italian centrist party has fallen out with the Democrats could be a weight for an already beaten down euro.
Days after agreeing to join forces in a bid to prevent a right-wing landslide in September elections triggered by the fall of Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s government.
The Azione party pulled out because “the pieces just didn’t fit together,” its leader, Carlo Calenda, said during an interview with national broadcaster Rai on Sunday.
“I’m not comfortable with this, there is no courage, beauty, seriousness and love in doing politics, so I communicated to the leaders of the Democratic Party that I do not intend to continue with this alliance,” Calenda said.
Mario Draghi’s broad coalition collapsed in July after the Five Star Party failed to back the government on a key vote and this put Italy’s public finances into scrutiny by financial markets and has resulted in a widening of the risk premium between Italian and German bonds.
Meanwhile, Moody's has affirmed Italy's sovereign rating at Baa3 and cut Italy's outlook to "negative" from "stable". The rating agency said the ''risks to Italy's credit profile have been accumulating more recently because of the economic impact of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and domestic political developments, both of which could have material credit implications"
The USD/CAD pair is gearing up for a decent upside move and surpass of the critical hurdle of 1.2950 will be crucial for the greenback bulls. The asset has shifted into an inventory distribution process after an upside break of the prolonged consolidation in a 1.2767-1.2911 range. The pair is going to add decent gains ahead after a divergence in US/Canada labor market data.
The US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) landed at 528k, significantly higher than the expectations of 250k and the prior release of 372k. Investors were expecting that commentary from US corporate players citing a halt in the recruitment process will result in lower employment generation and will put more pressure on the Federal Reserve (Fed) for not hiking rates dramatically. The Unemployment Rate has trimmed to 3.5% against expectations and the former print of 3.6%.
On the loonie front, the economy has disclosed a continuation of job loss. The economic data landed a -30.6k vs. 43.2k. Also, the jobless rate has remained unchanged at 4.9%. A vulnerable labor data has weakened the Canadian dollar against the greenback.
Going forward, the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) data will be of utmost importance. The annual inflation figure is likely to remain lower at 8.7% against the prior release of 9.1%. Oil prices have remained in a negative trajectory in July, which might be the critical factor for a decent slippage in the price rise index. While the US CPI that doesn’t include volatile food and oil prices may improve to 6.1% from the prior print of 5.9%.
EUR/USD is flat at the start of the week following Friday's sell-off from the 1.0250s that reached a low of 1.0141. The move came from a blockbuster US Nonfarm Payrolls report.
The US employment report showed a 528,000 gain in payrolls for July, beating estimates for an increase of 250,000, compared with the 398,000 increase in June. On top of that, the Unemployment Rate fell to 3.5% vs. estimates of 3.6%. Additionally, average hourly earnings were up 0.5%, stronger than an upward revised 0.4% increase in June, keeping the adjusted year-over-year rate at 5.2% compared with expectations for a slowdown to 4.9%. Overall, this leaves the Unemployment Rate back to its pre-pandemic low while hourly earnings are surging. Markets are therefore revising their Federal Reserve bets higher with sharper odds of a 75bp Fed hike.
''The upside surprise reaffirms that a Fed dovish pivot is premature and that the USD will be hard to beat,'' analysts at TD Securities said. ''While we are wary of price action on a summer Friday, USDJPY should be trading with a 136-handle while EURUSD will continue to languish in the shadow of the Fed and energy crisis.''
Meanwhile, in domestic politics, Mario Draghi’s exit as Italy PM has left an ambitious reform programme unfinished for which analysts at Rabobank argue questions whether the country will be able to unlock access to EUR 800 bln from the EU’s Covid recovery fund.
''Delays in both the reform programme and in access to these funds, at a time with the Eurozone is facing recession, bode poorly for investor confidence in peripheral debt. In turn, this is likely to be a test both for the European Central Bank and the EUR. We see a strong risk that EUR/USD could move as low as 0.95 in the weeks ahead.''
For the week ahead, US and German inflation data will be important with the major focus on the US Consumer Price Index. Core prices likely stayed strong in July, with the series registering a 0.5% MoM gain.
The price on the weekly chart has corrected to a 50% mean reversion of the prior weekly sell-off. Last week's sell-off could be the start of the bearish extension. A break of 1.00965 will be important:
USD/CHF remains sidelined around 0.9625-20, struggling to extend Friday’s gains amid a quiet start to the week, as the pair traders await Swiss Unemployment Rate data for July. It’s worth noting that firmer US employment report for July and the US-China tension appear to have favored the US dollar’s demand before the latest inaction ahead of the key data from Switzerland.
USD/CHF seems to portray cautious mood ahead of Swiss Unemployment Rate for July. Also likely to have challenged the pair bulls is the anxiety ahead of Wednesday’s US Consumer Price Index (CPI) for July.
Also likely to have probed the USD/CHF bulls could be the latest trade numbers from China. That said, China’s trade numbers for June marked upbeat results with the Exports rising the most in the year. That said, the headline Trade Balance rose to $101.26B versus $90B forecasts and $97.94B. Further details suggest that Exports increased by 18% compared to 15% expected and 17.9% prior whereas the Imports eased to 2.3% compared to 3.7% expected and 1.0% prior.
The anxiety surrounding upcoming data increased after a firmer US employment report for July that underpinned hawkish Fed bets and recalled the US dollar bulls, allowing the US Dollar Index (DXY) to snap a two-week downtrend. That said, the headline Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) rose to 528K versus 250K expected and 398K upwardly revised prior. Further, the Unemployment Rate also inched lower to 3.5% compared to 3.6% expected and previous readings.
On a different page, the escalation in the US-China tussles surrounding Taiwan keep the traders on their toes while also supporting the US dollar’s safe-haven demand. Reuters came out with the news suggesting that China is up for ‘regular’ military drills east of the Taiwan Strait median line. That said, the dragon nation’s Foreign Ministry announced on Friday that they will sanction US House of Representative Speaker Nancy Pelosi over the Taiwan visit. On the other hand, Taiwan's Defense Ministry reported 66 Chinese aircraft conducting activities in the Taiwan Strait as of 5 pm local time on Sunday. Further, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken mentioned that China's provocative actions were a significant escalation.
Talking about the Fedspeak, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said during the weekend that The fed is far from done in combating inflation. The policymaker also added, “50 bps increase is definitely in play. We need to keep an open mind.”
Against this backdrop, Wall Street benchmarks closed negative and the US 10-year Treasury yields rallied to 2.83%, up 14 basis points (bps), to renew the US dollar strength.
Looking forward, Swiss Unemployment Rate for July, expected to remain unchanged at 2.2%, will precede Wednesday’s US CPI to direct short-term USD/CHF moves. However, major attention will be given to risk catalysts and the Fed-linked talks for clear directions.
USD/CHF seesaws between the 100-DMA resistance surrounding 0.9635 and a weekly support line near 0.9585 as buyers struggle to retake control.
GBP/USD keeps Friday’s bearish bias as sellers attack 21-DMA support during Monday’s initial Asian session. In doing so, the Cable pair holds onto the previous day’s downside break of the one-month-old previous support line around a fortnight low, near 1.2060 by the press time.
In addition to the trend line breakdown, the recently easing bullish bias of the MACD and the RSI (14) retreat also keep the GBP/USD sellers hopeful.
However, the 21-DMA and the resistance-turned-support from mid-June, respectively near 1.2030 and 1.1995, seem to restrict the quote’s short-term downside.
Also acting as the downside filter is the June month’s low near 1.1935 and the yearly bottom marked in July surrounding 1.1760.
Alternatively, recovery moves may initially aim for the previous support line from July 14, around 1.2190 at the latest.
Following that, the monthly peak and the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the late May to mid-July downturn, close to 1.2295 and 1.2325 in that order, could challenge the GBP/USD buyers.
Even if the quote crosses the 1.2325 hurdle, the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement level near 1.2475 could test the upside momentum.
Overall, GBP/USD is likely to witness further downside but the room towards the south appears limited.
Trend: Limited downside expected
Gold price (XAU/USD) is oscillating in a narrow range of $1,771.70-1,779.76 after a sharp rebound from a downside move below $1,770.00. The precious metal is awaiting the release of the US Inflation data for fresh guidance, which is due on Wednesday.
The gold prices displayed a sheer downside on Friday after the release of the bumper US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) data. As per the market consensus, the US job additions were seen at 250k, however, the economic data released at 528k also outperformed the prior release of 372k. Earlier, investors were trimming their expectations for the continuation of exaggerated policy tightening measures by the Federal Reserve (Fed) as the labor data was expected to turn subdued. Now, the Fed would be able to hike rates with much confidence.
Meanwhile, the US dollar index (DXY) is aiming to recapture the critical resistance of 107.00 after an establishment above 106.50. The US Consumer Price Index (CPI) is seen at 8.7% vs. 9.1% reported earlier. A decent slippage in US inflation will provide some relief to US households, which are facing the headwinds of soaring price pressures.
On a four-hour scale, the gold price is declining towards the lower portion of the Rising Channel, which is placed from July 21 low at $1,681.87. While the upper portion is plotted from July 22 high at $1,739.37.
The precious metal has defended the 200-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at $1,765.80. Also, the bright metal is holding above the 50-EMA at $1,760.00, which signals the strength of the gold prices.
While, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) (14) has shifted into the 40.00-60.00 range, which indicates that the gold bulls are not holding a bullish momentum for a while.
NZD/USD begins the trading week on a firmer footing, despite the latest retreat to 0.6235, as the pair traders await Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) third quarter (Q3) inflation expectations. The quote’s latest strength could also be linked to the weekend data from China. However, fears of the Fed’s aggression and Beijing’s latest military drills surrounding Taiwan appeared to have probed the pair buyers of late.
During the weekend, China’s trade numbers for June marked upbeat results with the Exports rising the most in the year. That said, the headline Trade Balance rose to $101.26B versus $90B forecasts and $97.94B. Further details suggest that Exports increased by 18% compared to 15% expected and 17.9% prior whereas the Imports eased to 2.3% compared to 3.7% expected and 1.0% prior.
On the other hand, Reuters came out with the news suggesting that China is up for ‘regular’ military drills east of the Taiwan Strait median line. That said, the dragon nation’s Foreign Ministry announced on Friday that they will sanction US House of Representative Speaker Nancy Pelosi over the Taiwan visit. On the other hand, Taiwan's Defense Ministry reported 66 Chinese aircraft conducting activities in the Taiwan Strait as of 5 pm local time on Sunday. Further, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken mentioned that China's provocative actions were a significant escalation. Considering China’s role in the global commodity market, the latest Sino-American tussles over Taiwan negatively impact the NZD/USD prices.
Elsewhere, a firmer US employment report for July underpinned hawkish Fed bets and recalled the US dollar bulls, allowing the US Dollar Index (DXY) to snap a two-week downtrend. That said, the headline Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) rose to 528K versus 250K expected and 398K upwardly revised prior. Further, the Unemployment Rate also inched lower to 3.5% compared to 3.6% expected and previous readings.
Considering the data, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said during the weekend that The fed is far from done in combating inflation. The policymaker also added, “50 bps increase is definitely in play. We need to keep an open mind.”
Amid these plays, Wall Street benchmarks closed negative and the US 10-year Treasury yields rallied to 2.83%, up 14 basis points (bps), to renew the US dollar strength.
Moving on, NZD/USD traders should pay attention to the RBNZ Q3 Inflation Expectations, prior 3.29%, for fresh impulse amid the calls of the hawkish Fed bets. The recent mismatch between the consumer and business inflation expectations appears to make the case interesting. Should the data print upbeat numbers, the Kiwi pair may have some reason to consolidate the first weekly loss in three amid a likely quiet day ahead.
A three-month-old horizontal support zone surrounding 0.6210-0.6195 restricts immediate NZD/USD downside. However, downbeat oscillators and sustained trading below the two-month-old falling resistance line, around 0.6320 by the press time, appear to keep sellers hopeful.
Federal Reserve's Mary Daly, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, was interviewed on Face of the Nation and said there are "signs that the economy is cooling, it just is going to take some time for the interest rate adjustments we've made to work their way through."
The following is the transcript:
MARGARET BRENNAN: We turn now to the state of the economy and the president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, Mary Daly.
Good morning to you.
MARY DALY (President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco): Good morning.
MARGARET BRENNAN: The San Francisco Fed said fiscal spending during the entirety of the pandemic, all the congressional funding, contributed 3 percent -- a 3 percent hike in inflation.
Do you expect the congressional bill that's about to pass to add to inflation as well?
MARY DALY: Well, let's remember that, during the time that there was this fiscal relief during the pandemic, there was also monetary policy relief. And those were things necessary to get us through the pandemic.
So that's why that was such an important component. And history will be the judge whether it was too much or too little. But, right now, that's where that was. And my staff have evaluated that.
When I look forward, there are so many things going on in the economy right now, both domestically and globally. And we are struggling with high inflation. But the Fed is committed to bringing that down. And we're looking at not only things that Congress passes, but also what happens across the entire world.
MARGARET BRENNAN: So, do you think this bill will add to inflation? Has inflation peaked? Can you say that?
MARY DALY: You know, I really can't comment on pending legislation.
And it's really hard to tell, because all the details haven't been worked out yet, and -- or the time frame in which those things will take place.
MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes.
MARY DALY: So, right now, I think the most important thing, Margaret, is that inflation is too high, and the labor market is strong. The global economy is struggling with ongoing high inflation. And that's what I'm focused on.
MARGARET BRENNAN: You are a labor economist.
We had this surprisingly strong jobs number on Friday. Why was it so surprising? What was it that economists missed here? What was your takeaway?
MARY DALY: You know, it's super interesting.
You know, it did surprise everyone who tries to figure out exactly what the number will be. And we were -- you know, a number of projections were well off. But, frankly, if you're out in the communities, if you're traveling anywhere, you're just going in your own community, I don't think consumers or workers or businesses were that surprised.
There's help wanted signs all over the place. People can find multiple jobs if they want them. Search times for jobs aren't that long. So I think the labor market is continuing to deliver. It just tells me that people want to work and that people want to hire.
MARGARET BRENNAN: But...
MARY DALY: The universal truth is that inflation's too high.
MARGARET BRENNAN: But does it still -- or does it indicate that recession is not where we are or where we're going?
MARY DALY: If you're out in the economy, you don't feel like you're in a recession. That's the bottom line.
The most important risk out there is inflation.
MARGARET BRENNAN: OK.
MARY DALY: And I think the job market just confirms that.
MARGARET BRENNAN: OK.
We're going to take a break and come right back with you.
Mary Daly, stay with us. We have more questions.
(ANNOUNCEMENTS)
MARGARET BRENNAN: We will be right back a lot more Face the Nation, including more with Mary Daly.
(ANNOUNCEMENTS)
MARGARET BRENNAN: Welcome back to FACE THE NATION.
We continue our conversation now with the head of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, Mary Daly.
In that jobs number on Friday, we also saw that wages rose, but they're not rising as quickly as inflation is.
How concerned are you that that shows inflation is really becoming embedded in the economy in a way that is really going to force your - your colleagues at the Fed to continue to have to hike rates?
MARY DALY: You know, I don't see inflation as embedded in the economy. The kinds of things that we would worry about just not being able to correct easily.
What I see is supply and demand are just unbalanced. About 50 percent, by my own staff's estimates, of the excess inflation we see is related to demand. The other 50 percent is supply.
The Fed is really well-positioned to bring demand down. And we already see the cooling forming in the housing market, in investments. So, I do see signs that the economy's cooling. It just is going to take some time for the interest rate adjustments we've made to work their way through.
And we are far from done yet. That's the promise to the American people. We are far from done. We're committed to bringing inflation down. And we'll continue to work until that job is fully done.
MARGARET BRENNAN: So it would still be appropriate to raise rates in September by half a percent?
MARY DALY: Absolutely. And, you know, we need to be data dependent. It could -- we need to leave our minds open. We have two more inflation reports coming out. Another jobs report. We continue to collect all the information from the contacts we talk to, to see how this is working its way through the economy.
But you mentioned, you know, wage growth a little bit above 5 percent. Inflation, last print, at 9.1 percent. Americans are losing ground every day, so the focus has to be on bringing inflation down.
MARGARET BRENNAN: One of the things the Fed can't control is geopolitical risk. How concerned are you about what is happening in the Taiwan Strait right now?
MARY DALY: Well, there's so much going on globally. And I think that's really something that we need to think about. It's just getting through Covid, making sure the new variants don't derail economic activity. We have central banks across the globe raising interest rates to try to bridle their own inflation. And we have ongoing developments that take place, you know, geopolitically or just more generally among countries. And all of those things, the war in Ukraine, all of those things create headwinds, if you will, for the U.S. economy. And we're going to have to lean against those headwinds for growth while we bridle inflation.
MARGARET BRENNAN: The Fed has its work cut out. And I know we'll be talking again.
Thank you very much, Mary Daly.
MARY DALY: Thank you.
END
The US dollar and yields rallied on Friday, recovering from the sharpest daily drop in more than two weeks, following the Nonfarm Payrolls blockbuster report. The US dollar index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, rallied to a high of 106.93 after sliding 0.68% on Thursday, the largest fall since July 19. It remains around 2.5% below its mid-July high. Meanwhile, the US 10-year treasury yields have rallied from the daily chart's broadening formation's support as markets reprice Federal reserve interest rate expectations following the NFP report:
The AUD/USD pair is likely to remain sideways around 0.6900 as investors are betting more on the extremely hawkish stance of the Federal Reserve (Fed) going forward. The asset bounced back after printing a fresh weekly low on Friday at 0.6869 as the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported an outperformance labor market data.
The US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) landed at 528k, significantly higher than the expectations of 250k and the prior release of 372k. Investors were expecting that commentary from US corporate players citing a halt in the recruitment process after the US Fed hiked interest rates to squeeze liquidity from the market will make the US economy crippled in employment generation.
The US economy is seeing soaring price pressures and a solid labor market has always been a major supporting factor in announcing policy tightening measures. Now, the continuous upbeat performance from the US labor market will support Fed chair Jerome Powell to announce rate hikes unhesitatingly. Also, the Unemployment Rate has trimmed to 3.5% against expectations and the former print of 3.6%.
On the Australian front, a likely reversion to 25 basis points (bps) Official Rate Hike (OCR) by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) may restrict the aussie bulls. According to analysts at Wells Fargo, the RBA will likely raise again its OCR in September but with a 25 bps rate hike. They see the rate peak at 3.10% by early next year. Earlier, the RBA announced three consecutive OCR hikes by 50 bps.
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Izvršenje trgovinskih operacija sa finansijskim instrumentima upotrebom marginalne trgovine pruža velike mogućnosti i omogućava investitorima ostvarivanje visokih prihoda. Međutim, takav vid trgovine povezan je sa potencijalno visokim nivoom rizika od gubitka sredstava. Проведение торговых операций на финанcовых рынках c маржинальными финанcовыми инcтрументами открывает широкие возможноcти, и позволяет инвеcторам, готовым пойти на риcк, получать выcокую прибыль, но при этом неcет в cебе потенциально выcокий уровень риcка получения убытков. Iz tog razloga je pre započinjanja trgovine potrebno odlučiti o izboru odgovarajuće investicione strategije, uzimajući u obzir raspoložive resurse.
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