Currency Updates:
U.S. Dollar Trading (USD) investors enjoyed gains right after the release of the September Unemployment Rate which dropped to 7.8% vs. 8.1% previously. Most of these gains were reversed later in the day as research notes tempered the strong number. Analysts believe the number is a blip and that next month the rate will move back towards 8.0%. The actually nonfarm Payrolls change was at 114k vs. 113k previously with large revision. Looking ahead, Holiday in US for Columbus Day.
The Euro (EUR) the EUR/USD was strong hitting day highs at 1.3070 after finding support sub 1.3000 on multiple occasions. EUR/JPY reacted sharply higher with the US jobs and we are well supported ahead of a big week from the Eurozone. Spain and Greece are still in the headlines with some concerns that Spain is in no rush to ask for a bailout.
The Japanese Yen (JPY) the USD/JPY was already on the front foot going into the NFP numbers and was unable to break past the Y79 resistance as we closed well supported near Y77.70. The outlook is for more Yen weakness as stocks and the Euro continue to recover. The BOJ held at 0.1% disappointing some of the Yen Sellers.
The Sterling (GBP) the GBP/USD ended lower on the day after failing to hold onto gains and the USD pushed back into the weekend. The positive risk appetite is letting the GBP/USD remain above 1.6000 but we are in no hurry to push to higher levels with sellers in control above 1.6200. Looking ahead, Eurogroup Meeting. Also August German Industrial Production forecast at -0.7% vs. 1.3% previously
Australian Dollar (AUD) the AUD/USD is struggling to keep up with the Euro and we had another round of selling on Friday. The market hit highs at 1.0270 and after a few failed attempts reversed direction. The sellers took the pair all the way down to fresh lows under 1.0160. The bears are being fueled by increasing focus on the slowdown in China and RBA cutting rates and being more vocal on the AUD exchange rate. The bulls are supported by Australia’s AAA rating and higher yield.
Oil & Gold (XAU) Gold fell sharply from the $1800 level after the better than expected US jobs dampened demand for the precious metal. Oil couldn’t hold on to the $90 level and we fell back with US stocks late on Friday night. The outlook for Oil is mixed with Middle Eastern tensions being countered by slowing global demand.