Markets Consolidate As Traders Prepare For Non-Farm Payrolls

 | Sep 07, 2018 11:04

Market Overview

Markets have entered into a brief period of calm, or could it be that traders are just in limbo as the world awaits the next move from Donald Trump over the trade dispute with China. A formal escalation in the tariffs on China could be announced at any moment after the consultation period for tariffs on a further $200bn of imports from China passed on Thursday, so a tweeted decision could come any time now.

Add in the fact that it is Non-farm Payrolls today and it appears as though traders are unwilling to take much of a view on equities or forex majors this morning. However, reports overnight that Donald Trump could be set to turn his attention on trade with Japan as his next move runs the risk of impacting sentiment negatively once more. This is driving renewed pressure on the Aussie and Kiwi dollars this morning, whilst there is a slight safe haven bias again, with support for the yen and gold whilst US yields are lower.

As the session develops, focus will be increasingly on payrolls, with the ADP report yesterday hinting that there is an increasing tightening of the labour market in the US, making it harder to fill the jobs. Will this be reflected in today’s payrolls report?

Wall Street closed mixed last night with further selling pressure on tech stocks dragging the S&P 500 lower by -0.4% at 2878 whilst futures are ticking a touch lower today. Asian markets have been mixed to lower overnight (Nikkei -0.8% as the yen has strengthened again) whilst European markets are also mixed today.

In forex, there is little direction across the G4 majors (if anything a mild dollar negative bias) but the underperformance of the Aussie continues.

In commodities the slight risk aversion is helping gold find further support, with oil initially steady after further downside yesterday continued the recent correction.

Non-farm Payrolls will dominate the thoughts of traders looking at the economic calendar today. The US Employment Situation for August is revealed at 13:30 BST and is expected to show that the US economy added 191,000 jobs for the headline Non-farm Payrolls last month. This comes after a surprisingly low 157,000 last month which is around 50,000 below the average number of jobs created on a monthly basis throughout 2018 (which is 208,000). Watch out therefore for potential upward revisions to last month.

The key focus in the payrolls report is increasingly how wages move, with the Average Hourly Earnings expected to grow by +0.2% on the month to leave the year on year growth at +2.7% (as it was last month). Unemployment is expected to continue to fall towards the Fed’s projection in the mid 3s with a drop to 3.8% from 3.9% last month. Also of interest will be the U6 Underemployment which fell to multi-year lows of 7.5% last month.

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If the labour force participation rate also stays at or just above last month’s 62.9% (in conjunction with positive wages and falling unemployment) this would help to play into the assessment of a strong payrolls report.

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

It is interesting to see that the selling pressure on the Kiwi is starting to look tired against the euro and the dollar. On Euro/Kiwi the market has burst higher above the key long term resistance at 1.7480 in recent weeks, but is looking stretched with momentum indicators beginning to show signs of exhaustion. With negative candles starting to appear in recent sessions, there are signs of the market questioning the recent move, especially as the momentum is looking stretched. With the RSI above 70, watch for corrective momentum signals starting to appear, as the Stochastics have also crossed lower. Although no confirmation of a Stochastics sell signal yet, this could be seen with another bear candle today. The support of a recent sharp two week uptrend has been tested today but the early move higher means that it remains intact, however this is the time where potential reversals could begin to form. Initial support is now yesterday’s low at 1.7605 and a closing breakdown would be a corrective signal for some near term profit taking. On a medium term basis, a pullback to the breakout at 1.7480 would probably be a healthy unwind, with the support of a near three month uptrend at 1.7390 today. The resistance is at Wednesday’s high of 1.7735. The hourly chart shows a move below 1.7600 which is initial pivot support would be a corrective move and open 1.7500 initially.