5 Things The Market Is Talking About; What To Expect From NFP

 | Oct 05, 2018 11:54

Friday October 5: Five things the market is talking about

The granddaddy of economic indicators – U.S non-farm payrolls (NFP) for September – will be released later this morning (8:30 am EDT) along with the Canadian jobs report.

Today’s US number is ‘big,’ especially with this week’s aggressive backing up of the U.S. yield curve. The sell-off in Treasuries, in part, has been justified by U.S data supporting the strength of their economy and the markets future inflation fears.

This morning’s payrolls headline print, coupled with wage growth numbers, will provide substance to what investors should expect, from an interest rate perspective in particular. Does the Fed’s dot-plot line up neatly or will the Fed push its benchmark past the neutral level?

Consensus is looking for a September headline print of +185K new jobs and an unemployment rate to ease another one-tenth to +3.8%. However, expect dealers to look beyond the headline and focus intently on the increase in average hourly earnings.

The August wage growth print at +2.9% was the largest y/y gain in nearly a decade. If September’s number comes in even stronger, will justify some dealers fears that inflation pressures are building, maybe faster than originally perceived.

Current expectations for wage growth m/m are +0.3%, which would equate to approximately +2.8% y/y.

1. Stocks mixed reactions ahead of payrolls

Euro equities are struggling for traction after the Asian session ended the week with a further sell-off overnight as the region’s tech companies were battered by concerns about their U.S business.

In Japan, the Nikkei fell to its lowest close in a fortnight, tracking Wall Street’s slide yesterday as rising U.S Treasury yields have reduced the attraction of most stocks except financial ones. The Nikkei share average ended -0.8%, while the broader Topix dropped -0.5%.

Down-under, Aussie shares edged higher on Friday, supported by gains from the financial sector, which managed to advance for a second session. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed +0.2% higher. The benchmark is off -0.4% for the week. In S. Korea, KOSPI stock index also ended lower this morning (-0.31%) on fears of foreign fund outflows after U.S yields surged to a new seven-year high.

Note: China’s financial markets are closed for the National Day holiday and will resume trade on Oct. 8.

In Hong Kong, stocks fell for a fourth consecutive session, dragged by a selloff in tech stocks on fears that these companies will be the latest casualties in the Sino-U.S trade war. The Hang Seng Index was down -0.42%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board, pressured by rising sovereign yields. Investors will take their cue from this mornings N. American employment reports.

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U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.2%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.7% at 377.2, FTSE -0.8% at 7359, DAX -0.8% at 12142, CAC-40 -0.5% at 5385, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 9264, FTSE MIB -0.9% at 20438, SMI -0.5% at 9053, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%