Sample Category Title
EUR/CHF Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.9738; (P) 0.9794; (R1) 0.9825; More...
EUR/CHF retreated notably after edging higher to 0.9847 and intraday bias is turned neutral. On the upside, above 0.9847 will resume the rally from 0.9252 to 38.2% projection of 0.9304 to 0.9818 from 0.9709 at 0.9905. However, considering bearish divergence condition in 4H MACD, break of 0.9709 will confirm short term topping, and turn bias back to the downside for deeper pullback.
In the bigger picture, a medium term bottom should be in place at 0.9252 already, on bullish convergence condition in W MACD. Rise from there would now target 38.2% retracement of 1.2004 (2018 high) to 0.9252 (2023 low) at 1.0303, even as a correction to the down trend from 1.2004. This will remain the favored case as long as 55 D EMA (now at 0.9599) holds.
Cliff Notes: Marking Time
Key insights from the week that was.
Beginning in Australia, the RBA March Minutes revealed important developments in the considerations for, and operational framework around, monetary policy. On the former, it appears the RBA Board did not discuss the case for a rate hike in March, focusing solely on the case to remain on hold. That is a departure from this cycle’s common practice of considering multiple policy options at each meeting. The change in rhetoric was relatively marginal, however. The Board continues to recognise that, amid the currently restrictive policy environment, inflation is decelerating as demand and supply come into balance; that said, the Board needs more confidence in inflation’s sustainable return to target before debating the timing and scale of policy easing. We remain of the view that the Board will have this confidence by September, allowing the RBA to embark on a measured rate cutting cycle, 25bps per quarter to 3.10% in Q3 2025.
This week, Chief Economist Luci Ellis also discussed the RBA’s change to operational arrangements for monetary policy. The Board have decided to implement a regime of ‘ample reserves’ as the means of controlling the cash rate, similar to what is currently used by the Bank of England and ECB. This regime should still provide protection against the risk of sudden declines in exchange settlement balances compared to the pre-pandemic ‘scarce reserves’ regime; but, in the context of already-declining liquidity – as unconventional monetary policies are unwound – a regime of ‘ample reserves’ implies lower risks of market distortions than the pandemic-era ‘excess reserves’ regime. Overall, these changes are purely operational and have no implications for the stance of monetary policy.
This week’s updates on housing were a little murkier than usual. Headline (non-seasonally adjusted) figures from CoreLogic’s home value index suggest that house price momentum has improved since the turn of the year (0.2% in Dec to 0.6% in Mar). However, on our figuring, momentum in seasonally adjusted terms imply the opposite, with gains decelerating over recent months (0.5% in Dec to 0.3% in Mar). At the same time, the total volume of dwelling approvals look to be cycling lower still in 2024 (–5.8%yr) after spending much of 2023 near pandemic-era lows. While seasonal issues across both sets of data are making it more difficult to judge the underlying trend, it remains clear that Australia’s residential construction pipeline has shrunk significantly and, consequently, that tight housing supply will remain an underlying support for prices into the medium-term.
In the US meanwhile, the ISM manufacturing index rose 2.5pts while the non-manufacturing index fell 1.2pts. Both remain below their long-run averages. The sub-indices suggest conditions will shortly warrant policy easing. Both price sub-indices are now below long-run averages – periods over which inflation was low and stable. Although the employment sub-indices firmed in March, they remain at levels consistent with aggregate job loss. Regional indicators of employment and investment also suggest businesses are increasingly becoming cautious on the outlook. Note the March employment situation report is due tonight and the March CPI will follow next week.
Over in Europe, inflation eased to 2.4%yr in March, undershooting expectations of both the European Central Bank and market participants. However, services inflation remained sticky at 4.0%yr and now accounts for around 70% of total inflation. As goods inflation bottoms out, services inflation will have to soften to keep aggregate inflation near the 2.0%yr target.
AUD/USD and NZD/USD Remain In Uptrend
AUD/USD is correcting gains from the 0.6620 zone. NZD/USD is also moving lower and might attempt a fresh increase from 0.6000.
Important Takeaways for AUD USD and NZD USD Analysis Today
- The Aussie Dollar started a downside correction from 0.6620 against the US Dollar.
- There is a key bullish trend line forming with support at 0.6550 on the hourly chart of AUD/USD at FXOpen.
- NZD/USD is also moving lower below the 0.6030 support zone.
- There is a major bullish trend line forming with support at 0.5995 on the hourly chart of NZD/USD at FXOpen.
AUD/USD Technical Analysis
On the hourly chart of AUD/USD at FXOpen, the pair started a fresh increase from the 0.6480 support. The Aussie Dollar was able to clear the 0.6535 resistance to move into a positive zone against the US Dollar.
There was a close above the 0.6550 resistance and the 50-hour simple moving average. Finally, the pair tested the 0.6620 zone. A high was formed near 0.6619 and the pair is now correcting gains.
There was a move below the 0.6600 level. The pair declined below the 23.6% Fib retracement level of the upward move from the 0.6480 swing low to the 0.6619 high. On the downside, initial support is near the 50% Fib retracement level of the upward move from the 0.6480 swing low to the 0.6619 high at 0.6550.
There is also a key bullish trend line forming with support at 0.6550. The next support could be 0.6535. If there is a downside break below the 0.6535 support, the pair could extend its decline toward the 0.6480 level. Any more losses might signal a move toward 0.6440.
On the upside, the AUD/USD chart indicates that the pair is now facing resistance near 0.6580. The first major resistance might be 0.6600. An upside break above the 0.6600 resistance might send the pair further higher.
The next major resistance is near the 0.6620 level. Any more gains could clear the path for a move toward the 0.6650 resistance zone.
NZD/USD Technical Analysis
On the hourly chart of NZD/USD on FXOpen, the pair started a steady increase from the 0.5940 level. The New Zealand Dollar broke the 0.6000 resistance to start the recent increase against the US Dollar.
The pair settled above 0.6000 and the 50-hour simple moving average. It tested the 0.6050 zone and is currently correcting gains. The pair corrected lower below the 0.6030 level. The pair also traded below the 23.6% Fib retracement level of the upward wave from the 0.5939 swing low to the 0.6046 high.
The NZD/USD chart suggests that the RSI is still below 50 and signaling more downsides. On the downside, there is major support forming near 0.6010.
The next major support is near the 50% Fib retracement level of the upward wave from the 0.5939 swing low to the 0.6046 high at 0.5995. There is also a major bullish trend line forming with support at 0.5995.
If there is a downside break below the 0.5995 support, the pair might slide toward the 0.5965 support. Any more losses could lead NZD/USD in a bearish zone to 0.5940.
On the upside, the pair might struggle near 0.6030. The next major resistance is near the 0.6045 level. A clear move above the 0.6045 level might even push the pair toward the 0.6080 level. Any more gains might clear the path for a move toward the 0.6120 resistance zone in the coming days.
Trade over 50 forex markets 24 hours a day with FXOpen. Take advantage of low commissions, deep liquidity, and spreads from 0.0 pips. Open your FXOpen account now or learn more about trading forex with FXOpen.
This article represents the opinion of the Companies operating under the FXOpen brand only. It is not to be construed as an offer, solicitation, or recommendation with respect to products and services provided by the Companies operating under the FXOpen brand, nor is it to be considered financial advice.
All About March US Payrolls Today
Markets
Wednesday’s failed test to sustainably pierce through technical resistance levels (YTD highs) across the US yield curve met with some rebound action during US trading hours yesterday. Upwardly revised EMU PMI’s (composite >50 for first time since May 2023), Minutes of the ECB’s March policy meeting (first rate cut clearly coming into view), weekly jobless claims (still near historically low levels) or rising oil prices (Brent crude > $91/b) had no direct influence on trading. Fed governors clearly lack the ECB’s confidence to ready a June rate cut. Richmond Fed Barkin said that the Fed has time to gain more clarity before lowering rates as he’s looking for the slowdown in inflation to sustain and to broaden. Rightly so, he’s apprehensive on the bumpy road ahead. Next week’s March CPI figures are a point in case. The low comparison base (0.1% M/M in March 2023) suggests that headline inflation will rise again to levels around/above 3.5% Y/Y. This base effect issue will repeat itself in the months of May, June and July irrelevant of the impact of current price pressures (sticky services, lagged impact of rents, energy prices,…), entailing a risk that inflation will settle again around/above 4% Y/Y during summer months. Interestingly, Barkin admitted that he would be open to a target inflation range though he deems it difficult to suddenly back off 2% right now. A higher inflation risk premium because of (implicit) higher inflation targets by central banks is one of the drivers backing our call for substantially higher long-term interest rates over the medium term. Chicago Fed Goolsbee, close ally to Fed chair Powell, focuses more on growth and the labour market. There doesn’t seem to be broad-based overheating of demand while he thinks it’s worth staying attuned to the deterioration in the jobs market. Recent data shouldn’t knock the Fed off the inflation path towards 2% while he stresses developments in housing inflation as the most valuable near-term indicator. Cleveland Fed Mester wants a couple of more months data to assess inflation, but she’s unlikely to get those as she leaves the Fed in June. Finally, Minneapolis Fed Kashkari raised the possibility that the Fed won’t cut policy rates this year if inflation stalls. We stick to the view that the a first 25 bps rate cut will come in September at the earliest. It’s all about March US payrolls today with consensus expecting another decent job growth of 214k in combination with a slightly lower unemployment rate (3.8% from 3.9) and firm wage pressure (0.3% M/M & 4.1% Y/Y). The rather high consensus bar and this week’s failed test push US yields through the roof suggests that those levels will be able to hold into this week’s close. The dollar proved to be vulnerable when the long end of the curve underperformed (rising inflation expectations?!), but found (safe haven) relief after yesterday’s late swoon in US stock markets (up to -1.5%). We expect EUR/USD to gradually return to the low 1.07 area.
News & Views
The National Bank of Poland left its policy rate unchanged yesterday at 5.75%. The NBP sees a gradual recovery developing in Q1 24 after 1% growth in Q4 23. The unemployment rate remains low and annual wage growth continues to rise. The NBP took notice of the CPI declining to 3.9% Y/Y in January, while the further decline in February and March (1.9% Y/Y) was not retained in the NBP assessment (after cut-off date Feb 15). In its new forecast (based on a stable policy rate), the NBP downwardly revised its inflation projections (2024: 2.8%-4.3%, 2025 2.2%-5% and 2026 1.5%-4.3%) but turned more positive on growth (2024 2.7%-4.3%; 2025 3.2%-3.5% and 2026 2%-4.5%). The NBP sticks with its asymmetric upward risk to 2024 inflation. Disinflation is expected to continue in H1, but a rise in VAT and higher energy prices might significantly raise inflation in H2. Public sector wages also suggest upward demand pressures going forward. In this context, the NBP judges that policy is conductive to meeting the target. It still doesn’t give any guidance on (the timing of) further easing. The zloty trades in line with fundamentals and contributes to the disinflation process. EUR/PLN yesterday held stable just below the 4.3 handle.
The Reserve Bank of India left the policy rate this morning unchanged at 6.5% for the seventh consecutive meeting. According to RBI governor Das, strong growth gives the central bank room to keep the focus on inflation as the last mile of disinflation is assessed to be challenging. The RBI sees 7% growth in current fiscal year. Retail inflation is seen staying at 4.5% compared to the RBI target of 4% while food prices remain a risk. The Indian rupee this morning gains modestly against the dollar but at USD/INR 83.41 remains within reach of the all-time (INR) low.
Sour Mood Ahead of US Jobs Data
Risk appetite got a hit yesterday as an army of Federal Reserve (Fed) speakers sounded cautious about the timing of the first rate cut and as the barrel of Brent spiked past the $90pb level on rising tensions between Iran and Israel after Israel bombed the Iranian embassy in Damascus earlier this week. The barrel of US crude spiked to $87.50pb. So far, tensions in the Middle East didn’t impact oil supply significantly. As a result, we saw a sustainable rise in oil prices – not a spike. But Iran’s direct involvement could mark a new milestone in the Middle East conflict and could back a rapid rise in oil prices in the near term. In this context, we can’t rule out the risk of a short-term rally in oil prices to $95/100pb range.
The rate cut debate heats up
The latest spike in oil prices will be reflected in the upcoming inflation reads and may derail the Fed from its ‘three rate cuts’ plan for this year. Indeed, when we listen to the Fed speakers, we sense that there is an increasing caution regarding that expectation. Neel Kashkari for example, who used to be a dovish voice, said yesterday that the January and February inflation readings were ‘a little bit concerning’ and that the Fed may not cut rates at all this year. Happily, he doesn’t vote this year. But earlier this week, Raphael Bostic said that he expects just one cut this year – after the election, and Patrick Harker and Thomas Barkin also backed the idea of a patient approach from the Fed as the uptick in inflation and the rising oil prices don’t necessarily point at further easing in inflation toward the Fed’s 2% target.
Sour mood into US jobs data
The combination of cautious Fed remarks and oil rally spoiled the market mood ahead of today’s US jobs data. The S&P500 fell more than 1%, as Nasdaq 100 retreated 1.55%. The US yields however remained soft on the back of a flight to safety, and the US dollar rebounded in Asia after hitting a two-week low.
Today, all eyes are on the US jobs data, that should distinguish between those expecting that the Fed will cut interest rates three times this year and those who bet that the Fed will barely cut the rates with strong growth and rising inflation. The US economy is expected to have added 212’000 new nonfarm jobs last month, the average earnings may have accelerated on a monthly basis and decelerated on a yearly basis. The unemployment is seen steady at 3.9%. Note that the mention of job cuts in earnings call have been rising since the beginning of the year, yet we haven’t yet seen a material impact on official data. In fact, the past three NFP numbers exceeded market expectations by around 78’000 and the US economy added around 280’000 new nonfarm jobs on average over the past three months. Another higher-than-expected NFP and hotter-than-expected wages growth could lead to a further pullback in dovish Fed expectations, weigh on stock and bond valuations and boost the US dollar. The sweetest combination would be a reasonably strong NFP number and softer wages growth. The latter would cement the expectation of a soft landing and give support to equities.
Diverging Europe
The minutes from the latest European Central Bank (ECB) meeting showed that the Eurozone officials have a clearer opinion on the timing of the first rate hike: a June cut looks like a done deal even though ECB Chief Christine Lagarde warned that the ECB is not willing to commit to further cuts beyond June.
In Switzerland, a further fall in inflation to just 1% on a yearly basis in March (and 0% on a monthly basis) hints that the Swiss National Bank (SNB) is in position to opt for more rate cuts this year to take advantage of a period where they could loosen the franc and boost the Swiss economy – especially for Swiss exporters that have suffered the consequences of a too-strong Swiss franc during the SNB’s fight against inflation. And franc has room to soften, the USDCHF has not yet reached the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement on 2022-2023 selloff, while the EURCHF recovered just a third of the post-pandemic appreciation. Carry traders – which borrow low-yielding currencies to invest in higher yielding ones - are gently leaving the yen – where the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) next move could only be a hawkish move - and turning to Swiss francs for funding their carry trades. And the latter should help the Swiss franc give back strength, at least until the other central banks decide that it’s time for them to act, as well.
Today’s Focus Will be on March Jobs Report
In focus today
- In the US, today's main event will be the March Jobs Report. We expect non-farm payrolls growth to slow down to 180k and see average hourly earnings growth at +0.2% m/m SA. For more details on today's Jobs Report, please see our latest US Labour Market Monitor - Supply-driven recovery, 4 April.
- In the euro area, we look out for retail sales to see how consumption fared in February. A rebound in consumption is key for the growth outlook in the euro area this year.
- In Germany, we receive data on factory orders for February which will give more information on the state of the German industry that still is very weak.
Economic and market news
What happened overnight
In Japan, Finance Minister Suzuki emphasized the importance of stability in the FX market, highlighting that excessive exchange-rate fluctuations were undesirable and restating the government's readiness to intervene in cases of sharp yen depreciation. Market speculations suggest that if the USD/JPY exceeds the 152 level, the government would react with direct intervention. That happened in 2022, where USD/JPY also flirted with the 152 mark, which made the Japanese government intervene. As of now USD/JPY is trading around 151.25.
What happened yesterday
In the US, jobless claims came in higher than expected at 221k (cons: 214k), reaching the highest level since late January, while continuing claims fell slightly. The release painted a mixed picture, though labour markets remain very strong. However, it should be noted that claims data tend to be noisier around holidays. Prior to the release, the March Challenger Report also showed another uptick in announced layoffs. Tech companies accounted for the largest share of layoffs, with 'cost-cutting' named as the most common reason.
In the euro area, the final PMIs were released, with the composite PMI being revised slightly up in March to 50.3, while the services PMI was revised up to 51.5. Importantly, the composite PMI is now above 50 for the first time since May 2023, indicating some gradual improvement in an economy that had been stagnant.
The ECB minutes yesterday contained limited new information but included some nuances to the discussion within the ECB's governing council, notably the disinflationary process continuing, yet it may be a bumpy road ahead. This morning, we published our ECB preview ahead of next week. While this meeting may be considered an interim meeting and lead to limited market reaction we expect the ECB to deliver a clear commitment to a June rate cut, in the form of explicit guidance of an 'intention to cut by 25bp in June'. For more details, please see ECB Preview - An intention to cut, 5 April.
In Norway, housing prices for March was 0.6% m/m SA, clearly confirming the increasing optimism (or maybe less pessimism) among households at the moment.
In the UK, final PMIs for March were slightly lower than preliminary prints, with the composite PMI at 52.8 (prelim: 52.9), and services at 53.1 (prelim: 53.4). The PMIs indicate a modest rebound in growth following a technical recession at the end of 2023.
In Switzerland, inflation surprised to the downside as headline came in at 1.0% y/y (cons: 1.3%), while core printed 1.0% y/y (cons: 1.2%). Importantly, the m/m SA measures showed broad easing for headline (-0.15%) and core (0.1%).
In Poland, the Polish central bank kept its policy rate unchanged at 5.75%, as widely expected.
In Japan, the largest union group Rengo announced that Japanese firms offered average wage hikes of 5.24% after the third wage tally. Overall, it appears that wage pressures have indeed spread beyond big businesses, putting the Bank of Japan in a comfortable situation. Next is the final wage tally, which will not be published until early July.
In commodities, Brent continued north, settling above USD90/bbl for the first time since October, partly fuelled by escalating geopolitical tensions. This morning, the price has exceeded the USD91/bbl mark.
Equities: Global equities were lower yesterday, dragged down by the US and fear of renewed central bank hawkishness in equity space. S&P 500 made a turnaround halfway through the session with an intraday move above 2% and the biggest loss since February 2013. VIX lifting to 16 with bears getting airtime and uncertainty increased. Please note that energy was still the best performing sector while industrials and materials outperformed the larger part of the defensive space. Hence, this is not about a full risk-off move due to weak growth outlook but rather fear of inflation challenges down the road. Interestingly, this renewed fear in equity space comes with a lag of what we have seen in the bond space, and it comes in a week where macro/price data has been very benign. The trigger is two-sided, with central bank members changing their tones, yesterday it was Kashkari acknowledging the possibility of not cutting this year. Secondly, oil prices are moving higher with the geopolitical tensions rising in the Middle East. In US yesterday, Dow -1.4%, S&P 500 -1.2%, Nasdaq -1.4% and Russell 2000 -1.1%. Asian markets are lower this morning following the weak session in the US. European futures are catching down to the US cash session yesterday while US futures are marginally higher this morning.
FI: The European bond market was quite volatile yesterday. The European PMI and the US jobless claims sent yields lower, yet outside those 'release windows' the yields trended higher amid also Fed speakers downplaying the need for imminent rate cuts. 10y Bund yields ended 3bp lower on the day at 2.35% with Italy being the clear outperformer yesterday in a BTPs-Bund spread tightening of 7bp to end at 137bp.
FX: EUR/USD continued to drift higher in yesterday's session, surpassing 1.0850 with all focus on today's US jobs report. EUR/GBP moved higher during yesterday's session trading close to the 0.86 mark following softer data out from the UK. EUR/CHF continued its upward trajectory during yesterday's session following a sharp downside surprise to Swiss inflation in March. NOK FX performance during yesterday's session was hugely influenced by the report released Wednesday (after close) from the work group on government transactions consisting of employees from Norges Bank and the Ministry of Finance. For spot FX we regard the announcement as a medium- to long-term negative.
USD/CAD Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3495; (P) 1.3527; (R1) 1.3576; More...
Intraday bias in USD/CAD remains neutral for the moment as range trading continues. On the upside, decisive break of 1.3612 resistance will resume whole rise from 1.3176 towards 1.3897 resistance. On the downside, firm break of 1.3419 support will argue that rebound from 1.3176 has completed. Near term outlook will be turned bearish for 1.3357 support first.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3976 (2022 high) are viewed as a corrective pattern only. In case of another fall, strong support should emerge above 1.2947 resistance turned support to bring rebound. Overall, larger up trend from 1.2005 (2021 low) is still expected to resume through 1.3976 at a later stage.
AUD/USD Daily Report
Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.6558; (P) 0.6589; (R1) 0.6618; More....
AUD/USD retreated higher hitting 0.6618 and intraday bias is turned neutral first. Rise from 0.6480 is seen as the third leg of the corrective pattern from 0.6442. Above 0.6618 will target 0.6633 resistance first. Break there will target 0.6666 and above. However, on the downside, sustained break of 55 4H EMA (now at 0.6543) will bring deeper fall back to 0.6442/6480 support zone instead.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 0.6169 (2022 low) are seen as a medium term corrective pattern to the down trend from 0.8006 (2021 high). Fall from 0.7156 (2023 high) is seen as the second leg, which might still be in progress. Overall, sideway trading could continue in range of 0.6169/7156 for some more time. But as long as 0.7156 holds, an eventual downside breakout would be mildly in favor.
EUR/USD Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.0821; (P) 1.0849; (R1) 1.0866; More...
Intraday bias in EUR/USD is turned neutral with current retreat. Rise from 1.0723 is seen as the third leg of the corrective pattern from 1.0694. Above 1.0875 will target 1.0941/0980 resistance zone. On the downside, though, sustained trading below 55 4H EMA (now at 1.0814) will bring retest of 1.0694/0723 support zone instead.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.1274 are viewed as a corrective pattern to rise from 0.9534 (2022 low). Rise from 1.0447 is seen as the second leg. While further rally could cannot be ruled out, upside should be limited by 1.1274 to bring the third leg of the pattern. Meanwhile, sustained break of 1.0694 support will argue that the third leg has already started for 1.0447 and possibly below.
GBP/USD Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.2624; (P) 1.2654; (R1) 1.2673; More...
GBP/USD retreated after breaching 1.2667 resistance briefly. Intraday bias is back on the downside with break of 55 4H EMA (now at 1.2628). Retest of 1.2517/38 support zone would be seen next. On the upside, however, firm break of 1.2682 will suggest that fall from 1.2892 has completed at 1.2538. Intraday bias will be turned back to the upside for 1.2802 resistance next.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3141 medium term top are seen as a corrective pattern to up trend from 1.0351 (2022 low). Rise from 1.2036 is seen as the second leg, which might still be in progress. But upside should be limited by 1.3141 to bring the third leg of the pattern. Meanwhile, break of 1.2517 support will argue that the third leg has already started for 38.2% retracement of 1.0351 (2022 low) to 1.3141 at 1.2075 again.












