The Aussie Gets a Boost, as Focus Shifts to UK Retail Sales and the GBP
Employment numbers give the Aussie Dollar a boost as focus shifts to today’s stats out of the UK. Another set of weak numbers and the Pound could be looking at sub-$1.30 levels, progress on Brexit doing few favors. · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session this morning included June trade figures out of Japan and employment and business confidence numbers out of Australia.

For the Japanese Yen, June’s trade balance shifted from a ¥581bn deficit to a ¥721bn surplus, based on unadjusted figures, which was better than a forecasted narrowing to a ¥235bn deficit.

  • Exports rise by 6.7%, year-on-year, falling short of a forecasted 7%, whilst also easing from Mays 8.1% rise.

  • Imports increased by just 2.5%, falling well short of a forecasted 5.3% increase and May’s 14% surge.

  • Following a trade deficit with the U.S in May, Japan’s trade balance moved back into a surplus with the U.S in June, with Japan’s deficit with China seeing a material narrowing in June, driven by a surge in exports.

The surplus with the U.S may raise Trump’s eyebrows, though for now the administration appears to be focused on China and the EU…

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥112.838 to ¥112.8 against the Dollar, upon release of the figures, before moving to ¥112.73 at the time of writing, up 0.12% for the session.

For the Aussie Dollar, it was an impressive set of numbers, with the ABS reporting:

  • Employment change rose by 50.9k, coming in well ahead of a forecasted 18k increase, following an upwardly revised 13.5k rise in May.

  • Full employment change surged by 41.2k in June, more than reversing a revised 19.9k fall in May, while part-time employment increased by 9.7K.

  • While the unemployment rate held steady at 5.4%, which was in line with forecasts, the participation rate jumped from 65.5% to 65.7%, leading to the lowest unemployment rate in over 5-years.

For the NAB Quarterly Business Confidence numbers, the Index held steady at 7, with the impact muted as the markets responded to the positive labour market numbers that could ultimately provide the much needed pickup in wage growth that the RBA is in the need of to begin shifting on its policy stance.

The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.73987 to $0.74284 upon release of the figures, before easing to $0.7424 at the time of writing, a gain of 0.35% for the session.

In the equity markets, the ASX200 was on the move once more, gaining 0.38% at the time of writing to move into positive territory for the current week, with the Nikkei up 0.19% in spite of a stronger Yen, supported by the trade figures released earlier in the session, while the Hang Seng and CSI300 continued to languish in the red.

The Day Ahead:

For the EUR, there are no material stats scheduled for release through the European session to provide direction to the EUR, with the markets looking towards Capitol Hill for any retaliation to the EU’s roll out of tariffs on steel imports that has come in response to the U.S tariff on steel imports rolled out last month.