In This Article:
Earlier in the Day:
Economic data released through the Asian session this morning was on the lighter side, with stats limited to New Zealand’s April Business PMI and New Home Loans out of Australia.
For the Kiwi Dollar there was some good news, the Business PMI surging from 52.2 to 58.9 in April.
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April’s PMI was the highest since Jan-16, supported by a significant jump in the production, new orders and deliveries sub-indexes, with the surge in new orders from 54.3 to 60.3 boding well for the 2nd
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On the employment side, the employment sub-index stood at 54.9 in April, the strongest since Aug-17, providing another positive outlook for the economy and domestic consumption.
The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.69626 to $0.69659 upon release of the figures, before easing to $0.6964 at the time of writing, up 0.03% for the morning. While the PMI was positive, the May figures will be of greater importance, with the effects of Easter being washed out.
For the Aussie Dollar, home loans slid by 2.2% in March, which was worse than a forecasted 2% fall, following February’s 0.2% decline, marking a 4th consecutive monthly decline.
The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.75351 to $0.75293 upon release of the figures, before rising through to $0.7531 at the time of writing, down 0.01% for the morning.
Elsewhere, the Japanese Yen was down 0.05% to ¥109.46, with the risk on sentiment through the session easing demand for the havens.
In the equity markets, the Hang Seng led the way through the morning, up 1.36%, with the Nikkei and ASX200 up 0.93% and 0.10% respectively, while the CSI300 was down 0.18% to buck the trend, appetite for risk supported by the softer inflation figures out of the U.S on Thursday.
The Day Ahead:
For the EUR, economic data scheduled for release out of the Eurozone is on the lighter side this morning, limited to finalized April inflation figures out of Spain, which are unlikely to provide the EUR with too much support, barring an upward revision.
While inflation figures out of the U.S were on the weaker side, the numbers are unlikely to see the FED take the foot off the gas on the policy front, which should continue to place policy divergence in favour of the Dollar for now, supporting a pullback to $1.18 levels.
The stats may be on the lighter side, but with ECB President Draghi scheduled to speak, any more dovish chatter on policy and outlook on inflation and the EUR could be in for another slide.
At the time of writing, the EUR was flat at $1.1915, with market risk sentiment, stats out of the U.S and ECB President Draghi the key drivers today.