Take Five: Springing into action

,(Reuters) - Spring is in the air, the banking crisis appears to have been contained for the time being and it's time to take a look at how the real economy is faring.

Next week brings the all-important U.S. monthly jobs report, as well as a final read on business activity in March, a crucial rate decision Down Under and, possibly, the chance for Treasuries and the dollar to regain some stability after March's market madness.

Here's a look at the week ahead in markets from Kevin Buckland in Tokyo, Ira Iosebashvili in New York, Yoruk Baceli in Amsterdam, and Naomi Rovnik and Amanda Cooper in London.

1/GOTTA HAVE A J-O-B

After weeks of worry about the banking sector, Friday’s U.S. employment data shifts the focus back to the macro picture. Traders will be keen to learn whether the Federal Reserve’s barrage of rate increases is cooling the economy.

Views on the likely trajectory of rates have once again diverged. Fed officials project rates will remain around current levels for the rest of 2023 to help slow growth and fight inflation. A strong jobs number would support that view.

Economists polled by Reuters expect a rise of 240,000 in March, so anything short of that would suggest the Fed could cut rates this year as tighter monetary policy bites and growth softens.

That outlook - bolstered by the tumult in the banking sector - is one held by many investors. Futures markets are pricing a roughly 50% chance of a 25 basis point rate increase at the central banks next meeting, in May, followed by cuts throughout the rest of 2023.

Graphic: US job market expected to have eased in March, https://www.reuters.com/graphics/NONFARM-PAYROLLS/T5/gkplwbyywvb/chart.png 2/NO SPRING IN ITS STEP

Spring is finally here, and the dollar has posted its weakest performance for the first quarter since 2018, falling 1.3%, despite the swell of safe-haven demand the banking crisis unleashed.

Historically, Q1 is the strongest for the dollar. On average, over the last 50 years, the dollar has gained 1.1% between January and March, while Q4 is its weakest, with an average drop of 0.8%.

Fund managers slashed their bearish positions during February's 2.5% rally, but they're still sitting on a short position of $5.289 billion, according to Refinitiv data.

In theory, those bearish bets could be bought back and even flipped into bullish ones.

Traders are short, but not that short. With maybe one more rate hike priced in, inflation cooling and the banking crisis contained - for now - there don't seem to be too many reasons to spring for the dollar.