Forex: Dollar Ready for NFPs Volatility

Talking Points:

  • Dollar Ready for NFPs Volatility

  • British Pound Prone to Reversal as BoE Minutes Closes In

  • Australian Dollar Facing Expected Cooling in 3Q Inflation Figure

Dollar Ready for NFPs Volatility

Both the dollar and capital markets were stoic through Monday’s session as the speculative ranks await the release of a particularly important US employment report. Looking beyond the normal preoccupation with this series and the volatile reactions to ‘surprises’ (deviations from the consensus), this particular update will be uniquely market moving. Typically, this data prints on a Friday which both curbs trend development in the leads up and dampens follow through due to the weekend drain. This Tuesday report, suffers neither disadvantage. Where the September labor report really shines though is not in its shock value, but its implications for important monetary policy assumptions. Following the FOMC’s surprise decision to defer its Taper in September and the tone of uncertainty from Committee members since the US Government shutdown and shaved down growth amid delayed key data, we have seen economists’ forecasts for the first QE3 reduction pushed all the way out until March. The market is likely on the same page. That sets a very dovish, risk-on tone. Yet, that also establishes a heavy bias that can reverse.

British Pound Prone to Reversal as BoE Minutes Closes In

For GBPUSD traders, the focus over the coming 24 hours is clear: a significant change in expectations for US policy bearings and underlying risk trends can stir volatility and a heavy swing for the pair. Yet, individually, the sterling doesn’t have a particularly remarkable exposure to these more dominant themes of ‘risk’ and dollar fitness for reserve status. What guides this currency against its range of pairings is the other benchmark for FX fundamentals: interest rates. Last week, Bank of England Chief Economists Spencer Dale reinforced one of the market’s most aggressive rate forecasts by suggesting that 2015 was a like time frame for the central bank to tighten – despite the forward guidance stating explicitly 2016. BoE member Ben Broadbent made a modest effort Sunday to balance the ship when he said he doubted a hike before the forecast, but the market was unconvinced. The true weigh in comes with Wednesday’s BOE minutes. Will the tone soften?

Australian Dollar Facing Expected Cooling in 3Q Inflation Figure

A day before the Australian Bureau of Statistics releases the third quarter Consumer Price Index (CPI) stats, the market has pulled back on its expectations for a timely RBA rate hike. Looking at swaps, the probability of a 25bp rate hike over the next year has pulled back to 30 percent. The first full hike isn’t expected until well into 2015 according to the curve. While the Aussie dollar maintains a yield advantage over most majors, an aggressive forecast for policy tightening is key to building premium in a market already extended on its exposure to historically-low carry. As such, Wednesday’s CPI data is particularly important. Not a good position for an expected slowing in the headline figure…