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Weekly Wrap – Trade, Politics and a Busy Economic Calendar Drove the Majors

In This Article:

The Stats

It was another busy week on the economic calendar in the week ending 6th September.

A total of 62 stats were monitored throughout the week, compared with 57 in the week prior.

Of the 62 stats, 28 came in ahead forecasts, with 27 economic indicators coming up short of forecast. 7 stats were in line with forecasts in the week.

Looking at the numbers, 28 of the stats reflected an upward trend from previous figures. Of the remaining 34, 29 stats reflected a deterioration from previous.

While the economic data was skewed to the negative, the Dollar also ended up in the red. A material shift in the geopolitical landscape eased demand for the Greenback in the 2nd half of the week.

The U.S Dollar Index (“DXY”) fell by 0.42% in the week to $98.394, reversing August’s 0.3% gain.

Out of the U.S

It was a busy week for the Dollar.

August private sector PMI and Labor market figures were the key drivers through the week.

The PMI numbers delivered mixed results, with the markets focused on the ISM Surveys.

On Tuesday, the ISM Manufacturing PMI slid from 51.2 to 49.1 to cause a stir. While the ISM PMI reflected a contraction, the Markit Survey PMI came in at 50.3.

Brushing aside trade figures on Wednesday, ADP nonfarm employment change figures and the August ISM non-manufacturing PMI impressed on Thursday.

According to the ADP, 195k nonfarm jobs were added in August, up from 142k in July.

Perhaps more impressive was a jump in the ISM non-manufacturing PMI. The PMI rose from 53.7 to 56.4 in August.

Other positives included a 1.4% rise in factory orders, which came off the back of a 0.6% rise in June.

The main event of the week, however, was Friday’s labor market figures. While wage growth held steady year-on-year at 3.2%, nonfarm payroll figures disappointed. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 130k, following a 159k rise in July. Private nonfarm payrolls rose by just 96k…

In spite of the disappointing numbers, the unemployment rate held steady at 3.7% to limit the downside for the Dollar.

News of China and the U.S agreeing to resume trade negotiations next month failed to give the Dollar a boost.

Political events in the UK Parliament, HK, and Rome led to an easing in geopolitical risk and demand for the dollar over the week.

In the equity markets, the U.S majors closed out the week in positive territory for the 2nd consecutive week. The S&P500 led the way, rising by 1.79%, with the Dow and NASDAQ gaining 1.49% and 1.76% respectively.

Out of the UK

It was a relatively busy week on the economic data front. Economic data included August private sector PMIs, retail sales figures, and house price data.