Dollar Dives after Jobless Claims, Sterling Powers Up

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Dollar is back under some selling pressure, starting in European session, and intensifies after poor job data. Weakness in the greenback is dragging down Canadian Dollar as the second worst performing, while Yen follows as third. Sterling is once again leading the way higher, followed by Aussie and Kiwi. Euro and Swiss France are mixed, as ECB minutes provides nothing special to traders.

Technically, GBP/USD’s break of 1.3951 confirms rally resumption for 1.4376 long term resistance level. GBP/JPY is also set to take on 147.95 key structural resistance. GBP/AUD is a focus for the rest of the week, on the race of top performer. The support from 55 day EMA so far is favoring the Pound. Break of 1.8020 resistance will resume the rebound from 1.7412 towards 1.8523 resistance next.

In Europe, FTSE is down -1.15%. DAX is up 0.02%. CAC is down -0.45%. Germany 10-year yield is up 0.022 at -0.347. Earlier in Asia, Nikkei dropped -0.19%. Hong Kong HSI dropped -1.58%. China Shanghai SSE rose 0.55%. Singapore Strait Times dropped -0.40%. Japan 10-year JGB yield dropped -0.0044 to 0.094.

US initial jobless claims rose to 861k, above expectations

US initial jobless claims rose 13k to 861k in the week ending February 13, above expectation of 775k. Four-week moving average of initial claims dropped -3.5k to 883.3k. Continuing claims dropped -64k to 4494k in the week ending February 6. Four-week moving average of continuing claims dropped -120k to 4632k.

Also from US, housing starts dropped to 1.58m annualized rate in January. Building permits rose to 1.88m. Import price index rose 1.4% mom in January. Philly Fed survey dropped to 23.1 in February.

From Canada, ADP employment contracted -231.2k in January. New housing price index rose 0.7% mom.

ECB accounts: Policy should keep a steady hand and give recalibration time to take effect

Accounts of ECB’s January 20-21 monetary policy meeting noted “members agreed that ample monetary stimulus remained essential to preserve favourable financing conditions over the pandemic period.” Very accommodative stance was “necessary to counter the downward impact of the pandemic on the projected path of inflation”. Favourable financing conditions needed to “prevail for some time”.

“Overall, it was widely felt that the recalibration of instruments decided on in December remained appropriate and well-balanced… Monetary policy should keep a steady hand and that the measures that were put in place in December should be given time to take full effect.”

Nevertheless, “members also widely agreed that there was no room for complacency and that the Governing Council had to continue to stand ready and use all of its instruments, as appropriate, to ensure a robust convergence of inflation towards its aim.”

BoE Saunders to put high weight or job data to judge level of spare capacity

BoE MPC member Michael Saunders said the “elevated unemployment” is a sign that UK still has “too much spare capacity” and that would “push inflation below target”. That could cause a “slow, incomplete recovery”. Additionally, there are risks of “household caution overspending”, and “fears of unemployment”.

Saunders added, “I will continue to put high weight on labour market data in judging whether spare capacity in the economy has been used up, and hence whether we are on track to return inflation sustainably to target in line with our remit.”

Australia employment grew 29.1k in Jan, unemployment rate dropped to 6.4%

Australia employment grew 29.1k to 12.9m in January, slightly below expectation of 30.2k. That’s also the fourth consecutive monthly growth in jobs. Full time employment rose 59k to 8.82m. Part-time employment dropped -29.8k to 4.12m.

Unemployment rate dropped to 6.4%, down from 6.6%, better than expectation of 6.5%. But that was still 1.1% higher than a year ago. Participation rate dropped -0.1% to 66.1%. Monthly hours worked dropped -4.9%, or -86m hours, to 1667m.

BoJ Kuroda: Exports recovered to pre-pandemic levels

BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told reporters today that Japan’s exports have recovered to levels before COVID-19 struck. Output was making similar moves while consumption was picking up as a whole. However, services spending remains weak.

Kuroda also Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga today, and “explained how the global economy was picking up, and how the BOJ needed to conduct the review to continue its ultra-loose monetary policy.” He said that Suga didn’t comment on the review, and there was no discussion regarding the Tokyo Olympic games.

GBP/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3827; (P) 1.3867; (R1) 1.3905; More….

GBP/USD’s up trend resumes after brief consolidation and hits as high as 1.3977 so far. Intraday bias is back on the upside. Current rise from 1.1409 should target 1.4376 long term resistance next. On the downside, break of 1.3828 support will indicate short term topping, and bring deeper pull back instead.

In the bigger picture, rise from 1.1409 medium term bottom is in progress. Further rally would be seen to 1.4376 resistance and above. Decisive break there will carry larger bullish implication. On the downside, break of 1.2675 support is needed to indicate completion of the rise. Otherwise, outlook will stay cautiously bullish even in case of deep pullback.

Economic Indicators Update

GMT Ccy Events Actual Forecast Previous Revised
00:30 AUD Employment Change Jan 29.1K 30.2K 50.0K
00:30 AUD Unemployment Rate Jan 6.40% 6.50% 6.60%
07:00 CHF Trade Balance (CHF) Jan 5.05B 3.32B 2.88B
12:30 EUR ECB Monetary Policy Meeting Accounts
13:30 CAD ADP Employment Change Jan -231.2K -28.8K
13:30 CAD New Housing Price Index M/M Jan 0.70% 0.50% 0.30%
13:30 USD Building Permits Jan 1.88M 1.67M 1.70M
13:30 USD Housing Starts Jan 1.58M 1.66M 1.67M 1.68M
13:30 USD Initial Jobless Claims (Feb 12) 861K 775K 793K 848K
13:30 USD Import Price Index M/M Jan 1.40% 1.00% 0.90%
13:30 USD Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey Feb 23.1 20 26.5
15:00 EUR Eurozone Consumer Confidence Feb P -15 -16
15:30 USD Natural Gas Storage -250B -171B
16:00 USD Crude Oil Inventories -2.1M -6.6M

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