First Inflation Test Of The Week

First Inflation Test Of The Week

Impact on GBP:

Unemployment drop looks like a fluke

The surprise drop in the UK unemployment rate from 4.4% to 4.2% reported this morning will probably raise more concerns about data quality rather than offering clarity to the Bank of England. It is widely known that the survey used to calculate the unemployment rate has had very low response rates.

The rest of the jobs report is less surprising. The slowdown in wage growth is primarily due to the base effect and was generally in line with consensus. The month-on-month figures in the private sector continued to show some strength though.

UK economists note that the overall message from today’s report is that the jobs market is still cooling (declining vacancies are the main symptom of this), but there is probably enough to keep the Bank of England generally cautious on rate cuts. September still looks more likely to be a hold than a cut, but markets are pricing in around 10bp worth of easing for the upcoming meeting, and 45bp in total by year-end.

Sterling is trading on the strong side after the release, likely due to the surprise drop in unemployment. GBP/EUR?is attempting another move above €1.1695, but we think the downside is probably limited as the pair was already trading generally on the cheap side relative to its rate differential.

No Major Data


Impact on EUR:

EUR/USD still on track to $1.10

The ZEW survey of economists and analysts is the first activity indicator to be released in Germany every month and can help build expectations ahead of the Ifo and PMI indices, which instead track business sentiment. Last month, the drop in the ZEW expectations index was followed by similarly grim reads in the Ifo and PMIs. Today, expectations are for another sizeable drop in both the expectations and the current ZEW indices.

The majority?are well aware that the bullish EUR/USD view cannot rely on growth optimism in the eurozone, but that factor is also largely priced in by the market, and stickier-than-expected inflation is preventing large dovish repricing in the EUR curve. This is what matters the most for EUR/USD in the near term, along with risk sentiment which has continued to improve after the recent sell-off.

Consensus remain confident about a break above $1.10 in EUR/USD in line with the call for a softer USD into a 50bp September Fed cut. Incidentally there is a view to continue to see?downside potential for EUR/NOK, as the equity stabilisation/recovery should allow the very high-beta NOK to recover recent losses and Norges Bank will, in our view, remain hawkish on Thursday.

No Major?Data


Impact on USD:

First hurdle of the week

Today, one key test for USD/JPY and the broader FX market is the release of July’s US PPI report. The expectation is?a consensus 0.2% MoM print across headline and core measures to ease market nerves about a round of higher CPI/PCE that would deliver a hard hit to the risk sentiment just as global stock indices finalise their recovery of recent losses. USD/JPY could halt its rally after the release today and the dollar trade generally on the soft side across the board as some pre-inflation data defensive positioning is scaled back. Another important release is the NFIB Small Business Optimism report for July. The hiring plans sub-index is one of the most reliable predictors of private payrolls three months ahead: a resumption of the early 2024 decline following a recent rebound would fuel jobs market concerns.

Tomorrow’s CPI will undoubtedly generate higher FX volatility with markets likely to focus on the second percentage point decimal in the MoM print (consensus is 0.2%). We are generally optimistic that data will fall in line with consensus expectations and continue to endorse market pricing for 100bp of Fed cuts by year-end. An orderly USD decline is our baseline scenario for this and the next few weeks.

Data: 1:30pm -?Core PPI m/m?

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