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US Dollar consolidates after Fed-related sharp losses

May 2, 2024

NEW YORK (May 2) The US Dollar (USD) enters some calm waters on Thursday after a rollercoaster ride on Wednesday following the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary policy decision. The big batch of economic data on Wednesday together with the Fed’s policy meeting and Chairman Jerome Powell’s speech was the dream scenario for an uptick in the US Dollar Index (DXY), but this scenario failed to materialize and the index fell to 105.43, near the low of this week. Although it looked for a moment that the US Dollar could weaken further, it still holds ground and is likely to stay there until the US Nonfarm Payrolls data on Friday as the next catalyst. 

On the economic data front, some appetisers ahead of the Nonfarm Payrolls print and the broader employment report on Friday. Traders can feast on the weekly Jobless Claims numbers and the Challenger Job Cuts number to look for clues if those announced layoffs during the recent earnings season are starting to weigh on the labor market. However, expectations are for traders to keep their powder dry for Friday.   

Daily digest market movers: Here come the layoffs

  • A substantial move on the charts in USD/JPY and EUR/JPY on Wednesday, pointing to a possible intervention again from either the Bank of Japan (BoJ) or the Ministry of Finance, though no official confirmations were issued. 
  • Kickoff this Thursday at 11:30 GMT with the April Challenger Job Cuts report. the previous number was at 90,309.
  • At 12:30 GMT, the bigger part of the data for Thursday is to be released:
    • Weekly Initial Jobless Claims expected to head to 212,000 from 207,000.
    • Continuing Claims were at 1.781 million last week, with no forecast available.
    • The US Goods and Trade balance from March is to be released:
    • The Goods Trade Balance deficit was previously at $91.8 billion.
    • Goods and Services Trade Balance expected to head from a deficit of $68.9 billion to a deficit of $69.1 billion. 
    • Nonfarm Productivity growth for the first quarter of 2024 should slow down from 3.2% to 0.8%.
    • Unit Labor Costs are expected to accelerate substantially, from 0.4% to 3.2%.
  • Near 14:00 GMT, the monthly factory orders for March are expected to increase by 1.6%, higher than the 1.4% advance seen a month earlier.
  • Equities trade mixed on Thursday morning, with European equities mildly in the red while US Futures are mildly in the green. 
  • The CME Fedwatch Tool suggests a 91.1% probability that June will still see no change to the Federal Reserve's fed fund rate. Odds of a rate cut in July are also out of the cards, while for September the tool shows a 56% chance that rates will be lower than current levels.
  • The benchmark 10-year US Treasury Note trades around 4.61% and keeps lingering around this level.

FXStreet

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