- USD: Lower, ADP employment as expected, services PMI beat expectations, stocks rally
- JPY: Higher, Japan's finance minister says the government and BOJ will combat deflation
- EUR: Higher, Greece announces extra austerity measures, retail sales and PMI weaken
- GBP: Higher, stronger than expected consumer confidence & PMI, uncertainty about the Prudential AIG deal
- CAD and AUD: AUD & CAD higher, Australian GDP strong, commodity prices rall
Overview
The USD traded mixed in reaction to report that Greece has decided to take extra austerity measures to reduce its budget deficit. Greece plans to cut its deficit by a total of €4.8bln. The new Greek budget plan generates hope that the Greek fiscal crisis will be contained and that Greece will not default on its debt. EUR initially rallied in reaction to the Greek budget news but investors remain cautious and EUR gains were limited. Investors want to see if the Greek budget plans lead to EU solidarity and a plan to aid Greece. Greek officials said they will go to the IMF if the EU fails to give support. EUR upside was also limited by report of weaker than expected EU retail sales and services PMI. GBP traded higher for the first time in six days supported by report of improving consumer confidence and stronger services PMI. Commodity currencies were mixed with the AUD underperforming despite report of strong Australian Q4 GDP. CAD continues to outperform. JPY traded at its highest level since last December versus the USD supported by mixed risk sentiment and a statement from Japan's finance minister that Japan is taking efforts to defeat deflation. US jobs data was encouraging. Challenging Gray said that February job cuts were at their lowest levels since February 2006. ADP employment declined by the smallest since last February. ADP says jobs growth may return next month for the first time in two years. ADP says the service and manufacturing sector added jobs last month. February non-manufacturing PMI came in stronger than expected posting its fastest growth in two years. US equity markets rallied to the day's highs after the release of the non-manufacturing PMI and the USD traded lower. The USD traded to a new low for the day in reaction to an IMF statement that the Greek budget plan is very strong. Focus turns Thursday’s ECB and BOE policy meetings and Fridays release of US unemployment. The ECB is expected to remain on hold and there is uncertainty about whether the BOE will maintain its current level of asset purchases. US February unemployment is expected to post a modest rise with nonfarm payrolls declining by 50k.
Today’s US data:
ADP private-sector employment fell by 20k in February. January ADP employment was revised to -60k from -22k. The ADP report was in line with expectations. February non-manufacturing PMI rose to 53, a reading of 51 was expected
Upcoming US data:
On March 4th initial jobless claims for week ending 02/27 will be released expected at 490k compared to 496k last month. Q4 productivity, unit labor costs, January pending home sales and factory orders will also be released on March 4th. Q4 productivity is expected unchanged at 6.2%, unit labor costs are expected unchanged at -4.4%, factory orders are expected unchanged at 1% and pending home sales are expected at 98.4 compared to 96.6 last month. On March 5th February unemployment and nonfarm payrolls will be released along with January consumer credit. The unemployment rate is expected to rise 0.1% to 9.8%, nonfarm payrolls are expected unchanged at -50k and consumer credit is expected at -3.1bln compared to - 1.7bln last month.