Market Movers

  • The release of the ADP employment data for March should give us an early indication of what to expect from the official job report for March due on Friday although, admittedly, the ADP report is not always the best indicator for official job growth. We look for another solid US employment report on Friday with total payrolls above 200,000, see also our US Labour Market Monitor: Powering on from yesterday.

  • We will also keep an eye on the release of the euro area confidence data for March as the survey indicators for consumers, manufacturing and services have all been declining in recent months, possibly partly due to the negative spill-over from the financial turmoil to economic sentiment.

  • Preliminary HICP data for Germany in March are due at 14:00 CET.

  • Fed’s Evans (dovish, voter) is speaking tonight. He is a known dove and will likely express a similar view to Yellen’s.

  • Today at 9:00 CET we publish our quarterly Nordic Outlook including our new economic forecasts for the Nordic countries. Also Norwegian LFS unemployment data are due.


Selected Market News

Yesterday, Fed chair Yellen’s speech attracted a lot of attention in the markets. Although her overall message in our view was more or less a repetition of the concerned message from the last FOMC meeting in mid-March, her comments weakened the USD and sent US yields lower. The reason is that Yellen showed the markets ‘who is the boss’ by indirectly denouncing some of the more hawkish FOMC members who in recent weeks have expressed that they have not yet ruled out a hike in April – comments that came only shortly after the March meeting where the Fed was more dovish than expected. Yellen’s speech confirmed that she is still in the dovish camp together with the majority of the voting FOMC members. In her speech, Yellen expressed her concerns about the global economic and financial market developments and their potential spill-over effects on the US economy, about whether the pick-up in core inflation will ‘prove durable’ and about the lower inflation expectations, which she thinks are worrisome. Yellen definitely put more weight on the downside risks than on the upside risks through the speech. She seems to support that Fed could raise the target rate once or twice this year (in line with most of the ‘dots’ from the March projections) assuming Fed’s baseline scenario materialises. Markets have priced in slightly below one.

US consumer confidence rose to 96.2 in March from 94.0 in February (revised up from 92.2) suggesting that US consumers are still quite upbeat despite the turmoil in Q1. Recent spending data show that private consumption has been weak in Q1 and thus there is potential for higher consumption growth in the coming quarter as optimism is relatively high, employment continues to increase and real wages are growing.

Japanese industrial production fell 6.2% m/m in February, the largest decline since 2011 and one of the biggest since 1978 when the data series begun, adding to the pressure on Bank of Japan for more stimuli.

This publication has been prepared by Danske Bank for information purposes only. It is not an offer or solicitation of any offer to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Whilst reasonable care has been taken to ensure that its contents are not untrue or misleading, no representation is made as to its accuracy or completeness and no liability is accepted for any loss arising from reliance on it. Danske Bank, its affiliates or staff, may perform services for, solicit business from, hold long or short positions in, or otherwise be interested in the investments (including derivatives), of any issuer mentioned herein. Danske Bank's research analysts are not permitted to invest in securities under coverage in their research sector.
This publication is not intended for private customers in the UK or any person in the US. Danske Bank A/S is regulated by the FSA for the conduct of designated investment business in the UK and is a member of the London Stock Exchange.
Copyright () Danske Bank A/S. All rights reserved. This publication is protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD declines below 1.0700 as USD recovery continues

EUR/USD declines below 1.0700 as USD recovery continues

EUR/USD lost its traction and declined below 1.0700 after spending the first half of the day in a tight channel. The US Dollar extends its recovery following the strong Unit Labor Costs data and weighs on the pair ahead of Friday's jobs report.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD struggles to hold above 1.2500

GBP/USD struggles to hold above 1.2500

GBP/USD turned south and dropped below 1.2500 in the American session on Thursday. The US Dollar continues to push higher following the Fed-inspired decline on Wednesday and doesn't allow the pair to regain its traction.

GBP/USD News

Gold slumps below $2,300 as US yields rebound

Gold slumps below $2,300 as US yields rebound

Gold extended its daily slide and dropped below $2,290 in the second half of the day on Thursday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield erased its daily losses after US data, causing XAU/USD to stretch lower ahead of Friday's US jobs data.

Gold News

Top 3 Price Prediction BTC, ETH, XRP: Altcoins to pump once BTC bottoms out, slow grind up for now

Top 3 Price Prediction BTC, ETH, XRP: Altcoins to pump once BTC bottoms out, slow grind up for now

Bitcoin reclaiming above $59,200 would hint that BTC has already bottomed out, setting the tone for a run north. Ethereum holding above $2,900 keeps a bullish reversal pattern viable despite falling momentum. Ripple coils up for a move north as XRP bulls defend $0.5000.

Read more

Happy Apple day

Happy Apple day

Apple is due to report Q1 results today after the bell. Expectations are soft given that Apple’s Chinese business got a major hit in Q1 as competitors increased their market share against the giant Apple. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures