The week ahead
Australia’s RBA up tonight
A minority of observers are looking for the Reserve Bank to cut rates again tonight. The bank would probably do well to cut again now rather than waiting until May to cut, as most expect. Will RBA focus on the March Melbourne inflation gauge rebound or find support for a cut from the steady drop in core inflation through the official Feb “trimmed mean” data series and perhaps at the sense of impending doom from global market sentiment? No idea, but a cut wouldn’t be a huge surprise. AUD has been suffering from weak risk sentiment, not buoyed by Chinese stimulus hopes this time around because these are focused on encouraging consumption, not the fixed asset stimulus that drove so much demand for Australian coking coal, iron ore, etc.
Tuesday: Eurozone Flash March CPI
The core, YoY release expected to drop to a new cycle low of 2.5% after 2.6% in February.
Wednesday: Trump Tariff announcements, or “Liberation Day”.
The chief question for Trump’s touted Liberation Day may be more in how much the market has front-run whatever bad news is set to be delivered and whether this proves a “sell the rumor, buy the fact” moment or if it even serves as a major event risk at all. After all, the tariff chaos has been rolling along nearly every day since well before Trump’s inauguration and the impacts of tariffs will take a long time to accumulate, as trading partners also roll out their responses to US measures. And eventually, the US Congress could challenge some of the tariffs as discussed in the WSJ article noted above. In short, market focus could be more intense on the incoming data and where we are with the risk of a recession more than tariff headlines in coming weeks. One critical risk from here and over the next few months is the risk of a post tariff “cliff” if it proves that many have been front-running tariffs with large inventory builds ahead of their implementation.
US economic data through Friday’s jobs report
The usual first week of the month data is up this week, starting with the JOLTS survey and ISM Manufacturing survey on Tuesday. The JOLTS survey often gets a reaction, though the data quality on the initial release is considered very poor due to the combination of a small sample size and falling response rates (31% in 2023 vs. 64% in 2017. On the ISM Manufacturing, it is far too early in the game to look for tariffs to boost the US manufacturing sector, and this survey gets little play, but did just crawl above the 50 level the last two months after an incredible run of 26 months below 50 (pandemic hangover in part). The ISM Services survey could get more play on Thursday if it surprises in either direction. But the most important data points will be the labor market data this week, starting with Wednesday’s ADP employment change (especially if it is low again after the +77k in Feb.) and followed by Thursday’s weekly claims numbers if these surprise, and finally the usual monthly jobs report for March on Friday.
Friday: Canada’s March Jobs Report
Too early now, but watching for signs of disruption to the Canadian economy from Trump’s tariffs.
FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength.
Note: If unfamiliar with the FX board, please see a video tutorial for understanding and using the FX Board.
The JPY has jumped to life again on the plunge in global bond yields – though at this point it is merely bouncing back from weakness, not yet trending stronger. Elsewhere, gold really sticks out again after the brutal run higher in the last few sessions, while SEK and NOK maintain incredibly strong readings, even if the momentum has to come off at some point soon.