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Why Weak Payrolls Failed To Sink U.S. Dollar

Published 12/04/2020, 04:34 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
One of the most important pieces of data this week was November nonfarm payrolls. The softer release should have sent the U.S. dollar tumbling lower but instead the greenback ended the day sharply higher against most of the major currencies. This same strength can be seen in stocks, which soared to record highs. 
 
So why are investors buying the dollar and stocks on a lackluster jobs report? The answer is simple. 
 
Everyone knows that this latest pandemic wave hit the U.S. economy hard but with local governments crafting plans for vaccine distribution and Congress working towards a new stimulus deal before the end of the year, investors see pent up demand as 2021’s primary source of recovery. Even Federal Reserve officials agree that while the surge in virus cases makes the outlook “extraordinarily uncertain” according to Fed Chair Jerome Powell, vaccine development makes him “very positive” for the medium term. The pandemic is deepening, but the record-breaking moves in stocks tell us that investors are unambiguously optimistic.  
 
With that said, U.S. companies added only 245,000 jobs in the last month, down from 610,000 in November. This was significantly less than the 468,000 consensus forecast but the improvement in the unemployment rate and increase in average hourly earnings were bright spots. New restrictions should have caused more job losses and fewer additions in late November-December but how the market reacts to revisions or next month’s report depends on where we are at with vaccine development and distribution. 
 
In the near term, unless there are serious setbacks, investors continue to shrug off weaker data. Next week the focus shifts away from the U.S. dollar to the euro. With only CPI and the University of Michigan index on the calendar, the European Central Bank monetary policy announcement will dominate. The ECB is widely expected to ease monetary policy and lower economic projections. However, instead of falling in anticipation, the euro climbed to its strongest level in 2.5 years this week. Europe is a few weeks ahead of the U.S. in its coronavirus battle with some countries like France and Spain starting to see their curves flatten. By easing in December, these improvements could give the ECB the peace of mind to see if the region recovers before considering more stimulus. In other words, there could be more U.S. stimulus before another round of Eurozone stimulus in 2021. 
 
The best performing currency on Friday was the Canadian dollar. Job growth slowed in the month of November but, unlike the U.S., there was a big upside surprise. Economists were looking for job growth to slow 20,000 from 83,000 but instead, Canadian companies added a whopping 62,000 jobs last month which pushed the unemployment rate down to 8.9% from 8.5%. Canada is also struggling with record-breaking coronavirus cases, but a summer of stronger recovery paved the way for healthier job growth. The downside surprise in U.S. data combined with upside surprise in Canadian data drove USD/CAD to its lowest level since April 2018. The loonie remains in play next week with a Bank of Canada monetary policy announcement on the calendar. Today’s report reaffirms our outlook for no change in the BoC policy.
 
Sterling also hit a 2.5-year high on Friday before succumbing to a dollar recovery. Although better than expected construction sector PMI, declining new virus cases and plans to ease restrictions are all reasons for a rally, the primary catalyst is hope for an 11th hour Brexit deal. After failed agreements in London this week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will speak directly on Saturday in what will be one of their final chances to make a deal before their year-end deadline.

Latest comments

More like taxpayers financing the dow . $ is deluted.
cool
Europe is in dangerous trouble. Germany is in a dangerous zone of deflation -0.8% ............
If you were an equity trader you'd have made billions with such accurate analysis
when you start to wonder why the market hasn't figured out what you already know you're probably on the wrong side of the trade
The ECB is holding talks this week on a strong Euro and high deflation.
Yes
it's a bad article. stocks go up no matter what happens with covid. it's just the money printing that keeps this going
She did not say that stock go up in reaction to the pandemy development, she said stock keep going up fueled by this sentiment. Money printing is though the main reason, but its a old news, and this has been happening for the last 11 years
it isn't old news. the market smells the next round of "new" stimulus. it hasn't happened yet.
So the stock price now has been prices in even though the "new" stimulus is being approved
Good points 👍
Headed for a reality check real soon.  Can only ignore bad data for so long.  As soon as Kamala takes office the party will stop.
The market can “ignore bad data” longer than your account can sustain the losses. You’re looking at the wrong data...
I hope market will crash 75% to bring it back to normal from the casino
the dollar is weak on biden
look at h.8 data from the Fed, there is no lending going on, banks are tightening credit significantly, unemployment numbers are dismal. it doesn't get more deflationary than that. Any fiscal stimulus is just economic hospice.
because in this casino market why not?
they increased the money supply by 40%.
Wouldnt a strong dollar put pressure on stocks?
Are you doubting Kathy’s analysis? You’re right...and Kathy is wrong as usual.
Yaya Brexit will soon expire and they will be FREE !
So learning
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