sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

Australian data credibility doubted, the AUD becoming the "whipping boy" in international markets. BNZ sees more USD strength and NZD/AUD at 0.91 by year-end

Currencies
Australian data credibility doubted, the AUD becoming the "whipping boy" in international markets. BNZ sees more USD strength and NZD/AUD at 0.91 by year-end

By Raiko Shareef

NZ Dollar

NZD/USD continues to break lower, with the 0.8200 level broken on the back of a much more cautious RBNZ.

The NZD is 0.6% weaker against the USD this morning, sitting at 0.8175.

The RBNZ softened its rate track as widely expected. The vindication of this view saw a break below 0.82, helped by continued vitriol against the NZD’s strength.

Governor Wheeler declined to talk about FX intervention, confirmation of which would have likely seen a much sharper reaction in NZD.

The USD rally continues to be the defining feature of the FX landscape, and AUD’s failure to hold gains following an unbelievably strong employment report weighed on NZD.

Overnight, NZD/USD tested the top of significant support in the 0.8140-0.8160 area, but was rejected. We see rallies limited to 0.8250 today.

NZDAUD has had a whippy 48 hours. We were pleased to see the cross poke its head above 0.90 on Wednesday night, but those gains were undone by the RBNZ and AU employment report yesterday.

However, the AUD remains a focal point, and we pick a return to 0.90+ territory in the near-term.

We see NZD/AUD at 0.91 by year-end.

----------------------------------------------------------

To subscribe to our free daily Currency Rate Sheet and News email, enter your email address here.

Email:   

----------------------------------------------------------

Majors

Every time you think the USD might pare its rally ahead of the FOMC next week, perhaps sell off on a bout of profit taking, it simply keeps pushing higher.

It’s just a matter which major assumes the role of whipping boy, and for now, it remains the AUD.

The broad Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is up another 0.2%, and it looks likely to breach its mid-2013 high in the near-term. That break would see the USD at its strongest since 2010.

The market seems to have wrung its money’s worth from EUR and GBP weakness in the near-term, and is still using JPY and NZD as vehicles to push the USD higher. But in the latter part of this week, the AUD has been the biggest loser.

Not even an eye-popping resurgence in Australia’s labour market health could keep the AUD above water. To be sure, the market took the data with an enormous pinch of salt, given its ridiculous strength. Australia added 121k jobs in August, beating the market expectation of +15k eight times over. This was the highest ever monthly gain in the series’ 36-year history. Off the back this, the unemployment rate improved sharply to 6.1% (from 6.4%), despite a jump in the participation rate.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics insists that it carefully checked its data and found no aberrations to report. But analysts caution that severe payback is due next month. Our NAB colleagues take is that the ‘true’ level of unemployment lies somewhere between 6.1% and 6.4%. They also do not see yesterday’s outturn changing the RBA outlook, where NAB expects the Bank to remain on hold through to at least mid-2015.

The AUD initially spiked half a cent higher on the stunningly positive headline gain, but has more than reversed those gains. It sits near fresh six-month lows at 0.9090, down 0.7% for the day. That it has lost more ground than NZD, which had an RBNZ tailwind lower, tells much about market sentiment around the AUD.

Elsewhere, the JPY continued to weaken, rising above 107 for the first time since late-2008. This came after BoJ Governor Kuroda visited Japan’s Prime Minister Abe for the first time in five months. Not that they revealed discussion about anything exciting, with Kuroda simply re-stating his willingness to ease policy further, should progress toward the 2.0% inflation target look at risk. He should strike the same line at a scheduled speech tonight.

On the data front, euro-zone industrial production and US retail sales will be highlights, along with China’s monthly data flurry dueon Saturday. We strongly doubt any of these data have the potential to significantly derail further USD upside.

Daily exchange rates

Select chart tabs

Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
End of day UTC
Source: CoinDesk

All its research is available here.

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

1 Comments

http://www.dailyfx.com/forex/fundamental/forecast/weekly/usd/2014/09/13…

sorry Iconoclast didn't find a link that will put this in your email, hope you're watching for it

Up
0