ForexLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: USD lost more ground
PBOC Deputy Governor expects around 8% nominal economic growth for China in 2024China's State Planner Vice Chairman flags 6 trln yuan available for government investmentPeople's Bank of China dep gov says still more monetary policy roomBank of Japan Governor Ueda says massive stimulus had negative side effectsSwiss National Bank policy decision due Thursday, 21 March 2024 - previewChina’s focus on the supply side to drive economic growth is creating problems in EuropePBOC sets USD/ CNY reference rate for today at 7.0942 (vs. estimate at 7.1792 )BoJ Governor Ueda says expects to maintain accommodative monetary policy for time beingAUD/USD popped on the big beat for Australian February employment dataJapan finance minister Suzuki says closely watching FX moves with a high sense of urgencyJapan March preliminary PMIs: Manufacturing 48.2 (prior 47.2) Services 54.9 (prior 52.9)Australian February unemployment rate 3.7% (vs. 4.0% expected)Japan's government issues an emergency earthquake warningJapan February trade balance -379bn yen (vs. -810bn yen expected)Hong Kong's central bank follows the Fed, leaves base rate unchanged at 5.75%, es expectedJapan Reuters Tankan for March shows solid improvement for Manufacturing and ServicesFed 'insider' Timiraos says Fed's outlook has not changed since December: 3 cuts in '24Gold price surging higher in thin tradeGoldman Sachs have 3 three takeaways from Powell's press conferenceAustralian March preliminary PMIs show manufacturing lower on the month & services higherNew Zealand Q4 2023 GDP -0.1% q/q (vs. +0.1% expected)ICYMI: European Central Bank President Lagarde emphasizes again decisions data dependentFOMC June rate cut probability back up to around 70%Record closes for the Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ indicesForexlive Americas FX news wrap: Dots continue to show 75 bps in cuts this year, risk popsTrade ideas thread - Thursday, 21 March, insightful charts, technical analysis, ideas It was an active post-FOMC/Powell session in Asia with plenty of news and data flow, and plenty of FX movement.We kicked off with Q4 GDP from New Zealand, with the second consecutive quarter of contraction for the economy and thus a ‘technical’ recession. A ‘technical’ recession is a recession, commonly defined as two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth. NZD/USD dipped a little on the data release but soon bounced back as the US dollar continued its down draft after the Fed decision. More on the USD losses to come a little further down in this wrap.Data flow from Japan was the next set of notable items. The monthly Reuters Tankan survey, which serves as a key indicator for the Bank of Japan's quarterly Tankan survey, due on April 1, showed that confidence at big Japanese companies rebounded to a three-month high in March, and the service-sector mood rose to a seven-month high.Japanese February trade data followed soon after; exports grew for a third consecutive month on the back of shipments of vehicles. In less bright news imports missed expectations. More in the bullets above.On the session USD/JPY fell away, below its US-time lows and to under 150.50 before seeing some sideways movement around 150.40. Later in the session we had verbal intervention comments from Finance Minister Suzuki and Chief Cabinet Secretary Hayashi. More on these in the bullets above, along with remarks from Bank of Japan Governor Ueda, who added some detail to the reasoning behind the Bank’s tightening move earlier in the week.From Australia today was another stunning employment report. The unemployment rate plunged to 3.7% from the previous month’s 4.1% (admittedly there was a small drop in participation) with 116K jobs added. The 78,200 rise in full-time employment was the most in 11 months. The Australian dollar and bond yields jumped. Further support for AUD came from an ANZ forecast for iron ore to trade between USD 90-110/ton for the remainder of 2024.From China we saw the People’s Bank of China injecting the least amount of funds through reverse repos in open market operations since August 11, 2023. Later was a press conference including the PBoC and State Planner (the National Development and Reform Commission of the People's Republic of China (NDRC)). Remarks from PBOC and NDRC officials were supportive and upbeat on the economy, with a PBOC Deputy Governor saying he expects around 8% nominal economic growth for China in 2024. Maybe he is overstating expectations because 8% nominal would be a huge win for China. Oil traders might like to pay attention to this also, it implies a huge demand for oil this year from China. Indeed, after dribbling lower the oil price found some stability here during the session.Gold rose. Regional equities rose also, following the strong lead from Wall Street.As mentioned earlier the US dollar lost further ground during the day, adding to its US-time fall. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.
- PBOC Deputy Governor expects around 8% nominal economic growth for China in 2024
- China's State Planner Vice Chairman flags 6 trln yuan available for government investment
- People's Bank of China dep gov says still more monetary policy room
- Bank of Japan Governor Ueda says massive stimulus had negative side effects
- Swiss National Bank policy decision due Thursday, 21 March 2024 - preview
- China’s focus on the supply side to drive economic growth is creating problems in Europe
- PBOC sets USD/ CNY reference rate for today at 7.0942 (vs. estimate at 7.1792 )
- BoJ Governor Ueda says expects to maintain accommodative monetary policy for time being
- AUD/USD popped on the big beat for Australian February employment data
- Japan finance minister Suzuki says closely watching FX moves with a high sense of urgency
- Japan March preliminary PMIs: Manufacturing 48.2 (prior 47.2) Services 54.9 (prior 52.9)
- Australian February unemployment rate 3.7% (vs. 4.0% expected)
- Japan's government issues an emergency earthquake warning
- Japan February trade balance -379bn yen (vs. -810bn yen expected)
- Hong Kong's central bank follows the Fed, leaves base rate unchanged at 5.75%, es expected
- Japan Reuters Tankan for March shows solid improvement for Manufacturing and Services
- Fed 'insider' Timiraos says Fed's outlook has not changed since December: 3 cuts in '24
- Gold price surging higher in thin trade
- Goldman Sachs have 3 three takeaways from Powell's press conference
- Australian March preliminary PMIs show manufacturing lower on the month & services higher
- New Zealand Q4 2023 GDP -0.1% q/q (vs. +0.1% expected)
- ICYMI: European Central Bank President Lagarde emphasizes again decisions data dependent
- FOMC June rate cut probability back up to around 70%
- Record closes for the Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ indices
- Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: Dots continue to show 75 bps in cuts this year, risk pops
- Trade ideas thread - Thursday, 21 March, insightful charts, technical analysis, ideas
It was an active post-FOMC/Powell session in Asia with plenty of news and data flow, and plenty of FX movement.
We kicked off with Q4 GDP from New Zealand, with the second consecutive quarter of contraction for the economy and thus a ‘technical’ recession. A ‘technical’ recession is a recession, commonly defined as two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth. NZD/USD dipped a little on the data release but soon bounced back as the US dollar continued its down draft after the Fed decision. More on the USD losses to come a little further down in this wrap.
Data flow from Japan was the next set of notable items. The monthly Reuters Tankan survey, which serves as a key indicator for the Bank of Japan's quarterly Tankan survey, due on April 1, showed that confidence at big Japanese companies rebounded to a three-month high in March, and the service-sector mood rose to a seven-month high.
Japanese February trade data followed soon after; exports grew for a third consecutive month on the back of shipments of vehicles. In less bright news imports missed expectations. More in the bullets above.
On the session USD/JPY fell away, below its US-time lows and to under 150.50 before seeing some sideways movement around 150.40. Later in the session we had verbal intervention comments from Finance Minister Suzuki and Chief Cabinet Secretary Hayashi. More on these in the bullets above, along with remarks from Bank of Japan Governor Ueda, who added some detail to the reasoning behind the Bank’s tightening move earlier in the week.
From Australia today was another stunning employment report. The unemployment rate plunged to 3.7% from the previous month’s 4.1% (admittedly there was a small drop in participation) with 116K jobs added. The 78,200 rise in full-time employment was the most in 11 months. The Australian dollar and bond yields jumped. Further support for AUD came from an ANZ forecast for iron ore to trade between USD 90-110/ton for the remainder of 2024.
From China we saw the People’s Bank of China injecting the least amount of funds through reverse repos in open market operations since August 11, 2023. Later was a press conference including the PBoC and State Planner (the National Development and Reform Commission of the People's Republic of China (NDRC)). Remarks from PBOC and NDRC officials were supportive and upbeat on the economy, with a PBOC Deputy Governor saying he expects around 8% nominal economic growth for China in 2024. Maybe he is overstating expectations because 8% nominal would be a huge win for China. Oil traders might like to pay attention to this also, it implies a huge demand for oil this year from China. Indeed, after dribbling lower the oil price found some stability here during the session.
Gold rose. Regional equities rose also, following the strong lead from Wall Street.
As mentioned earlier the US dollar lost further ground during the day, adding to its US-time fall. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.