FX Majors Weekly Outlook (27-31 March) | Forexlive
UPCOMING
EVENTS:
Thursday: US
Jobless Claims.
Friday: EZ
CPI, US PCE.
Last week
the Fed hiked by 25 bps and left its terminal rate and QT unchanged. The tl;dr
of the meeting is that they don’t know how the recent events in the banking
sector have impacted or will impact the economy, so they will look at the data
to decide their next moves. The market, on the other hand, is already pricing
an aggressive rate cut cycle as it sees a slowdown in economic activity due to
the tightening in credit. The jobless claims and PMIs reports though have not
showed any meaningful impact on the economy yet.
Thursday: What
everyone wants to know about is how the recent events in the banking sector
have impacted the real economy. One way to look at it is from the data that
have as reference period the week after the SVB collapse and onwards. Jobless
Claims are released every week, so we can see how the events impacted the
labour market. Initial Claims are expected at 196K vs. 191K prior, and
Continuing Claims are expected at 1684K vs. 1694K prior.
I would
expect risk off in case we see a notable jump in the data with gold and bonds
bid and oil and stocks offered. For the US Dollar I would expect it to
appreciate against the commodity currencies in case we get a miss and
depreciate against the JPY as the fall in Treasury yields should drag the pair
lower. In case we get another beat though, we should see some repricing of the
recent moves with a fall in gold and bonds and the USD/JPY higher.
Friday: Eurozone headline
CPI is expected at 7.2% vs. 8.5% prior, while the Core reading is expected at
5.7% vs. 5.6% prior. I would say that a beat in the data should be negative for
risk sentiment, while a miss should be positive. Ultimately, I expect Jobless
Claims to be the most important event of the week anyway.
US Headline
PCE is expected at 5.3% vs. 5.4% prior for the Y/Y figure and 0.2% vs. 0.6%
prior for the M/M reading. The Core Y/Y is expected at 4.4% vs. 4.7% prior and
0.4% vs. 0.6% for the M/M reading. This report is based on the month of
February, so I think it’s more likely that we see a reaction to a miss rather
than a beat, because the market is more interested about the data after the
banking woes.
This article
was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta.