Dollar Pressured by a Weak US Payroll Report

The dollar index (DXY00) on Friday fell by -0.35%.  The dollar was under pressure on Friday from a weaker-than-expected US Feb payroll report.  Also, a decline in US Jan retail sales added to negative sentiment toward the dollar. Losses in the dollar were limited on Friday as a slump in equity markets boosted some liquidity…


Dollar Pressured by a Weak US Payroll Report
Dollar Pressured by a Weak US Payroll Report

The dollar index (DXY00) on Friday fell by -0.35%.  The dollar was under pressure on Friday from a weaker-than-expected US Feb payroll report.  Also, a decline in US Jan retail sales added to negative sentiment toward the dollar.

Losses in the dollar were limited on Friday as a slump in equity markets boosted some liquidity demand for the dollar.  Fed comments on Friday were also supportive of the dollar.  Fed Governor Christopher Waller said the Iran war is unlikely to cause sustained inflation, and Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack and Boston Fed President Susan Collins expressed their support for keeping interest rates at their current mildly restrictive level “for some time.”

US Feb nonfarm payrolls unexpectedly fell by -92,000, weaker than expectations of a +55,000 increase and the biggest decline in four months.  The Feb unemployment rate unexpectedly rose +0.1 to 4.4%, showing a weaker labor market than expectations of no change at 4.3%.

US Feb average hourly earnings rose +0.4% m/m and +3.8% y/y, stronger than expectations of +0.3% m/m and +3.7% y/y.

US Jan retail sales fell -0.2% m/m, a smaller decline than expectations of -0.3% m/m.  Jan retail sales ex-autos were unchanged m/m, right on expectations.

US Jan consumer credit rose +$8.05 billion, weaker than expectations of +$12.65 billion.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller said, “Thinking about monetary policy going forward, the Iran war is unlikely to cause sustained inflation.  That’s one reason the Fed doesn’t look at energy prices but looks at core prices, excluding energy, as core is a better predictor of future inflation.”

Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said, “Under my base case, I think policy should be on hold for quite some time as we see evidence that inflation is coming down and the labor market stabilizes further.”

Boston Fed President Susan Collins said, “My baseline features a still-uncertain inflation picture, with continued upside risks. This, combined with recent evidence suggesting a relatively stable labor market, in my view, argues for maintaining policy rates at their current, mildly restrictive levels for some time.”

Swaps markets are discounting the odds at 5% for a -25 bp rate cut at the next policy meeting on March 17-18.

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