Strong Payrolls Will Force Dollar Bears to Reconsider

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Non-farm payrolls blew away even the best estimates by economists, driving the dollar sharply higher against all of the major currencies. No one including ourselves expected such a hot number. We have previous said that in order for the dollar to stage a long term recovery, U.S. growth needs to blow away expectations and the latest NFP numbers did just that. With job losses falling by only 11k last month, the U.S. economy is at the verge of returning to positive job growth. Based upon the consumer confidence numbers, the ADP report and the employment component of the ISM reports, it is hard to believe the accuracy of the latest non-farm payrolls figures. However the numbers provided are the only numbers that we have at hand and revisions will not be released until next month. Therefore taking the report at face value, the massive improvement in the labor market should create a medium term bottom in the U.S. dollar as long as risk appetite does not gain control of the currency market.

The latest non-farm payrolls figures suggests that the U.S. economy is not doing nearly as bad as everyone have feared. Many had assumed that the sheer magnitude of the recession would require a more disenchanting path of unemployment, signs that it is subsiding could indicate that the recovery will be more brisk and robust than previously thought. The drop in the unemployment rate from 10.2 to 10.0 percent suggests that joblessness may have finally peaked and the price action in the dollar reflects traders repositioning for stronger U.S. growth in 2010. Given that the Fed has never raised interest rates before a peak in the unemployment rate, the decline in November gives the Fed a stronger reason to speed up their timetable for an exit. The average weekly hours and wage data indicate that companies are forcing employees to work longer hours for an incrementally smaller increase in pay but this is not enough to erase the positive tone of the data. In our non-farm payrolls preview, we talked abuot how it typically takes an average of 2.27 months for job growth to return after a recession. Even though the official end of the recession is still debatable, if we use Bernanke’s estimates of a September estimate as a rough guide, then the U.S. economy is on track to return to positive job growth in December.

However, with the good news and excitement aside, the next question that comes to our minds is what this means for the Federal Reserve and its doctrine of keeping rates low for an extended time. Up until this point, no respectable economist would consider that rates would move anywhere until the second quarter at the earliest. In fact, the Fed has committed to little in terms of unwinding extraordinary measures, having only terminated the Treasury purchases in October. However, if a continued easing in unemployment indicates that we have indeed past the peak, history has shown that the Fed is inclined to start raising rates. Typically, the trough in employment is used as a barometer of when the Fed feels comfortable with draining excess money from the system. It remains to be seen how the Fed will react and a hike still seems months in the future, but today’s release definitely brings new possibilities to the table.

Comments (12)

hsbc
December 04, 2009 at 09:51 AM ET
any idea why gbp is so strong?
klien
December 04, 2009 at 11:21 AM ET
Corporate year end flow
alexjbrandt
December 04, 2009 at 09:54 AM ET
I myself was blown away with the report. I thought someone had done a typo, then thought maybe someone miscalculated the numbers. I am still skeptical that the US economy lost 11k jobs when the previous month we lost 190k and companies last month were still handing out pink slips. Where did the hiring take place?
fuji
December 04, 2009 at 10:02 AM ET
retail sector hiring for the Holiday season? imo.
klien
December 04, 2009 at 11:22 AM ET
lots of part time demand
riyazz009
December 04, 2009 at 10:43 AM ET
do you think that once this aura of NFP lays down then carry will take the front seat again and usd is again short may be next week??
klien
December 04, 2009 at 11:22 AM ET
I think that this move has continuation
myforexjourney
December 04, 2009 at 10:45 AM ET
Remember to all the infrastructure jobs from the stimulus.
Doobp
December 04, 2009 at 12:34 PM ET
haha.. hey guys.. add another 80k. they cheated.
Doobp
December 04, 2009 at 12:41 PM ET
oh ya kathy, what it means by unadjusted figure? i read that the unadjusted figure for NOV was additional 80k.
LoopyLoo
December 06, 2009 at 07:28 AM ET
Hmmmmmm! Something does not sit right with these figures. Do you think these figures could ever be massaged for effect? And why have they caused such a stunning effect on the markets!
jet
December 06, 2009 at 08:25 PM ET
first of all US NFP: Gains in the service sector (+58K) and education/health (+40K) helped offset declines in manufacturing(-41K), construction(-27K). AND yes partime hires TOO let us not ignore the real good news because of our bias .

secondly "no respectable economist would consider that rates would move anywhere until the second quarter at the earliest." that may be why they are economists and not TRADERS

and thirdly there is obviously a point when you can no longer lay off many more people - once companies are operating on skeleton staffs the only way to lose more jobs is to go out of business

this is a clear sign of the beginning of the end - not an end by any means but a begining to the end

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Kathy Lien began her FX trading career 10 years ago at J.P. Morgan Chase. After graduating New York University’s Leonard Stern School of Business at the age of 18, Kathy joined the bank's interbank FX trading desk and eventually moved to the cross markets proprietary trading desk. In the interbank market, her ability to create solid fundamental and technical analysis from the myriad of information on the market helped her trade forex spot and options. Her experience eventually led her to be chief strategist at Daily FX where she worked until she joined GFT in 2008.

With her knowledge of forex, as well as her experience trading other products, such as interest rate derivates, bonds, equities, and futures, Lien has built a reputation as an international currency analyst. She is frequently quoted on CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox Business and Reuters. Lien has also written for publications like Active Trader, Futures, and SFO magazine. She is the author of the newly updated Day Trading the Currency Market: Technical and Fundamental Strategies to Profit from Market Moves, and the co-author of Millionaire Traders: How Everyday People Are Beating Wall Street at Its Own Game with Boris Schlossberg.

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