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Markets Hold Losses as “Bad News is Bad News” Dynamic Returns

Risk appetite remains weaker across the financial markets this morning after a slew of data releases pointed to a slowdown in the world’s largest economy. Equity futures are setting up for more selling at the open, commodity prices are down, and ten-year Treasury yields are back to levels last hit in September. The Canadian dollar is experiencing a bout of round-number bias, clinging to the 1.35 mark after dropping nearly a cent during yesterday’s trading session. According to the latest numbers published yesterday, US retail sales fell a seasonally-adjusted 1.1 percent in December from the prior month, and were revised...

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New Year, New (Thinner) Dollar

The greenback appears to be following its New Year resolutions rather well, on course to end the week at a lower weight after investors received confirmation of easing price pressures in the United States and evidence of surprising resilience in other major trading blocs. The trade-weighted dollar is down almost 1.5 percent this week, and has fallen more than ten percent from its September highs. Yesterday’s inflation numbers were almost precisely aligned with median economist forecasts, but markets reacted nonetheless. Yields jumped and the dollar spiked higher in the moments after the release, and then round-tripped lower less half an...

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Anticipation Builds Ahead of Critical US Inflation Report

Markets are on high alert ahead of what might be the post-pandemic world’s most consequential economic data release: the US consumer price index. Consensus estimates suggest headline prices fell 0.1 percent month-over-month in December, decelerating to 6.5 percent annualized from 7.1 in the month prior. Excluding food and energy, prices are expected to rise 0.3 and 5.7 percent. The risk of a violent adjustment in foreign exchange markets is real: an above- or below-consensus print could trigger a reappraisal of the odds on a 50 basis point hike at the Federal Reserve’s February meeting, and unleash sharp short-term moves in...

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Markets Go Eerily Quiet As Data Calendar Calms

Currency markets are treading water this morning, with most majors turning in a mixed performance against the dollar ahead of Thursday’s all-important US inflation print. Treasury yields are moving in almost-imperceptible ranges, equity bourses are mostly flat, and the commodities complex is advancing incrementally as the session proceeds. The Canadian dollar is holding steady, but appears to be building a foothold that could support gains later in the week if US price growth subsides in line with expectations. Japan’s yen is trading on a more solid footing after Tokyo consumer prices jumped 4 percent year-over-year in December, topping market forecasts...

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Dollar rises as markets brace for strong jobs number

The dollar is climbing against all of its major rivals as traders buy insurance against another strong jobs report. Economists think US non-farm payrolls, out at 8:30, will rise by 200,000 in December, with the unemployment rate holding at 3.7 percent. The “whisper number” on Wall Street appears closely aligned, with most market participants prepared for a print between 150,000 and 250,000 that keeps the Federal Reserve on a tightening trajectory – suggesting that a buy-the-rumour, sell-the-news dynamic could hit the greenback in the minutes after the release. The Canadian dollar remains on a defensive footing even as Statistics Canada...

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