Friday, February 03, 2012

US NonFarm Payroll - Much Higher Risk-On except for European Currencies and Gold

This Friday, February 3rd 2012 at 8:30 EST (13:30 GMT) the montly payroll data from the USA was released. This is basically an indication of the Employment Situation and is the most well known and widely watched piece of economic data known to the market. Almost every market instrument will move based on this data. If there are jobs in the USA then there will be confidence and Americans will have money in the pockets to buy stuff...whether houses from the large stock available or things fabricated in China.

Earlier in the week on Wednesday the ADP data came out slightly lower. This is a smaller sample but it gives an advanced indication of what is likely to happen with the NonFarm Payroll Number.
There are other economic data figures which attempt to gauge the employment situation in the USA. The weekly Initial Jobless Claims for instance has been coming out below 400k since December 2011. This broke the low seen in February 2011 and the number has been consistently at around 360k now. The Challenger Job Cuts was higher however, which indicates more people were laid-off from their jobs. The Employment Component of ISM Manufacturing PMI was also slightly lower, but Consumer Confidence definately has been up. Anyhow despite all these advanced readings on the day there is little you can do to predict what the NonFarm Payroll number will be unless you have special connections or something. This time there was an upward surprise. Here is the data:

US Change in Nonfarm Payrolls
Estimates- Median: +140k Average: +146k Range: +95k to +225k
Actual: +243k Prior: +200k Revised: +203k

US Change in Private Payrolls
Estimates- Median: +160k Average: +162k Range: +110k to +250k
Actual: +257k Prior: +212k Revised: +220k

US Change in Manufacturing Payrolls
Estimates- Median: +12k Average: +14k Range: +9k to +25k
Actual: +50k Prior: +23k Revised: +32k

Unemployment Rates
Estimates- Median: +8.5% Average: +8.5% Range: +8.3% to +8.7%
Actual: +8.3% Prior: +8.5% No Revision

Average Hourly Earning MOM All Emp
Estimates- Median: +0.2% Average: +0.2% Range: 0.0% to +0.3%
Actual: +0.2% Prior: +0.2% Revised: +0.1%

Average Hourly Earning YOY All Emp
Estimates- Median: +1.9% Average: +1.9% Range: +1.8% to +2.0%
Actual: +1.9% Prior: +2.1% No Revision

Average Weekly Hours All Employees
Estimates- Median: 34.4 Average: 34.4 Range: 34.3 to 34.5
Actual: 34.5 Prior: 34.4 Revised: 34.5

Change in Household Employment w/Pop
Actual: 847 Prior: 176 No Revision

Underemployment Rate
Actual: 15.1% Prior: 15.2% No Revision

So where to start. Of course there were some nice moves, however while the commodity currencies forex pairs rallied the european currencies sold off. Gold sold off while Crude rallied. We will start with the Stock Index Futures, these are actually the most reliable to trade on US news in general these days. Here is the 1 minute chart of the Emini S&P 500 Future and the DAX Future:

After the Stock Index futures the CADJPY or another Commodity Currency like Australian dollar or New Zealand versus the Japanese Yen, AUDJPY or NZDJPY. Here is the 10 second chart of the CADJPY:

and this is the 1 minute chart of the CADJPY to show more of the move:

It is always good to keep an eye on the USDJPY, although the moves are not always so many pips. Here is the 10 second chart of the USDJPY:

and a 1 minute chart of the USDJPY to show more of the move:

So now a 30 second chart of the EURUSD will show how it moved down on the release. It did briefly run up about 30 pips but then dropped 120 pips:

In contrast to the AUDUSD which spiked up, pulled back, and kepted rallying. The GBPUSD, USDCHF, USDNOK followed the Euro by weakening against the Dollar, only the Swedish Krona escaped the sell-off in European Currencies. The NZDUSD, USDCAD, USDZAR and Asian Currencies all rallied against the US Dollar much like this Australian Dollar did in this 1 minute chart of AUDUSD:

Also here is the 1 minute chart of Gold. It was whippy initially, basically it lost some of its shine as a safe-haven when better employment in the USA meant risk appetite. Interesting to note shifting correlations, Crude Oil did rally in contrast:

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