
Limited retracement by the greenback after a weak NFP
The US dollar retreated only modestly from its recent highs against various other major currencies despite February’s NFP released on 6 March coming in much lower than expected at negative 92,000. This article summarises the latest American job report and the revisions that came with it then looks briefly at the charts of EURUSD and GBPUSD.
March’s NFP came after an unexpectedly strong release in February but was significantly disappointing, missing the consensus by more than 150,000. December’s figure was also revised down into negative; between then and January, total employment was 70,000 lower than initially reported:
March’s data certainly seem to suggest that last month’s unexpectedly positive release is much more likely to have been an outlier than the beginning of a new trend of a relatively stronger American labour market. However, part of the reason for the latest results being so disappointing was the impact of medical strikes which might not continue for an extended period. Unemployment also rose unexpectedly back to 4.4%:
While still below November’s four-year high of 4.5%, unemployment certainly doesn’t seem to be on a downward trend or likely to start one imminently. This situation in itself might suggest that the Federal Reserve (the Fed) could cut rates faster this year, but the NFP like most other data is likely to play second fiddle to news of the conflict in the Gulf.
Oil’s enormous surge in recent days since the beginning of hostilities and effective shutdown of much of the Gulf’s capacity for exporting means that the threat of surging inflation around the world has risen hugely. Most major central banks including the Fed are likely to pause or delay previously expected plans to cut rates while some such as the European Central Bank (ECB) and Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) are now expected to hike rates in 2026.
A clearly weaker job market in the USA compared with around this time last year is made more difficult by the likely rise in headline inflation over the next few months: the Fed might need to ‘walk the tightrope’ again between keeping rates low enough to avoid throttling the economy too much but not so low that control of inflation is lost. It’s unlikely to see a very large effect from the conflict on 11 March’s American inflation covering February, but in April and ahead the importance of inflation data for forex might be significantly higher.