Inflation remains stubbornly low in the Euro-Zone, with neither the core nor the headline figure near the European Central Bank’s +2% medium-term target. At the December ECB policy meeting, President Mario Draghi made clear that no rate hikes are to be expected so long as inflation remains below the central bank’s target and while its asset purchase program is still under way. Incoming inflation figures point to price pressures unchanged at +1.4% y/y in December, down one-tenth of one percent from the reading in November. With that said, one market measure of inflation – the 5-year, 5-year inflation swap forwards – closed 2017 out at a yearly high, suggesting that momentum is building for higher inflation in the Euro-Zone.

01/05 Friday | 13:30 GMT | CAD Net Change in Employment & Unemployment Rate (DEC)

The November Canadian employment report was a stunning surprise, with the economy having added +79.5K jobs and the unemployment rate dropping to fresh cycle lows at 5.9% – a sharp decline from the 6.2% rate seen in October. Yet after the exuberance, it seems that a bit of ‘give back’ is due: economists polled by Bloomberg News suggest that the Canadian economy neither added nor shed jobs in December, and as a result, with labor market participation still rising, the unemployment rate is due to tick higher to 6.0%. Another dramatic print would have stark implications for the timing of the next Bank of Canada rate hike, currently pegged for March 2018 per overnight index swaps.

01/05 Friday | 13:30 GMT | USD Change in Nonfarm Payrolls & Unemployment Rate (DEC)

The main issue for the US Dollar when it comes to the December US Nonfarm Payrolls report is whether or not the US labor market will remain strong enough to justify a more aggressive pace of Fed tightening this year. After all, the Fed has suggested it will hike rates around three times in 2018, whereas rates markets are pricing in one to two hikes (at maximum, depending on the measure used). Heading into this Friday’s data release, current expectations for the data are modest, with the unemployment rate expected to hold at 4.1%, and the headline jobs figure to come in at +188K.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email