FOREX Fundamental Analysis for EUR/USD on October 9
The US labor market report released on Friday showed that investors need not worry about a soft landing or, even more so, recession. Employment growth in September amounted to 336 thousand jobs, which is the maximum for 8 months. Yes and the August figure was revised upward, with unemployment remaining at historic lows. The NFP was better than expected, so the bullish momentum in EUR/USD is questionable.
Immediately after the release of the report, the yield on 10-year treasuries hit a 16-year high, which raised the probability of a rate hike in November by 25 basis points above 50%, although before Friday analysts mostly predicted the end of the Fed's monetary restriction cycle.
Actually, such yields on debt bonds, according to BNP Paribas, in itself tightens financial conditions without raising the rate. In other words, the market is helping the Fed do its job, so with the growing likelihood of an increase in borrowing costs in November, there may not be one.
Besides, history shows that labor market statistics are quite volatile, and the Fed is unlikely to be guided only by the major NFP chants when making a decision. The central bank should be as cautious as possible to avoid hurting the United States economy. And Jerome Powell understands this very well.
It is not excluded that after the yield of bonds fulfilled the maximum target, investors began to fix dollar purchases, which led to the recovery of EUR/USD.
But this is unlikely to help the European currency, which has plenty of thin spots of its own. The Eurozone economy is still weak, with additional pressure from rising oil prices and Italy's sovereign debt problem. Nomura believes that Brent's hike to the $110 mark will help EUR/USD fall to parity levels
From the point of view of John Murphy's technical analysis, the pair's rebound to 1.0595 allowed opening new sell trades. I believe that investors will soon realize the fundamental background and EUR/USD will return to the downtrend.