Dollar – 2 Reasons Why Friday Is The Big Day

This Friday is a big day for currencies, equities, and Treasuries. It's Congress’ self-imposed deadline for a stimulus package and the scheduled release of non-farm payrolls. Based on the decline in the dollar, investors are worried that job growth will slow and the deadline will pass with no agreement. According to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, there’s light at the end of the tunnel but Democrats and Republicans still can’t agree on topline numbers so there’s probably an 85% chance that Friday will pass with no deal. According to White House Chief of Staff Mr. Meadows, if nothing happens by tomorrow, his optimism will “fall off the cliff exponentially.”

To complicate the scenario, President Trump, frustrated with lack of progress by Congress, said he expects to sign executive orders Friday or Saturday to extend enhanced unemployment benefits, impose a payroll tax holiday, provide eviction protection, and student loan repayment relief. It's unclear if Trump really has the power to make these changes because Congress passes tax laws, not the President. However, it may be within his means to defer taxes and extend deadlines but not suspend them so employers may continue to collect taxes. He could also re-appropriate unused funds allocated to the CARES Act to extend unemployment benefits and as Pelosi said, Trump may have to power to extend eviction moratorium on his own. Still, all of these questions worry investors and give them reasons to sell dollars.

Non-farm payrolls is also a risk which is why the dollar traded lower against most of the major currencies today. Economists are looking for non-farm payrolls to rise by 1.48 million in July, which is a fraction of the increase they saw in June but the worry is that companies added even fewer workers to payrolls last month. Not only did some of the most populous US states tightened restrictions last month as virus cases hit record highs, but other economic measures reinforce the fear that job growth slowed.

The employment component of services ISM contracted at a faster pace, Challenger reported a 576% increase in layoffs, ADP reported that US companies added only 167K and consumer confidence fell across the board. Jobless claims were better but as we’ve long learned, fewer jobless claims does not translate into more hiring. If these indicators are right and job growth falls short of expectations, the dollar could tank, especially if it's accompanied by a weaker unemployment rate or average hourly earnings. Additionally, depending upon what happens with the stimulus bill and Trump’s executive orders, Friday could be a very ugly day for the dollar.

Arguments in favor of weaker payrolls

1. Employment Component of services ISM drops to 42.1 from 43.1
2. Challenger Reports 576.1% increase in layoffs, up from 305.5%
3. ADP reports 167K vs. 4.3 million
4. Consumer Confidence index drops to 92.6 from 98.3
5. University of Michigan reports lower confidence as well

Arguments in favor of stronger payrolls

1. 4 week moving average jobless Claims at 1.337M vs. 1.435M previous
2. Continuing Claims at 16.1 million vs. 17.7 million
3. Employment Component of manufacturing ISM contracts as slower pace 44.3 vs 42.1

With that said, there are also a number of scenarios where the dollar could rise – for example, if payrolls beats the low forecast or average hourly earnings improves, Congress reaches a deal or the market seems pleased with Trump’s executive orders. Aside from NFPs, labor market numbers will also be released from Canada and like the US, slower job growth is expected. Investors should keep an eye on Asian currencies with the release of PMI services from Australia, the RBA’s monetary policy statement and Chinese trade numbers.

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Backyard Hiker 5 years ago Member's comment

And now Trump wants his head added to Mount Rushmore too!

Ethan M. Hunt 5 years ago Member's comment

I thought it was hilarious how he's claimed over 150 times that he signed the Veteran's Choice Program into law, something presidents have failed to do for 50 years. Even though Obama was the one who signed it into law in 2014! When he was called on his lie by reporters, he walked out of his own press conference!

edition.cnn.com/.../index.html

Roger Keats 5 years ago Member's comment

Just a freakin sh*t show

Susan Miller 5 years ago Member's comment

Yes, and as I predicted below Trump did exactly as I feared. Was able to march in as the hero saying he will give the money flowing to Americans because Congress wouldn't or couldn't. He even went so far as to say buy votes by saying if he was re-elected, people wouldn't have to pay their taxes. It's a sad day for America.

Bill Johnson 5 years ago Member's comment

Yes, it is.

Danny Straus 5 years ago Member's comment

"President Trump, frustrated with lack of progress by Congress, said he expects to sign executive orders Friday or Saturday to extend enhanced unemployment benefits, impose a payroll tax holiday, provide eviction protection, and student loan repayment relief."

Hot damn! I am not a Trump supporter but if he can get me my extra $600 per month and get rid of my student loans, he'll have my vote! Meanwhile none of those fat, rich congressman will. They only care about themselves.

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Thanks for the update, I appreciate the info.

Susan Miller 5 years ago Member's comment

I am very frustrated with Congress that they can't seem to put politics aside and offer economic relief. If they can't stop bickering, it creates a dangerous precedent where the president will be in a position to appear to be the hero of the people, and possibly even get elected despite his dreadful handling of the pandemic and his low approval ratings.

Even if Trump does not have the authority to institute these changes, if he tries and is blocked by Congress, the people will flock to support him and throw their ire at Congress and create a situation where he "wins" without actually doing anything. And perhaps will create the catalyst for what Trump has wanted all along - popular support to give the president even more uncontested power.

Boaz Berkowitz 5 years ago Contributor's comment

A sobering scenario. @[Roger Keats](user:10012).

Adam Reynolds 5 years ago Member's comment

I have to agree with @[Roger Keats](user:10012) on this one!

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Yes, if people read the Constitution and take the time to understand it, this power grab by the President which clearly undermines states rights, separation of powers, and social security. True Conservative Republicans should be outraged and demand a Supreme court decision on this. In the future any president could use the same Presidential decree to strip all revenue from the states and allocate all your tax money to anything the President wants such as taking the whole budget and giving it all to whomever they want. This is horrific beyond belief if used as a precedent for Executive Power which it is. Dictatorship can easily be established from here. The founding father easily understood this and is why the created the Constitution as is.

Angry Old Lady 5 years ago Member's comment

I don't think #Trump cares much for the constitution. Or the bible for that matter. His bible is "The Art of the Deal."

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

It is the Senate that is responsible for not passing it, debating it early on, and making a deal. The Republicans are Trump's party so there is no real way to pass it or solve it except by extending the existing benefits which Republicans are angry about Americans in need getting money. Don't expect anything.

Susan Miller 5 years ago Member's comment

I could easily see a scenario where the Republicans simply refuse to agree to give Trump the chance to swoop in and appear to be the hero. Big picture will be the November election and if it was held today, Trump would lose. By a lot. But much can still happen before then.

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Sadly one is never a hero if you save something from your own party. Thus like Trump said with Covid, expect things to get worse before they get better.

Angry Old Lady 5 years ago Member's comment

Well as expected many of my friends are hailing him as a hero for being able to find the perfect compromise of $400 and offered to suspend taxes. I mean come on, Republicans wouldn't budge at $200, Dems wouldn't budge at $600. Was it so hard to compromise at $400? I think this was all engineered by the Republicans so Trump could "Save the day".

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Sadly it's a deal Trump could sacrifice the Constitution and separation of powers for a deal no one wants, now all he has to do is never have an election and get rid of the Constitutional succession clause and he then can declare the US a Dictatorship. These are dangerous times. You must consider evil endgames like these.

The Constitution can't save the Republic if no one opposes its obvious subversion.

David M. Green 5 years ago Member's comment

It seems the president maybe trying to sabotage the postal system before the election as well. He installed a loyalist with zero postal experience who immediately wants to cut jobs and instituted a hiring freeze. That will cause massive delays in counting ballots and leaves the door for ballots to be easily "lost." It is very very troubling:

edition.cnn.com/.../index.html

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Anyone politicizing the Post Office especially during elections is trouble.

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

LOL with delaying the outcome. If his term ends with no replacement, the next in succession is the Speaker of the House. Nancy Pelosi becomes the Interim President. The Constitution doesn't allow the current President to stay in office past his tenure.

David M. Green 5 years ago Member's comment

And what if the election gets postponed or simply is delayed due to moves he's making to sabotage USPS before the ballots can be tallied?

Moon Kil Woong 5 years ago Contributor's comment

Likely Nancy Pelosi becomes interim President until one is decided. As stated the President can not Constitutionally continue his term past his expiration date. Hopefully this will not happen.

Maxwell E. Cramer 5 years ago Member's comment

What scares me is that the Trump can create enough doubt on a number of fronts - election fraud, counting ballot delays and inaccuracies, accusations of a fixed election, or a fake media against him, etc. This could lead to a constitutional crises where he refuses to give up power. Add to that his promise to tie economic relief for millions of Americans to his winning could cause him to have enough popular support that it could literally lead to a civil war.

Stock Fan 5 years ago Member's comment

That sounds a bit extreme, don't you think?

Maxwell E. Cramer 5 years ago Member's comment

Seriously? He told people to take up arms against their democratically elected mayors and governors to "liberate" their cities and states for simply asking them to wear masks and stay home for their own safety from COVID-19.

You think he wouldn't do the same and more to stay in power? His ego feeds on power and he's used the position to enrich himself and his holdings. He won't give up so easily. Mark my words. Scary times are ahead.

Flat Broke 5 years ago Member's comment

Can his promise to suspend taxes if people vote for him even be legal? I'd be tempted to vote for him myself if it gets me more $$. But I don't think he can keep his promise. Certainly the government can't afford to do that - how they spend trillions on stimulus money and not take in money from income tax.