本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛USDCAD (1.1970) The USD is broadly weaker against its G10 peers following yesterday’s solid gains, although it is recovering some losses as we go to press. Asian equity markets finished either well off their intraday lows or with respectable gains (the Nikkei fell 3½%, the Kospi rose 3.9%), while most European bourses are in positive territory and S&P futures are pointing to a higher open in the United States. Markets may be taking a breather following two days of remorseless selling (the 2-day loss in US equities was the worst since 1987), although the gains have not gotten out of hand ahead of today’s much-feared US nonfarm payrolls report. The market has had to absorb plenty of bad news in recent days, with US retailers posting dismal October results yesterday and the IMF slashing its global GDP forecasts less than a month after publishing its latest World Economic Outlook. The IMF noted that “prospects for global growth have deteriorated over the past month” and that output in the advanced economies was expected to contract on a full-year basis for the first time in the post-war period (the Fund also cut its 2009 crude oil forecast from $100/barrel to $68). • Canada’s employment numbers just came out, and surprised higher once again with a 10K increase. However, USDCAD hasn’t moved too much, perhaps because traders have discounted the sustainability of the performance. The details reveal that most of the hiring was in the public sector (mainly due to the Federal election) and education. The more cyclical goods-producing sector lost 27K jobs, while accommodation and food services – typically a casualty of weak growth – lost 27K jobs. Today will of course be all about US nonfarm payrolls. Economists have been busy slashing their estimates in the wake of weak data in general and this week’s ISM and ADP employment measures in particular. The current consensus is for a 200K decline, but it’s not hard to imaging something even worse (Scotia Economics expects a 250K loss). Markets will thus probably rejoice anything better than -200K considering where the whisper estimates must lie; however, it is difficult to imagine this will last long (note that continuous jobless claims stand at their highest level since 1983).更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net