Australia’s ANZ job advertisements accelerated from an upgraded 0.7% m/m increase in July to 1.9% in August, hinting at stronger hiring prospects down the line
Commodity prices fell by 2.9% m/m in August due to lower dairy and lamb prices, following earlier 2.6% slump
JPY Pairs

After an early run higher for the bulls, Sterling took a turn to the downside, roughly correlating with the disappointing U.K. Services PMI update on Tuesday. While coming out better-than-expected, this was the first contractionary survey since early 2023, which also pointed out slowing metrics in both employment and input prices conditions.
Merchandise trade deficit with the world fell from a revised -C$4.9B in June to a -C$987M deficit in July
But the bearishness really picked up speed on Wednesday during the Bank of England’s testimony to U.K. lawmakers, most likely driven by comments that further rate hikes may no longer be needed.
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Overlay of NZD vs. Major Currencies Chart by TV
It’s was a mixed close for the New Zealand dollar, which is a bit of an improvement considering the Kiwi spent most of its week in the red.
Household spending slumped further by 5.0% y/y in August instead of improving from earlier 4.2% decline to a 2.4% drop
We also got a much better-than-expected U.S. Services PMI read, once again signaling to the world that the U.S. is pretty resilient while the rest of the world slows. This was confirmed further again on Thursday after a better-than-expected U.S. weekly initial jobless claims update.
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Japan’s Finance Ministry’s Kanda says that “it’s important for currency moves to reflect fundamentals” and that they “won’t rule out any options if speculative moves persist”
Canada Employment Change for August 2023: 39.9K (-8.0K forecast; -6.4K previous); Unemployment Rate was 5.5% (5.7% forecast); Average Hourly Wages: 5.2% y/y (4.8% y/y forecast)
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Euro area services PMI data continued to point to slowing business activity, but that didn’t stop the euro from being a net winner on the week. It’s likely that the risk averse environment was the contributor to the euro’s relative strength, given the lack of major positive headlines from Europe this week.
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S&P Global Services PMI for August: 50.5 vs. 52.3 in July; businesses are starting to see waning post-pandemic economic strength; sees renewed “upward pressure on energy, fuel & transportation costs”
Leading Economic Index: 107.6 (109.2 forecast; 108.8 previous)
The U.S. dollar easily took the crown this week, with several factors likely drawing buyers to the Greenback. First, it was possibly the moves to set the reference rate higher in USD/CNY by the People’s Bank of China and the weak Chinese Services PMI update that sent plenty of traders to the Greenback.
Ivey PMI for August: 53.5 vs. 48.6 previous; Prices Index rose to 66.7 vs. 65.1 previous; Employment Index rose to 54.8 vs. 54.2 in July
The Loonie came in a close second thanks to a strong move higher in oil prices and a surprisingly hot employment update from Canada.
Overlay of JPY vs. Major Currencies Chart by TV
Bundesbank Bank President Joachim Nagel said on Monday that he’d be open to raising reserve requirements after the ECB stopped paying interest on them starting Sept. 20
HCOB Eurozone Services PMI Business Activity Index for August: 47.9 vs. 50.9 in July; The rate of contraction in New Contracts was the strongest in two-and-a-half years; input prices rose at the fastest rate in 3 months
Spain Unemployment Change for August: +0.93% m/m to +24.8K; total unemployed registered at 2.7M (the lowest level since August 2008)
France payroll employment change for Q2 2023: +0.1% q/q as expected vs. +0.3% q/q previous
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Chinese property developer Country Garden Holdings manages to avoid default by paying $22.5 million in coupons but still seeking to extend payments on seven more onshore bonds by three years
HCOB Germany Services PMI for August was significantly weaker at 47.3 vs. 52.3 in July; “Falling workloads and muted business expectations placed the brakes on job creation across the service sector in August”
Current account surplus expanded from 2.35T JPY to 2.77T JPY in July (vs. 2.24T JPY expected) as lower crude oil prices helped reduce imports
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Overlay of CAD vs. Major Currencies Chart by TV