4 minute read

With macro data in limbo, investors hold steady

No jobs report, no conviction. Euro’s sugar high fades. Under pressure.

Avatar of George VesseyAvatar of Antonio RuggieroAvatar of Kevin Ford

Written by: George VesseyAntonio RuggieroKevin Ford
The Market Insights Team



USD: No jobs report, no conviction

George Vessey

Markets are sending mixed signals. U.S. and European equities continue to climb, but beneath the surface, investor positioning suggests caution is building. The outperformance of traditional safe havens – Gold, Treasuries, and the Japanese yen – reflects persistent concern over political gridlock and its potential spillover effects. Meanwhile, amidst the US data blackout and the confusing signals on the labour market, the US dollar might find a floor.

With the official September jobs report delayed by the government shutdown, investors have turned to alternative data sources to gauge labour market health. Revelio Labs reported a rise in employment, offering a more comprehensive snapshot by including both public and private sectors. This contrasted with ADP’s weaker print, which was partly skewed by a methodological recalibration.

Labour market signals remain murky. Unemployment is edging higher, wage growth is steady, and hiring momentum appears to be stalling. Challenger data showed a sharp drop in job cut announcements -suggesting employers aren’t rushing to downsize – but hiring plans also softened, reinforcing the view of a “no-hire, no-fire” environment.

Chart of US challenger jobs showing layoffs remain low

Overall, the labour market looks fragile but not yet broken. The key risk is that prolonged political dysfunction could trigger broader layoffs, especially if fiscal uncertainty deepens. For now, however, the lack of clear deterioration in employment data may limit expectations for aggressive Fed easing. That dynamic could help the U.S. dollar find a near-term floor, even as broader sentiment remains cautious.

That being said, history offers little comfort – during the last three shutdowns (2013, early 2018, and late 2018–2019), the dollar drifted lower through the impasse.

EUR: Euro’s sugar high fades

Antonio Ruggiero

This week challenged the divergent ECB–Fed policy paths, with contrasting signals from both sides. ECB President Christine Lagarde sounded more dovish than expected, while Dallas Federal Reserve President Lorie Logan cautioned that although the Fed’s recent rate cut helped mitigate labour market risks, further easing could be premature.

Adding to the mix, the privately-owned Challenger report showed an improvement in layoff intentions for September compared to August. Amid shutdown silence, and with little else concrete to trade on, these factors combined to trigger an outsized market reaction, with EUR/USD tumbling over 0.3% at some point during the session.

Technically, the pair remains supported around the $1.17 level, which looks more realistic than $1.18 for now, given the ever-cautious Fed. EUR/USD is still in the green week-to-date, having steadily risen until yesterday’s drop. Yet the weekly performance has highlighted signs of upside exhaustion, with daily price action showing longer upper wicks this week compared to previous sessions. After multiple failed attempts to break resistance at $1.1750, it took the often-overlooked Challenger report to trigger a pullback.

Overall, this week’s price action began with an artificial euro rally, driven by shutdown risks that weighed on the dollar. But organically, there was little to support the euro, and after repeated resistance tests, the pullback was inevitable.

Chart of EURUSD risk reversals showing sentiment is flat in H2.

CAD: Under pressure

Kevin Ford

Lacking clear, compelling catalysts, the Canadian Dollar remains decidedly under pressure, continuing its struggle. Despite a broadly softer U.S. dollar, the USD/CAD pair has spent the week confined to a tight, narrow range between 1.389 and 1.395, consolidating after last week’s break above 1.39.

The CAD’s weakness, however, is a deeper, year-to-date trend; it has exhibited marked underperformance relative to its G10 counterparts, with the decline being most pronounced against key European currencies. This persistent struggle has driven several major currency pairs to notable valuation extremes: EUR/CAD is trading at its highest level since 2009, CHF/CAD has soared to an all-time high, and SEK/CAD stands at its strongest level since 2021. While the Loonie has managed a marginal gain of approximately 3% against the U.S. dollar this year, it nonetheless holds the position of the worst-performing G10 currency on a year-to-date basis.

The upward momentum in the USD/CAD pair has temporarily stalled, yet it critically continues to hold above the 1.39 threshold, with the upcoming Canadian employment report next Friday standing as the week’s most pivotal data release, poised to significantly shape market expectations for the Bank of Canada’s monetary policy direction ahead of its crucial October 29th decision.

Loonie approaches the 1.40s, last seen 6 months ago

Japanese yen is top performer this week

Table: Currency trends, trading ranges and technical indicators

Key global risk events (NO NFP report today due to government shutdown)

Calendar: September 29 – October 3

Weekly global macro events

All times are in EST

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*The FX rates published are provided by Convera’s Market Insights team for research purposes only. The rates have a unique source and may not align to any live exchange rates quoted on other sites. They are not an indication of actual buy/sell rates, or a financial offer.

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