At a look:
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AUD strengthened after strong Australian employment knowledge
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Unemployment fell for a fourth straight month; hours labored rose 0.6%
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RBA March hike expectations firmed, although not locked in
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Japan equipment orders surged 19% m/m, supporting capex outlook
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Iran strike rumours continued
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Korea’s KOSPI hit a report excessive
The Australian greenback was the standout mover throughout the session, gaining floor as markets leaned additional towards the potential of a Reserve Financial institution of Australia charge hike at its March 16–17 assembly following one other agency labour market report.
Headline employment rose modestly, however the underlying element bolstered the message of a still-tight labour market. The variety of unemployed fell for a fourth consecutive month, a sequence final seen within the 4 months instantly previous the RBA’s Could 2022 rate-hike cycle. Hours labored additionally climbed 0.6% in January, pointing to strong labour demand.
The information don’t lock in a March transfer, however they preserve the RBA’s tightening bias intact. AUD/USD climbed from round 0.7040 to simply above 0.7070 earlier than retracing a very good portion of the transfer later within the session.
USD/JPY edged greater in comparatively mild information move. Nevertheless, Japanese knowledge delivered a standout shock, with core equipment orders leaping greater than 19% month-on-month in December, far exceeding expectations for a 4.5% rise. The capex indicator helps the Financial institution of Japan’s outlook for continued financial growth, at the same time as fiscal and forex dynamics stay in focus.
Elsewhere, geopolitical chatter continued round the potential of a US strike on Iran, with stories suggesting this weekend stays into consideration. The headlines added a layer of warning to broader danger sentiment.
In fairness markets, South Korea’s KOSPI surged to a report excessive as buying and selling resumed following a three-day vacation. Mainland China and Hong Kong markets remained closed, retaining regional liquidity thinner than common.
