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EUR/USD moves little after posting modest losses in the previous day, hovering around 1.1600 during the Asian hours on Wednesday. The currency pair may experience further depreciation as the US Dollar (USD) gains ground due to increased risk aversion stemming from the Middle East conflict.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC), China's central bank, announced to leave its Loan Prime Rates (LPRs) unchanged on Wednesday. The one-year and five-year LPRs were at 3.00% and 3.50%, respectively.
The USD/JPY pair trades on a flat note around 159.05 during the early Asian session on Wednesday. The potential upside for the pair might be limited amid intervention fears from Japanese authorities. Traders continue to digest the latest headlines on US talks with Iran to end the war.
Solana futures funding turned negative as demand for SOL and its associated decentralized exchanges fell. Will traders buy the dip or is $78 next?
Australia's April jobs data, due Thursday, is expected to show employment rising around 10k-15k with unemployment steady at 4.3%, though Easter distortions and Middle East risks cloud the outlook.Summary: The following draws on notes from Westpac, Commonwealth Bank of Australia and a Reuters market analysis:Both Westpac and CBA expect a softer April employment print after recent strong momentum, with Westpac forecasting a gain of 10,000 jobs and CBA forecasting 15,000, down from March's 17,900Both banks expect the unemployment rate to hold at 4.3% and the participation rate steady at 66.8%, with CBA noting the unemployment rate would remain unchanged due to roundingWestpac flagged a seasonal distortion risk: the April survey window completely overlaps Easter, including Good Friday and Easter Monday, which could over-emphasise weakness in the headline figureThe March result was solid in aggregate but the underlying detail was stronger still, with full-time employment surging 52,500 and hours worked rising 0.5%, a mix the RBA will have notedThe RBA's most immediate concern remains inflation rather than labour market conditions, meaning a modest employment miss is unlikely to shift the policy calculus materially, though a significant deterioration would be harder to dismissA weak print, particularly a rise in unemployment toward 4.4% to 4.5% or a decline in full-time jobs and hours worked, could book-end an extended period of AUD strength and trigger a significant technical reversalAustralia's April labour force data, due Thursday, will be scrutinised for signs of whether the country's remarkably resilient jobs market is beginning to buckle under the weight of three consecutive RBA rate hikes and the mounting economic spillover from the Middle East conflict.Analysts at Westpac and Commonwealth Bank of Australia both expect a modestly softer headline number following a run of strong results. Westpac is pencilling in employment growth of 10,000, while CBA forecasts a gain of 15,000, both below March's 17,900. Neither bank expects a move in the unemployment rate, which is seen holding at 4.3%, or in the participation rate, forecast steady at 66.8%.The March result was solid on the surface but notably stronger beneath it, with full-time employment surging 52,500 and hours worked rising 0.5%, an underlying mix that has given the RBA little reason to soften its hawkish bias. The central bank still characterises labour conditions as somewhat tight, and with underlying inflation remaining above target and capacity pressures persisting into 2026, a genuinely weak jobs number would be needed to shift the policy calculus.Westpac has flagged a specific seasonal complication for this month's survey. The April reference period completely overlaps both Good Friday and Easter Monday, a timing abnormality that could artificially depress the headline employment figure and complicate interpretation. Analysts caution that a soft number driven by lower participation rather than genuine labour market deterioration may be dismissed by markets and the RBA alike.The stakes for AUD are considerable. A firm result would reinforce expectations for continued tightening and position the currency to challenge four-year highs around 0.7283. A weak print, in particular one showing rising unemployment, falling full-time employment or declining hours worked, would hit rate hike pricing hard and risk triggering a significant reversal of the AUD rally that has run since April 2025, with limited technical support visible ahead of the 0.6830 to 0.6835 zone.-----The April employment print carries outsized significance for both AUD/USD and RBA rate expectations. A strong result would reinforce the case for continued tightening after three consecutive quarter-point hikes and empower AUD to challenge four-year highs near 0.7283. A soft outcome, particularly if unemployment rises toward 4.4% to 4.5% or full-time employment falls, would materially dent rate hike expectation
US President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran in “two or three days” as part of the push for a deal to end the war, after he said he had just called off a US attack, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday.
Federal Reserve (Fed) Bank of Philadelphia President Anna Paulson said that she favored leaving interest rates unchanged and conditioned lower borrowing costs on making sustained progress on inflation, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday.
Gold price (XAU/USD) faces some selling pressure near $4,480 during the early Asian session on Wednesday. The precious metal drops to its lowest since March 30 as persistent inflation fears keep interest rate hike expectations and Treasury yields high.
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