Confirming you are not from the U.S. or the Philippines

By giving this statement, I explicitly declare and confirm that:
  • I am not a U.S. citizen or resident
  • I am not a resident of the Philippines
  • I do not directly or indirectly own more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest of the U.S. residents and/or do not control U.S. citizens or residents by other means
  • I am not under the direct or indirect ownership of more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest and/or under the control of U.S. citizen or resident exercised by other means
  • I am not affiliated with U.S. citizens or residents in terms of Section 1504(a) of FATCA
  • I am aware of my liability for making a false declaration.
For the purposes of this statement, all U.S. dependent countries and territories are equalled to the main territory of the USA. I accept full responsibility for the accuracy of this declaration and commit to personally address and resolve any claims or issues that may arise from a breach of this statement.
We are dedicated to your privacy and the security of your personal information. We only collect emails to provide special offers and important information about our products and services. By submitting your email address, you agree to receive such letters from us. If you want to unsubscribe or have any questions or concerns, write to our Customer Support.
Octa trading broker
Open trading account
Back

AUD/JPY probes intraday high above 76.50 on upbeat Aussie jobs report

  • AUD/JPY bounces off 76.49 to 76.67 as Australia’s July month employment data beat expectations.
  • Aussie Unemployment Rate drops below 7.8% forecast to 7.5%, Employment Change crosses 40K market consensus with 114.7K figures.
  • Market sentiment sours amid mixed catalysts and a light calendar.
  • US stimulus, coronavirus and trade headlines become the key to watch.

AUD/JPY rises to 76.67, currently around 76.60, following Australia’s welcome prints of the employment data on early Thursday. However, challenges to the risk-tone sentiment seem to question the pair’s upside following the two consecutive days of rise. Additionally, downbeat prints of Australia’s Consumer Inflation Expectations also weigh on the quote.

Read: Australian July Unemployment Rate arrives at 7.5% vs. expected 7.8%

Not only the price-positive Aussie jobs data but receding strength of the coronavirus (COVID-19) wave 2.0 in Victoria also favor the pair bulls. The second most populous state of Australia marks a sustained weakness in pandemic numbers above 400. Though, fears of unknown cases among the healthcare workers, as cited by The Guardian, question optimism.

Elsewhere, US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and US President Donald Trump alleged opposition Democratic Party for the delay in the much-awaited aid package. Though, President Trump’s economic optimism could be cited as restricting the bears. Furthermore, the Trump administration’s showcase of stealth bombers near Vietnam and trade attacks on Europe played their role to confuse the market players.

It’s worth mentioning that the trading sentiment rallied the previous day as US inflation data marked upbeat figures amid policymakers’ claim that they’re far from the recession.

Amid all these catalysts, S&P 500 Futures ease from the six-month high to 3,368 while stocks in Japan gain 1.68% but Australia’s ASX 200 drop 0.27% to 6,105 as we write.

Looking forward, a lack of major data/events will keep traders searching for risk catalysts concerning the US stimulus, Sino-American tussle and COIVD-19 for fresh impulse.

Technical analysis

Although an eight-day-old ascending trend line suggests the pair’s run-up to 77.00, an upward sloping resistance line from July 24, at 76.75, and the previous month’s top near 76.90 can probe the bulls.

 

Clearing data suggests PBOC buying government debt – Bloomberg

According to the latest report carried by Bloomberg on Thursday, the clearing data prompted speculations that the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) may ha
Read more Previous

RBNZ's Yuong Ha says the Bank would like a weaker NZD

weakness in the NZD is being seen onthe comments fro Ha. More to come....
Read more Next