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Dollar boost despite poor jobs outlook

The dollar has soared US2¢, hitting its highest level since late June despite further signs of a cooling economy with the jobless rate hitting a four-year-high.
By · 12 Jul 2013
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12 Jul 2013
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The dollar has soared US2¢, hitting its highest level since late June despite further signs of a cooling economy with the jobless rate hitting a four-year-high.

The local currency was trading below US91¢ on Thursday morning, but lifted to above US93¢ later in the day as the US dollar rallied across the board after Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke committed to an easy monetary policy stance.

The dollar was buying US92.34¢ late Thursday.

The sharp lift against the US dollar was not hampered by Bureau of Statistics data on Thursday showing a rise in the Australian unemployment rate by 0.1 per cent to 5.7 per cent.

It reflected the currency's sensitivity to international factors, but also showed that local markets had already expected a weaker jobs report amid the recent spate of soft economic data pointing to fewer job ads and weak business conditions. "The unemployment rate has been on a clear, gradual rising trend over the last year," Nomura economists Charles St-Arnaud and Martin Whetton said.

"It is notable that in April 2012 it was only 5 per cent, confirming a sharp deterioration of the labour market over that period."

While economists said the higher jobless rate cemented the case for an August cash rate cut, financial markets had not fully priced in a further easing in monetary policy as they were awaiting second-quarter inflation figures, which will be released on July 24.

Markets were pricing in a 64 per cent chance of a 25 basis cut next month, the highest odds possible without the key data, UBS interest rate strategist Andrew Lilley said.

"As a general rule, if a cut is more than two-thirds priced, it's about 90 per cent likely to happen," Mr Lilley said.

"The economic outlook for Australia is looking weak enough for a cut in the demand sense. We're just looking for some further weakness in the price data to get confirmation of that, which would kickstart the RBA back into gear."

Although the economy added 10,400 new jobs in June, the positions came from part-time employment, which rose by 14,800 as full-time employment dropped by 4400. The full-time unemployment rate lifted to 6.1 per cent, the highest since the financial crisis.

Moody's Analytics associate economist Katrina Ell said business caution, as reflected in ANZ's job ads series and NAB's business survey this week, had seen them hold back on adding staff, while favouring part-time positions.

The latest jobless figures were also catching up with Australia's below-trend economic growth and its struggles as it moves away from mining-led growth as resources investment peaks.

"There's still a big structural adjustment task going on and those numbers suggest that the economy is still struggling with that task," National Australia Bank's head of Australian economics, Rob Brooker, said.

The state-by-state breakdown of the unemployment rate reflected the shift away from mining, Deutsche Bank senior economist Phil O'Donaghoe said, highlighting the change between services-oriented NSW and mining-dependent Western Australia.

NSW recorded a 2.3 per cent employment growth in the year to June, outstripping the 1.5 per cent growth in WA. Queensland, another mining state, only reported an increase of 0.4 per cent over the year. Victoria's employment growth came in at 1 per cent.

But analysts said a rise in the national participation rate by 0.1 per cent to 65.3 per cent was encouraging, and that the greater number of jobs created this year compared with last year meant the economy was not in dire straits.

"Taking a step back from the monthly detail, in the past six months there have been more than 17,500 jobs created each month, up from a rise of more than 9000 jobs each month in the second half of 2012," HSBC chief economist for Australia Paul Bloxham said.

Economists have said the rising population meant the economy needed to add 17,000 jobs a month, with participation unchanged, for the jobless rate to remain stable.
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Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…

The Aussie rose because the US dollar strengthened after Fed chairman Ben Bernanke signalled an easy monetary policy stance, pushing currencies around the world. The article says the currency’s move reflected its sensitivity to international factors and that local markets had already expected a softer jobs report, so the higher unemployment rate didn’t stop the rally.

The article reports the Australian dollar was trading below US$0.91 on Thursday morning, then lifted to above US$0.93 later in the day, and was buying US$0.9234 late Thursday.

June added 10,400 new jobs overall, but that came from a 14,800 rise in part‑time employment while full‑time employment fell by 4,400. The full‑time unemployment rate rose to 6.1%, the highest since the financial crisis.

Economists in the article said the higher jobless rate strengthened the case for an August cash rate cut. Markets were pricing a 64% chance of a 25 basis point cut next month, according to UBS interest rate strategist Andrew Lilley, but many were waiting for second‑quarter inflation figures due July 24 before fully pricing further easing.

Analysts said the figures are consistent with below‑trend growth and the economy’s transition away from mining investment. Deutsche Bank’s Phil O'Donaghoe highlighted a state split — services‑oriented NSW recorded 2.3% employment growth while mining‑dependent Western Australia grew 1.5%, reflecting that structural shift.

Nomura economists noted a clear, gradual rise in unemployment over the past year (it was 5% in April 2012), and Moody’s Analytics’ Katrina Ell said businesses are cautious, favouring part‑time hires and holding back on adding staff amid weaker job ads and poor business conditions.

There are some positives: the national participation rate rose 0.1 percentage point to 65.3%, and HSBC’s Paul Bloxham pointed out that in the past six months the economy has been creating more than 17,500 jobs per month (up from about 9,000 per month in the second half of 2012). Those trends suggest the situation isn’t dire, though unemployment is rising and the jobs mix is shifting toward part‑time work.

Investors should watch three things highlighted in the article: currency volatility driven by international central‑bank signals (the AUD moved with the US dollar rally), the RBA’s likely response to rising unemployment (markets were pricing a possible rate cut), and upcoming second‑quarter inflation data (due July 24) that many analysts said could confirm whether further easing is likely.