The is heading back to record highs as the World Health Organization confirmed 3,100 new cases in China over the last 24 hours. There are also two cruise ships quarantined in Asia, which is stranding more than 5,000 passengers. One would assume reports like these would drive equities and currencies lower but overnight, a Chinese media outlet reported that a research team had found an effective drug to treat people with the virus. Although the World Health Organization came out within hours to refute the existence of effective therapeutics, investors shrugged their warning off in favor of optimism. Eventually the virus will peak and with the world racing to develop a treatment for coronavirus, progress could be announced sooner than later. But we are not at that stage so the rally is tenuous at best.
With that said, U.S. assets and the in particular benefitted from stronger data. accelerated at the start of the year with the index rising to 55.5 from 54.9. ADP (NASDAQ:) also reported the biggest month for in more than 4 years. However, according to the details of non-manufacturing ISM, slowed and the trade deficit widened. Going into Friday's report, this tells us that the odds favor a good but not great report. At the end of the day, the real question is how much it matters. This month's report won't include the impact of coronavirus and it will certainly not affect the central bank's near-term policy plans. Risk is back on and the only question is whether Friday's report supports or eases risk-on flows. For the time being, a move above 110 is in sight.
The best-performing currency today was hands-down the . The worst was the , which closed below 1.10 for the first time in nearly 4 months. Eurozone data was mixed. While and PMIs were revised higher, fell sharply in December. This wasn't a huge surprise considering the weakness previously reported in German and French demand. At the same time, the comments from ECB President Lagarde were not encouraging. She said climate change will affect monetary policy and coronavirus adds a new layer of uncertainty. Considering that the market interpreted the last ECB meeting as more dovish, these worries only adds to her concerns. With 1.10 broken, the next stop for EUR/USD could be 1.0925. also moved lower despite strong PMIs but unlike EUR/USD, GBP/USD is still trading in a range.
The and dollars ended the day unchanged. The loonie should have benefitted from Canada's narrower and higher but the gains in the prevented it from moving higher. Bank of Canada Deputy Governor also said the country escaped secular stagnation but the data may not be capturing all of the changes in technology investment and the coronavirus could hurt Canada through oil prices and travel. While it appears that USD/CAD is nearing a top at 1.33, we may not see a meaningful move until Friday's and employment reports.
As for the , Reserve Bank of Australia Governor spoke last night and he effectively said a is on the table this year. He explained that existing stimulus and long lags prompted their decision to keep interest rates on hold and he felt that 2020 GDP will be largely unaffected by the wildfires but coronavirus is a new uncertainty. While it's too early to know the impact, the spillover could be bigger than SARS. He sees a case for further easing but also warned about the risks of low rates. Meanwhile, the ended the day lower amidst mixed labor data. While the improved significantly, , hourly earnings and the weakened in the fourth quarter. NZD underperformed AUD as a result, driving the pair well above 1.04.