Equities were in a more buoyant mood this week amid optimism that the US and Iran were negotiating an off-ramp to the Middle East conflict. However, President Trump's address dashed hopes of any near-term shift, pushing front-month crude to fresh highs by the weekend at $112/bbl. Still, risk sentiment held up, sending the USD softer across the major pairs, while bond yields declined.
US nonfarm payrolls rose by 178k in March, rebounding strongly above consensus (65k) after adverse weather and industrial action drove a 133k decline in February. The unemployment rate fell from 4.4% to 4.3%, though participation (61.9%) was down slightly on the prior month. Meanwhile, the wage component showed no concerns for inflation, easing to 3.5% yr from 3.8%. The report came on the back of other data points that were consistent with strength in the US economy ahead of the conflict. Retail sales lifted 0.6%m/m in February (0.5% expected) and the control group - a better gauge of the underlying strength in spending - rose by 0.5%m/m (vs 0.3%). The ISM manufacturing index rose to 52.7 in March, indicating activity in the sector was expanding at its fastest pace since mid-2022; however, the prices paid sub index accelerated (+7.8) reflecting the impact of surging oil prices.
Euro area inflation surprised slightly to the downside in March, with the full effects from the energy shock yet to show. Headline inflation rose to 2.5%yr (vs 2.7% expected) from 1.9% in February, while the core rate eased to 2.3%yr against consensus for an unchanged 2.4% pace. ECB officials over the past week left the door open to raising rates but emphasised the duration of the shock and its second-round effects on prices and wages were key factors. A longer and more sustained shock would start to shift the outlook towards the more adverse scenarios the ECB outlined in its recent macroeconomic projections.
Locally, the RBA's March meeting minutes shed further light on the internal hike-hold debate, revealing more division among members than initially appeared. A narrow 5-4 majority delivered a 25bps rate hike to 4.1%, while Governor Bullock later said all members supported the need for tighter policy - the only disagreement was on timing. However, the minutes outlined the key differences between the hike and hold camps.
The more hawkish majority landed on raising rates due to the conflict adding to existing inflationary pressures, with policy viewed as not adequately restrictive. While acknowledging increased economic uncertainty and the possibility of slower-than-expected growth, their view was that weaker demand (if it eventuated) would help return inflation to target faster. By contrast, the less hawkish minority took a more cautious view, preferring to wait for greater clarity over the impacts of the energy shock. They also contested the assessment that the economy was operating with excess demand, highlighting inconsistencies in the consumption and labour market data.
Data this week indicated that the labour market was robust, with job vacancies rising by 2.7% for the 3 months to February, remaining a little above a 2% as a share of the labour force. Dwelling approvals surged almost 30% in February, though that appeared to be driven by approvals in the higher-density segment being held over during the summer holiday period (see here). The goods trade surplus widened sharply to $5.7bn in February, driven by surging safe-haven demand for gold exports (see here).

































