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Forex News Today - May 9, 2026: US Non-Farm Payrolls rises to 158.74T, NZD/USD falls to 0.5959; Silver surges 10.41% image
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Forex News Today - May 9, 2026: US Non-Farm Payrolls rises to 158.74T, NZD/USD falls to 0.5959; Silver surges 10.41%

Daily forex market recap for May 9, 2026: 5 economic releases across 3 currencies, led by US Non-Farm Payrolls rises to 158.74T, from 158.62T prior; Brazil Unemployment prints at 6.10%. Major pairs, central-bank expectations, and cross-asset context are covered in the full market summary.

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U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls edged up to 158.74T from 158.62T, signaling a resilient labor market that reinforces the Federal Reserve's higher-for-longer rate stance and fueled broad-based USD strength.

Daily Signal Board

What actually moved this session

A quick read on the lead release, the biggest pair move, the cross-asset backdrop, and speculative positioning before the deeper narrative.

Lead Release

🇺🇸

USD Non-Farm Payrolls

US Dollar

158.74T

Prior 158.62T

Released 12:30 UTC

Major Pair

NZD/USD

0.5959

-0.32% vs prior close

2026-05-08

Cross-Asset

Silver

82.23

+10.41% vs prior close

2026-05-08

Spec Positioning

USD COT Bias

Long

Net non-commercial 693

Week of 2026-05-05

U.S. Jobs Data Quashes Fed Pivot Hopes

The U.S. labor market report was the session's primary driver, with Non-Farm Payrolls showing a modest gain to 158.74T from a prior 158.62T. The U.S. Unemployment Rate held steady at 4.30%, unchanged from the previous reading. While not an explosive print, the data indicates a labor market that is cooling too slowly for the Federal Reserve to consider imminent policy easing. With headline CPI still elevated at 3.30%, well above the target, this labor market resilience solidifies the case for the Fed to maintain its restrictive 3.75% policy rate through the summer.

The market reaction was a straightforward repricing of Fed expectations, favoring the dollar. The move was amplified by existing long USD speculative positioning, as reported by the COT (net 693), suggesting traders were positioned for a print that would not justify dovish repricing. Consequently, risk-sensitive currencies like the AUD and NZD sold off, with AUD/USD falling 0.32% to 0.7234 and NZD/USD dropping 0.32% to 0.5959.

Divergent North American Jobs Picture Lifts USD/CAD

North America presented a diverging employment story. Canada's Unemployment Rate improved, falling to 7.00% from 7.10% prior. While a positive domestic signal for the Bank of Canada, it was completely overshadowed by the U.S. data's impact on the greenback. The policy rate differential remains stark, with the BoC at 2.25% against the Fed's 3.75%, giving the USD a significant carry advantage.

This dynamic propelled USD/CAD 0.22% higher to 1.3658. The move was likely exacerbated by heavy net short CAD positioning (-14,659 contracts), forcing shorts to cover in a rising market. Elsewhere, Brazil's Unemployment Rate printed at a low 6.10%, though the release had minimal impact on G10 FX flows, which remained fixated on the U.S. labor market narrative.

Commodity FX Ignores Precious Metals Surge

A powerful rally in precious metals, with Gold surging 2.18% and Silver rocketing 10.41%, failed to provide any support for commodity-linked currencies. The Australian and New Zealand dollars both faltered under the weight of broad USD demand. The disconnect highlights that in the current environment, interest rate differentials are the dominant driver for FX, overriding traditional commodity correlations.

The price action exposed a vulnerability in the crowded long AUD positioning (net 78,674), which faced headwinds from the dollar's advance. Conversely, the heavy speculative shorts in NZD (net -48,251) were rewarded as the focus remained squarely on the wide negative rate differential between the RBNZ's 2.25% and the Fed's 3.75% policy rate.

What to Watch Next

  • Upcoming U.S. CPI and PPI releases will be critical to see if labor market tightness is translating into persistent inflation.
  • Commentary from Federal Reserve officials in the wake of the jobs data for any shift in tone regarding the path of monetary policy.
  • The 1.3700 level in USD/CAD, which now acts as a key psychological and technical resistance point following Friday's rally.

The primary risk going forward is that continued resilience in U.S. economic data forces a further hawkish repricing of the Fed's policy path, extending USD dominance and pressuring global risk assets.


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This briefing covers economic releases from May 9, 2026. Published automatically at 07:00 UTC.

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FX Market Overview 2026 05 09
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Last Updated
2026-06-15 11:06 UTC

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