
Forex Week Ahead: NFP Takes Center Stage Amid RBA Decision and Geopolitical Tensions
Key economic data releases from the US, Australia, China, and Eurozone set to drive currency volatility in first full week of May 2026

The week of May 4-10 brings critical market-moving events including the US Nonfarm Payrolls report, Reserve Bank of Australia rate decision, and key economic data from major economies. Ongoing Iran-Strait of Hormuz tensions add a geopolitical risk premium to oil and currencies.
As markets enter the first full trading week of May 2026, forex traders face a data-heavy calendar dominated by the US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report on Friday, alongside critical policy decisions and economic releases from Australia, China, and the Eurozone. Against a backdrop of elevated geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz affecting oil prices and cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation expectations, currency volatility is expected to intensify throughout the week.
Monday, May 4: Quiet Start Before the Storm
The week opens with no major scheduled releases, providing traders a brief window to position ahead of Tuesday's heavy slate of data. Japanese markets will be closed Tuesday for Children's Day, likely reducing Asian session liquidity.
Tuesday, May 5: RBA Decision Headlines Multi-Region Data Dump
Reserve Bank of Australia Rate Decision (04:30 GMT)
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) takes center stage early Tuesday, with markets split on whether Governor Michele Bullock and the board will deliver another rate hike following consecutive 25 basis point increases in February and March that brought the cash rate to 4.10%.
The hawkish case is compelling: crude oil prices have surged due to the US-Israel-Iran military conflict disrupting Strait of Hormuz shipping lanes, directly impacting Australia's import-dependent energy costs. Bullock has repeatedly emphasized that inflation "remains too high" and warned that interest rates could stay elevated longer than markets anticipate.
A 6-3 split vote at the last central bank meeting signals internal debate. If three board members again dissent in favor of tightening, it would reinforce expectations for a rate hike at the June meeting even if the RBA holds in May.
Trading implications for AUD/USD: A surprise 25bp hike would likely propel the pair toward the 0.6800-0.6850 zone. A hold with hawkish forward guidance keeps the uptrend intact, while a dovish pivot would trigger stop losses below 0.6600.
Additional Tuesday Releases
Switzerland CPI (06:30 GMT): After March's +0.2% monthly gain (+0.3% YoY), Swiss inflation remains subdued relative to peers. A softer reading could pressure the Swiss National Bank toward eventual policy easing, weighing on CHF pairs.
US ISM Services PMI (14:00 GMT): The services sector, representing 80% of US GDP, posted a 54.0 reading in March. Any decline below 50 would signal contraction and undermine dollar strength ahead of Friday's NFP. Traders will scrutinize the employment sub-index as a leading indicator for the labor market.
New Zealand Employment Report (22:45 GMT): Q1 data showed +0.5% employment growth with unemployment at 5.4%. A deterioration would pressure the Reserve Bank of New Zealand toward rate cuts, sending NZD/USD toward key support at 0.5800.
Wednesday, May 6: China and ADP Set the Stage for NFP
China Services PMI (01:45 GMT)
The Caixin/S&P Global Services PMI for China has hovered above the 50 expansion threshold for months (52.1 most recently). As the world's second-largest economy and Australia's top trading partner, any weakness below 52 would ripple through AUD/USD and commodity-linked currencies.
US ADP Employment Report (12:15 GMT)
March's modest +62,000 private sector job gain followed February's +66,000, continuing a trend of deceleration from 2025's stronger prints. While the ADP report doesn't directly correlate with Friday's official NFP data, it serves as a critical sentiment gauge. A print below 50,000 would fuel recession fears and dollar weakness, while anything above 100,000 would support USD bulls heading into Friday.
Thursday, May 7: Australia Trade, Eurozone Retail Sales
Australia Balance of Trade (01:30 GMT): February's 5.686 billion AUD surplus reflected strong commodity exports. A widening surplus supports AUD/USD, while contraction would raise concerns about global demand for Australian resources.
Eurozone Retail Sales (09:00 GMT): The bloc's consumer spending showed -0.2% monthly decline in February (+1.7% YoY). Persistent weakness would reinforce expectations that the European Central Bank will need to maintain accommodative policy longer, capping EUR/USD upside.
Friday, May 8: NFP Day — The Week's Main Event
US Nonfarm Payrolls and Labor Market Data (12:30 GMT)
The April employment report represents the week's highest-impact event, with three critical components:
1. Nonfarm Payrolls: March delivered +178,000 jobs after February's shocking -133,000 contraction (later revised). Consensus forecasts cluster around 120,000-150,000. A print below 100,000 would validate "material weakening" concerns and likely trigger USD selling across the board. Above 200,000 would spark aggressive dollar strength.
2. Unemployment Rate: Holding at 4.3%-4.4% for three consecutive months. Any tick higher toward 4.5%-4.7% (matching some economist forecasts for mid-2026) would amplify Federal Reserve rate cut speculation. The Fed has signaled heightened sensitivity to labor market deterioration.
3. Average Hourly Earnings: March's +0.2% monthly gain (+3.8% YoY) shows wage growth gradually cooling from 2024's peaks. Sustained moderation below +0.3% monthly would ease inflation pressures, giving the Fed flexibility to cut rates if employment weakens further.
Market Scenarios
Dovish Miss (<100k jobs, unemployment rising): EUR/USD breaks above 1.1500, GBP/USD targets 1.3400, USD/JPY falls toward 155.00. Markets price in two additional Fed rate cuts for 2026.
Hawkish Beat (>180k jobs, wages accelerating): DXY rallies toward 98.50-99.00, EUR/USD retreats to 1.1200, and rate cut expectations evaporate.
In-line Print (120k-150k, unemployment stable): Range-bound consolidation continues, with directional bias determined by forward guidance from Fed speakers in subsequent weeks.
Canada Unemployment Rate (12:30 GMT)
Released simultaneously with US data, Canada's April unemployment (6.7% in March) impacts USD/CAD positioning. Rising joblessness would pressure the Bank of Canada toward policy easing, potentially driving the pair toward 1.3800-1.4000.
Geopolitical Wild Card: Iran and the Oil Factor
Overhanging all economic data is the ongoing military confrontation between the US-Israel coalition and Iran near the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of global oil supply transits. Crude prices have surged, feeding into broader inflation expectations that complicate central bank policy paths.
Any escalation or de-escalation headlines could trigger violent intraday swings in oil-sensitive currencies (CAD, NOK) and safe-haven flows into JPY, CHF, and USD. Traders should monitor geopolitical wires closely, particularly during Asian and early European hours when liquidity thins.
Technical Levels to Watch
EUR/USD: Support at 1.1200 (50-day moving average), resistance at 1.1400-1.1450. NFP-driven break above 1.1500 opens path to 1.1650.
GBP/USD: Holding above 1.3200 support, eyeing 1.3400 if dollar weakens. Cable remains sensitive to UK economic data flow.
USD/JPY: Trading near 159.60 after Bank of Japan's April 28 hold. Critical resistance at 160.00-160.50; break below 158.00 would signal carry trade unwind. Watch for Governor Ueda commentary on inflation and rate hike timing.
AUD/USD: Pivotal week with RBA decision. Support at 0.6550-0.6600, resistance at 0.6750. Bullish above 0.6800 on hawkish RBA surprise.
Risk Management Considerations
The confluence of high-impact economic releases and geopolitical uncertainty demands disciplined risk management. Consider:
- Wider stop losses: NFP and RBA decisions can trigger 100+ pip moves within minutes. Standard technical stops may get blown through.
- Reduced position sizing: Cut risk by 30-50% on positions held through Friday's 12:30 GMT release window.
- Avoid illiquid pairs: Stick to G10 majors during data releases; exotic and minor pairs can gap unpredictably.
- Two-way scenarios: Have contingency plans for both bullish and bearish outcomes rather than directional bias that ignores alternatives.
Bottom Line
The week of May 4-10 represents a critical inflection point for forex markets in Q2 2026. The US labor market's trajectory will dictate Federal Reserve policy flexibility, while the RBA's stance determines whether Australian dollar strength persists. Overlay persistent geopolitical tensions, and traders face an environment where nimble execution and strict risk management separate profitable positioning from costly missteps.
Friday's NFP report will likely set the tone for the remainder of May and beyond. Position accordingly.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.