The Strait’s Dead

The president’s on his way home
And pundits with TD Syndrome
All say that the trip
Did not flip the script
And still see the world in a gloam

But markets, one thing, seemed to hear
That though China wants Hormuz clear
The President said
To him the Strait’s dead
And markets responded with fear

With President Trump on his way back home from his trip to Beijing and meeting with Chinese President Xi, we can now expect reams of stories about all the things that he either did or didn’t accomplish.  Much has been made of Xi’s opening comments about Taiwan and how it is a critical issue that cannot be mishandled or it would impact the relationship between the two nations.  But as I think about Taiwan and China, I certainly understand Xi’s interest in having the island reintegrate into China as it would bring an enormous number of technological skills and abilities in areas currently absent on the mainland.  And, of course, Xi will point to history and claim it has always been part of China, yada, yada, yada.

However, ask yourself why any Taiwanese would want to become part of China.  After all, per capita income in Taiwan is ~$42K annually compared to ~$14K on the mainland.  That is a serious reduction in living standards.  Add to that the ability to vote in free elections and the accompanying belief that one’s voice can be heard, and that is a powerful argument to remain independent.  Now, as TSMC builds out is fabs in Arizona and elsewhere in the world, it seems to me that the US will lose interest in the Taiwan independence issue overall because, especially for President Trump, who views almost everything transactionally, if the US can get its semiconductors from elsewhere with no problems, notably domestically, defending an island on the other side of the world, one that is decidedly not in the Western Hemisphere, seems far less critical. 

Here’s a forecast, by the end of Trump’s term, with TSMC fabs up and running in Arizona, Japan and even Germany, we can see a Taiwan deal similar to the Hong Kong deal, which will sound great but over time China will absorb it in the same way it has done Hong Kong, removing freedoms and its appeal as a manufacturing center.

On to the other part of the trip that has had a much larger impact on markets, when Mr Trump explained, “We don’t need the Strait of Hormuz open.”  While the comments from the trip were that China wants it open and agrees tolls are inappropriate, the last throwaway line is what has markets on edge this morning.  And on edge, they certainly are!

Thus, without further ado, let’s take a look with pictures serving their purpose.  As of 7:15 this morning, here are the major equity index futures from tradingeconomics.com

The caveats here are that Toronto’s TSX and Brazil’s IBOVESPA futures markets are not yet open, but I’m confident both will open lower.  Russia’s MOEX is irrelevant which makes the Swiss Market Index the only equity market anywhere that is not falling.  Perhaps more than the Swiss franc, their stock market has achieved some haven status.

The thing to remember about this sell-off, though, is that we have had a remarkably strong week overall, and so this feels more like a profit taking retracement than the beginning of a new move lower, at least to me.  

In the bond market, sellers are the dominant force with yields higher everywhere around the world as per the below Bloomberg screenshot.

Much has already been written about 10-year Treasury yields trading at their highest level in almost exactly a year, and 30-year Treasury yields now firmly above 5.0% and how that spells the end of the good times in the US.  Maybe that is the case, but I am not convinced.  My take of the biggest problem is in the UK, where PM Starmer is under even more pressure this morning after several moves where a key cabinet member, Wes Streeting, resigned to open his path to run for PM as well as where a Labour party member stepped aside so that the very popular Andy Burnham, who is Mayor of Manchester, can now run for parliament and be in a position to become PM.  The issue here is that since Starmer will do all he can to hold on to his seat, and the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is in his corner, we will see even more deficit spending there to try to help Starmer stay in power.  Apparently gilt investors are not impressed with that potential.  Of course, neither is anybody holding pounds as a position as is apparent in the FX markets.

While the pound (-0.25%) is only modestly lower this morning, since Monday, as you can see below, it has fallen 3 cents and does not yet seem to have found a bottom.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But this is of a piece with the dollar writ large this morning, which is higher virtually across the board.  In fact, as you can see, in what may be my most frequently printed chart to dispel the idea that the dollar is dying, the DXY remains firmly in its range for the past year and is now heading toward the upper band.  If you look at the calculated mean/variance of the DXY, you can see the trend line (the black line in the center) is completely flat, i.e. the dollar is trending neither higher nor lower over the past year.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Looking at specific currencies, AUD (-1.0%) and NZD (-1.45%) are the worst performers in the G10, although NOK (-0.9%) and SEK (-0.9%) are giving them a run.  Kind of surprising for NOK given oil is much higher this morning.  in the EMG bloc, ZAR (-1.0%), CLP (-1.0%), MXN (-0.8%), and KRW (-0.5%) are the laggards in their respective regions with ZAR suffering from the commodity movements, as is CLP with copper sharply lower this morning.  MXN seems to be reacting to the news that the US has been stepping up its aggressive tactics against the drug cartels there and concerns about how that will end up.

Finally, on to commodities where oil (+3.0%) has responded exactly how you would expect to the Trump comment about his cares about Hormuz.  Meanwhile, the metals are back in full negative correlation mode with oil as all of them are sharply lower this morning (Au -2.0%, Ag -5.9%, Cu -4.3%, Pt -4.0%).  The one thing you have to admit about the commodities markets these days is that they are living up to their reputation of extreme volatility.

On the data front, this morning brings Empire State Manufacturing (exp 7.5), IP (0.3%) and Capacity Utilization (75.8%), none of which typically have a big impact and given the oil/Hormuz fears extant this morning, will almost certainly be completely ignored.  There are no Fed speakers today but I do want to mention one from yesterday, Governor Michael Barr, who directly contradicted everything Chairman Warsh has been saying about the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, explaining that if they move away from their current ‘ample reserves’ model, it could have very negative impacts on the functioning of money markets.

There is an irony here as prior to the ‘ample reserves’ framework, there was a very active Fed funds trading market on an interbank basis and banks were able to borrow from each other whatever they needed for liquidity purposes.  The Fed has usurped that role ever since the GFC and are now clearly concerned (afraid?) about going back.  The thing is, it seems to me that there continues to be a tremendous amount of liquidity around and it would be quite feasible to create an intraday loan market to help alleviate those concerns.  In fact, cash rich corporates (Berkshire Hathaway anyone?) could be part of the market as it would be entirely interbank and those corporates would know the counterparties quite well.  Suffice it to say that Mr Warsh will have quite a time getting his way at this stage.

And that’s what we have going into the weekend.  Gloom and doom about the near future, or profit taking, I’m not sure which.  As I have said all along, play it close to the vest, in think.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Prices Ain’t Tame

The story today is the same
First China, then prices ain’t tame
The meeting twixt Xi
And Trump seemed to be
Successful as both sides will claim

But price data once again soared
Thus, PPI wasn’t ignored
But markets remain
Quite happy to feign
Indifference while traders are bored

China and prices remain the two dominant stories this morning, although despite much angst over yesterday’s MUCH hotter than expected PPI readings (Headline: 1.4% M/M, 6.0% Y/Y; Core 1.0% M/M, 5.2% Y/Y), markets did very little overall.  For instance, Treasury yields edged up 1bp yesterday and this morning have reversed that tiny move.  US equity markets were mixed with the DJIA slipping slightly while the NASDAQ (+1.2%) powered ahead oblivious to any potential negative issues with rising prices.  Oil barely budged, and the same was true with metals and the dollar.  In other words, despite a lot of analyst angst, and there was plenty regarding the data point, investors didn’t seem to care.

Now, while I am personally concerned over the trajectory of prices as I have seen nothing to indicate that governments anywhere are going to reduce their debt-financed spending nor are central banks going to stop supporting that activity, I clearly do not make up the majority view.  With that in mind, I do have a suspicion that something will come along that will shake the investor community’s faith in higher forever equity prices, but I have no idea what it will be.  After all, every other potential catalyst (e.g., oil at $100/bbl, 30-year Treasury yields at 5.00%, two hot wars involving nuclear powers) has been largely ignored.  So, let’s move on to the other story of note, Nixon Trump in China.

It is always interesting to see the framing of a particular story from different news outlets which is obvious based on how they lede a story.  But, trying to get through different versions of the same thing, it is clear that China’s primary concern is Taiwan and that there should be no US interference there.  The US’s primary concern appears to be solving the Iran situation with President Trump looking to President Xi to use his influence to get Iran to see the light.  Both nations agreed Iran should never have a nuke and that the Strait of Hormuz is an international waterway that should not be subject to blockage by one nation.  (China really cares about this because half of their oil also transits the Strait of Malacca, and if the precedent is set in Hormuz that it is not a free waterway, that could easily be extended to Malacca which would be a real problem for Xi.). 

Then there were trade talks, and discussion of fentanyl precursors and oil and agricultural trade as well as semiconductors, the usual stuff.  FWIW, which may not be much, I see this as the first major step to serious de-escalation between the two nations.  But here’s an interesting tidbit, and a critical piece of the Trump rationale behind tariffs on Chinese manufactured goods.  The below table from Nikkei News shows how much major Chinese companies (all listed on their stock exchanges) are getting in state subsidies.  This is, of course, the very definition of “cheating” on trade.

Ask yourself why profitable public companies that focus on exports would need state support.  This appears to be just another reason that Chinese manufactured goods are relatively cheap compared with elsewhere in the world.

Ok, enough about those stories as traders don’t seem to care about them.  In fact, right now, traders don’t seem to care about much.  But let’s look at the markets this morning.

Since there is not that much ongoing across all markets right now, I’m going to start in the FX world as yesterday saw a noteworthy move in the Brazilian real (-2.4%) as you can see in the chart below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

While thus far this morning it has rebounded ever so slightly, +0.25%, the story is that Flavio Bolsonaro, former president Jair’s son and a leading candidate in the upcoming presidential election, has been caught up in a local financing scandal which may impact his electoral prospects and leave Lula, and his socialist policies, in charge.  Now, it must be remembered that this is a one-day movement but has done nothing to change the trend, as you can see below.  BRL has gained more than 21% in the past 18 months as real interest rates remain quite high and are drawing in carry traders from around the world.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But away from that story in Brazil, FX is sound asleep across both G10 and EMG blocs.

Mixed is the only way to describe Asian equity markets last night with Tokyo (-1.0%), China (-1.7%) and Indonesia (-2.0%) all under pressure while Korea (+1.75%), India (+1.1%) and Taiwan (+0.9%) all rallied nicely.  As to the rest of the region, it was +/- a lot less movement.  Data overnight showed Chinese financing shrinking slightly, a surprising outcome, but one in sync with the reality on the ground there that the combination of a still imploding property market and a significant reduction in local government financing on the back of that is weighing on the economy overall.  They claim they will grow GDP at 4.5% to 5.0% this year, and I’m sure they will “meet” that target when the official data is produced, but all is not well there.

European bourses, though, are having a much better day with the DAX (+1.2%) leading the way higher although solid gains in France (+0.6%) and Spain (+0.8%) as well.  Everything I read about this price action this morning points to excitement over AI, but given Europe is virtually absent from the AI universe, I am not sure what they are implying.  It doesn’t seem likely there will be a European AI champion anytime soon, if ever.  But that’s the story I see.  Meanwhile, US futures continue to trade modestly higher at this hour (7:30).

In the bond market, while JGB yields continued higher overnight by 4bps, making yet further 19-year highs, European sovereign bonds have all seen yields slide between -4bp and -5bps this morning, allegedly on optimism that the Trump-Xi meeting will lead to pressure on Iran to reopen the Strait and reduce oil prices.  But that seems misplaced in the short-term in my view.  Nonetheless, that’s the story.

Earlier this week I discussed the political sh*t show in the UK and how PM Starmer appears to be on his last legs.  One of the reasons for this is that his policies have not exactly helped the nation’s economy.  For instance, this morning, preliminary GDP figures were released, and the Y/Y number was a better than expected 1.1%.  Now, the fact that 1.1% annual growth is better than expected is a major part of the problem.  A look at UK GDP growth for the past 5 years gives a sense of why the people there are so unhappy.  Of course, hamstringing yourself with the worst energy policies on the planet are a big part of this outcome, and that defines the Starmer administration.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, a turn to commodity markets shows…almost no movement.  Both oil (-0.1%) and gold (+0.1%), the leaders in the category, are going nowhere right now.  We have seen other commodities sink a bit (silver -0.8%, copper -0.7%), but given their volatility, those are also limited moves in reality.  When it comes to the oil market, there is an enormous amount of discussion regarding the imminent collapse of the global economy as the shuttering of the Strait is going to lead to a virtual energy apocalypse.  But to my eye (and I am not an oil trader) I cannot help but look at the below chart and see a market that has found a pretty good balance between supply and demand at around $100/bbl.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It is also important to remember that the oil market remains in a steep backwardation which tells us that supply issues over time are not a great concern.  In fact, I read this morning that with the overall curve at current levels, some oil drillers are considering expanding operations to take advantage of the higher prices, yet another reason to expect that the fears of $200/bbl oil are massively overblown.  They ain’t coming, I think.

On the data front, this morning brings the weekly Initial (exp 205K) and Continuing (1790K) Claims data as well as Retail Sales (+0.5%, +0.6% ex-autos) and Business Inventories (+0.8%).  We hear from a few more Fed speakers but, again, I don’t think they are of much importance right now.  The market is not pricing in any Fed funds movement for the rest of the year, and then a 25bp hike is the new view after that.  But the one thing we know about Fed funds futures is they are subject to major changes based on policy comments.  I’m sure we are all anxiously awaiting Chair Warsh’s first meeting next month.

And that’s it for today.  Quiet markets and no reason to think that will change right now.  Remember, fiat currencies are still crap, but nothing has changed my view that the dollar is the best of the bunch.

Good luck

Adf

Hot, Hot, Hot

So, prices were all Hot, Hot, Hot
Resulting from Trump’s Iran shot
But do not forget
The government’s debt
And spending, with what that has wrought

Meanwhile, Trump, to Beijing, has flown
As both sides seek a temperate zone
Where it is agreed
To what both sides need
And neither, the outcome, bemoan

For a change, Iran is not the lead story today in markets.  Instead, there is much angst over yesterday’s CPI reading, which was hotter than forecast, and much pontificating as to what will come from the summit between Presidents Trump and Xi that starts tonight in Beijing.  Let’s take inflation first.

The results showed the month-on-month readings for headline (0.6%) and core (0.4%) which translated into annual readings of 3.8% and 2.8% respectively.  I always turn to The Inflation Guy™, Mike Ashton, when trying to understand CPI readings and have linked here his description of the report and things driving it, which you should all read.  However, I will offer his conclusion here:

Wrapping this up, the read is actually pretty easy. Inflation is not just in energy, but right now is fairly wide as the diffusion index shows. Some of that is related to energy…the price of diesel fuel affects trucking costs, which affects other goods prices…and some of it is related to the fact that wage growth is no longer slowing. Any way you look at it, as I said the read is pretty easy: the Fed obviously isn’t going to be tightening into an oil shock. But there is nothing here that gives them cover to ease into an oil shock either. Warsh inherits a pickle.”

I know the Fed targets Core PCE, not Core CPI, but I include the below chart of the latter to remind us all of just how far from their target the Fed has been for the past 5+ years.  Powell may have bitched about political pressure, but he received none during the Biden administration and he failed dismally then too.  Just sayin’.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

(One last thing I will note is that USDi, which I mentioned yesterday, will return 10.2% annualized during the month of June, on top of this month’s 12.6% return.  Folks, you really should own some.  You can mint it at www.usdicoin.com ).

We cannot be surprised that yields rose yesterday on the back of the CPI result with the 10-year rising a further 3bps right after the number and 4bps on the day.  This takes us to a 10bp rise in the past three sessions including this morning as per the below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It also is the highest yield since last summer and clearly is not moving in the direction the administration would like to see.  The thing is, now that we are several months into the Iran war and oil prices have been elevated since the beginning of March, we are going to see more pass through of price increases due to energy costs, at least until demand starts being destroyed.  That is always the market tension, rising prices force behavioral adjustment unless the central bank accommodates those prices by increasing money supply.  It is, of course, that action which helps drive generalized inflation as opposed to specific price increases.  Mr Warsh, who was confirmed as a Fed governor by the Senate yesterday and faces another vote today to become Fed Chair, although I expect that will be without fireworks either, will have has work cut out for him.

Moving on to the Beijing summit, the key to remember is that summits are where things are signed amid a ceremony, they are not events to negotiate details.  Secretary Bessent has been in Asia all week and he has met with Chinese Premier Le Hifeng, clearly discussing terms of what can be agreed.  One would expect that the focus will be on Iran and having China press Iran to come to an agreement, trade between the nations, especially in AI related technology and rare earth elements, and Taiwan.  I have no way of knowing what will be announced, but I’m confident Mr Trump wouldn’t be going if there wasn’t a deal of some sort already agreed.

So, let’s see how markets have behaved overnight.  Yesterday’s US session, which started out looking pretty awful, moderated throughout the day to wind up with fairly benign outcomes.  Weirdly, this led to some dramatic differences in Asia with some strong gainers (Korea +2.6%, Japan +0.85%, China +1.0%, Singapore +1.2%) and some serious laggards (Indonesia -2.0%, Taiwan -1.25%) with some lesser weakness (Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and HK).  I might argue that most investors were excited about the potential results of the summit, but if so, perhaps it implies a change in the US position regarding Taiwan, and that could well be a negative there.

In Europe, the picture is also mixed as Germany (+0.7%) is having a solid session on some solid earnings reports from the pharma sector, although France (-0.4%) is under pressure after the Unemployment Rate there jumped to 8.1%, its highest print in five years.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Otherwise, the rest of Europe is mixed with little of note.  US futures at this hour (7:30) are also mixed with DJIA (-0.25%) lagging but the other two major indices showing gains of 0.25%.

While we discussed Treasuries above, looking elsewhere around the world, yields this morning in Europe are essentially unchanged, having risen on the back of the US CPI report yesterday.  However, overnight, JGBs saw yields rise 4bps on that inflation fear, and they have made yet another new 19-year high as per the below chart (dates are in European terms).

In the commodity markets this morning, oil is essentially unchanged as it is clear nobody knows how things will play out in Iran.  There have been numerous commentators competing to describe just how much oil has been missing from the market and how soon (June? July? September?) the infrastructure will crash and it will be a global depression.  But they keep having to push their timeline further out as the combination of more production outside the gulf plus the ingenuity of getting production there to other markets via trucks and trains, has mitigated the overall price risk.  Again, here in the US, there is no risk of a shortage of any type as we continue to export our net surplus of products.  I have not read about the blockade lately, but I think that speaks to the fact it must be effective because most articles wanted to describe it as a failure and not doing its job.  If Iranian oil is not getting to market, their financial troubles are growing apace which is the key pressure point.

As to the metals markets, given the lack of movement in oil, it should be no surprise that gold (-0.25%) is little changed as well.  However, something is changing here and that is silver (+1.0%) and copper (+2.0%) are both starting to distance themselves from the gold trade as both remain critical inputs into the electrification story.  A quick look at the chart below of the two elements shows how just in the past two days, silver has broken away from gold.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is firmer again today, continuing to ignore the many calls for its demise.  But as we have seen in most other markets today, the magnitude of the movement is unimpressive.  So, DXY (+0.2%) is an excellent proxy for virtually the entire FX market this morning.

On the data front, today brings PPI (exp 0.5% M/M, 4.9% Y/Y) and core (0.3% M/m, 4.3% Y/Y) although with CPI already released, I doubt it will get much interest.  We also get the EIA oil inventory data which is looking for continued draws of roughly 6 million barrels across crude and products.  there are Fed speakers too, but when was the last time anyone listened to anything they had to say with interest?  Exactly.

It is shaping up to be a quiet session (famous last words) and I suspect all the news of note will come from Beijing tonight.

Good luck

adf

His Denouement

In England and Scotland and Wales
Without getting into details
The PM has lost
Support, and will be tossed
But Labour, so far’s, moved like snails

Until the time comes when he’s gone
And Keir reaches his denouement
Both gilts and the pound
Will fall toward the ground
But they’ve no one to settle on

While the stalemate in the Gulf continues, although there is clearly less optimism that things are going to end quickly according to the oil market (+3.0% and back to $101/bbl), there are a few other things that are ongoing in the world that are impacting markets.  This morning, the most obvious is in the UK, where PM Keir Starmer, he of the <20% approval rating, is seeing his grip on power slip away, but like most politicians, he will hold on as tightly as possible for as long as possible regardless of the negative impact that has on his constituency, which in this case is the entire nation.

For instance, a quick look at the gilt market shows that yields there, this morning, have jumped 12bps in the 10-year, up to their highest level, at 5.11%, since April 2008, as per the below chart from marketwatch.com.

Perhaps, of more concern for the UK Treasury and the BOE is the fact that the spread between US Treasuries and UK Gilts has jumped 9bps this morning and, at 67bps, is now pushing back toward its upper quartile, also not seen since 2008 as per the below chart from worldgovernmentbonds.com.

The pound (-0.5%) is faring no better this morning, lagging the rest of the G10 while UK stocks suffer alongside with the FTSE 100 (-0.6%) adding to the overall pressure on Starmer. 

Now, in fairness to poor Keir, he has failed in essentially every aspect of government, notably as to his promises when elected, so this cannot be a surprise.  The question becomes; how much longer will he try to fight this very clear outcome to the detriment of his nation?  From a fiscal perspective, I imagine he will be seeking to offer money to specific constituencies in an effort to buy more time, but my take is the die is cast here.  For now, I expect UK assets and the pound are going to underperform and likely will until he is gone, regardless of his replacement.

However, aside from the war in Iran, where there is nothing new of note today, the next biggest stories are that President Trump is on his way to Beijing to meet with President Xi and this morning’s CPI report.  Since I can offer nothing of note on the summit meeting, let’s turn to inflation.

Expectations this morning are for the headline number to print 0.6% M/M and 3.7% Y/Y while the core (ex-food & energy) number is expected at 0.3% M/M and 2.7% Y/Y.  Below is a chart showing headline CPI for the past 10 years, which I believe is informative of the national mood.  In it, you can see both the annual rate of inflation (the red line, RH axis) and the steady growth of the underlying CPI index published by the BLS (blue bars, LH axis).  To get the full sense of things, though, make sure you look at the index level on the left, which has grown, in aggregate, 38.7% over the past 10 years.  It is this feature which drives the nation’s unhappiness with prices, I would contend, not the monthly data, but the cumulative nature of the problem.

Data: Fred, graphics: @fx_poet

All of us remember the peak inflation in the immediate post-Covid years.  In addition, I’m sure we all remember the government shutdown and the missing data point because of the inability to collect data and the known assumption that if data were not collected, it would be assumed to be 0.0%.  Well, not only is the Iran war having a direct impact on inflation, but that missing data is starting to leave the calculations, so the red line is going to continue to head higher.  I must admit, that if I were to guess how things arise this morning, I would suspect the estimates to be on the low side, but we shall see in a few hours.  The question here is; will the markets respond to this or are they focused on other issues?  I also suspect that this depends on the outcome.  If CPI is higher than forecast, it does not bode well for Treasury prices, nor likely stocks.  But, if it is softer than forecast, I would look for the equity rally to continue.

Ok, let’s see how markets are behaving as we await the data.  Yesterday’s nondescript and modest US rally was followed by a lot of nondescript trading in Asia (Tokyo +0.5%, HK -0.2%, China -0.1%), although both Korea (-2.3%) and India (-1.9%) had a bit more action with the former seeming a reaction to its recent moonshot rise while the latter continues to try to deal with a steadily weakening currency and the government’s efforts to address that without raising interest rates.  Otherwise, in the region there were both winners and laggards but nothing else noteworthy.

In Europe, though, red is the only color I see with the DAX (-1.1%) leading the way down despite a better than expected, although still negative, ZEW report of -10.7.  But Spain (-0.9%), Italy (-0.8%) and France (-0.6%) are all under pressure with only Norway (+0.6%) showing any life as its energy-centric market performs well with oil prices back up again this morning.  As to US futures, they, too, are red with the NASDAQ (-1.1%) the worst of them at this hour (7:10).

We’ve already discussed Gilt yields but yields around the world are higher this morning with US Treasuries (+2bps) adding to yesterday’s 5bp rise.  In Europe, and in Japan, yields are higher by 4bps to 5bps across the board.  This appears to be a combination of concerns over both increased supply as nations spend more than they tax and rising inflation.  It’s a pretty toxic combination for bonds.

Yesterday was a bit of an anomaly in the precious metals markets as despite the rise in oil prices we saw, gold, silver and copper all rally as well.  Recently, we would have expected the metals to trade lower in that circumstance.  And this morning, with oil (+3.0%) higher again, they are with gold (-0.9%) and silver (-3.3%) both under pressure although copper (+0.4%) continues to rise to new records.  It turns out, the electrification of everything, and the massive power requirements for data centers along with rebuilding aging electricity grid infrastructure will require a lot of copper, likely more than will be mined at the current prices.  It feels like this chart will continue to go higher.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is back in form this morning against virtually all its counterparts in both the G10 and EMG blocs.  In fact, it is easier to discuss the outliers which are NOK (+0.3%) and BRL (+0.4%) both benefitting from rising oil prices (as is the dollar!) while the rest of the world collectively suffers.  The DXY (+0.35%) continues to ignore all the calls for its collapse and today’s weakest performers are KRW (-1.0%) and ZAR (-0.6%).  The latter continues to be buffeted by the combination of higher oil and lower gold prices, although remains well above the lows (below dollar highs) seen at the beginning of the war that started this price action as per the below chart.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

KRW, though, is a bit more confusing to me as while weakness overnight alongside the KOSPI, makes sense, it has, in truth, performed terribly compared to the KOSPI’s remarkable rally.  It would have made a great deal of sense to see significant foreign inflows to the won as investors jumped on that bandwagon, but I guess not.

There is nothing other than the CPI data released in the US this morning so that will be the driver for now.  I would be remiss if I didn’t highlight, again, that the best way to manage inflation risk for us all is to own USDi, the fully backed, inflation-tracking cryptocurrency that is returning 12.588% annualized this month and depending on the exact CPI print this morning, set to return something on the order of 8% or so in June.  Remember, Treasury bills return 3.6% annualized, so this is a way to keep up with prices.  Check out www.usdicoin.com for more information and the ability to mint your own!

Good luck

Adf

Massive Divides

On Friday, the Payrolls were strong
So, pessimists mostly were wrong
This week it’s inflation
That might change narration
Of how things are coming along

As well, this week Trump and Xi meet
And pundits, for good takes, compete
One side says Trump’s hand
Is nought but grandstand
The other cites Xi’s self-deceit

And last, but not least, all the talk
Of some kind of deal on the block
Was trashed by both sides
With massive divides
Twixt what each will offer…or walk

Last week ended on a very positive note in markets.  The payroll report, at least to my eyes, was solid with NFP higher than forecast, although Manufacturing payrolls shrank slightly, and overall, things seemed pretty solid.  Certainly, the equity markets were comforted as all three major indices closed higher with new record highs for both the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ.  Oil prices slipped on Friday, along with bond yields and the dollar while gold and silver finished the day higher.  The Iran narrative was that there were proposals going back and forth and folks were generally in a good mood.

Ahhh, the good old days.  While thus far, this morning is no disaster, there has clearly been a change in tone as hopes for a peace deal collapsed after President Trump declared that the Iranian response was “TOTALLY UNACEPTABLE!”  Not surprisingly, the first move in markets was oil (+2.5%) rising along with the dollar (DXY +0.1%) and Treasury yields (+3bps) while stocks (S&P -0.15%, NASDAQ -0.3%) and gold (-1.1%) fell.  This is all of a piece with recent correlations and relationships.

So, what are we to make of the current situation?  On the ground, at least in the US, things have not changed very much.  While energy prices remain higher than before the war, there are no shortages of any type for consumers, although that is not the case in many other nations.  India has gotten a lot of press this morning after PM Modi suggested that more people there work from home and that they stop buying gold as that exacerbates the shrinking FX reserve situation while the rupee continues to slide. 

Now, the thing about the rupee is that it has been sliding for a very long time.  Since 2003, as you can see in the below chart from Yahoo finance, the currency has more than halved in value vs. the dollar.  Perhaps the trajectory has steepened a little lately, but my take is this is more about the big round number of 100 rupee/dollar than the fact that the currency is weakening.

Of course, the issue for them becomes a weakening rupee amid rising commodity prices results in rising inflation, and that never helps an elected government.

I raise the point because it is a lead article in the WSJ and I have seen discussions on Substack blogs as well this morning, so it has a little oomph.  But look at that chart and ask has anything really changed?  The more important fact is that India is merely the avatar of what is happening around the world, especially in developing nations as they try to cope with the current situation.

Which begs the next question, when might this change?  Here the answer is far more difficult.  Clearly, there needs to be a cessation of hostilities in Iran for things to begin to return to normal and while I am encouraged that, at least, the US and Iran are swapping proposals, no matter how far apart the terms, it implies that there is a goal to end the situation.  One other thing that I continue to read is that the world hasn’t really felt the full impact of the war as the buffers of products that flow through Hormuz were significant and haven’t been run down yet, but there are many analysts explaining its just a matter of days/weeks/months before a total collapse occurs.  And maybe they are correct, but so far it has just not been the case.

Which takes us to the key event this week, the Trump-Xi meeting and what may result.  China is one of Iran’s few allies and likely has real pressure points there to help (force?) them to come to the table.  And, of course, there is a great deal of economic and trade stress between the two nations.  However, it is clearly in both nations’ best interest to come to an accord of some nature and de-escalate.  I am far more hopeful of a positive outcome on that front than on Iran, but we shall see.

In the meantime, let’s look at how markets have behaved overnight as we await, prior to the Trump-Xi summit, CPI tomorrow.

In the equity markets, overall, Tokyo was mixed although the Nikkei (-0.5%) finished the day lower.  Other laggards of note were, not surprisingly, India (-1.7%) along with Australia (-0.5%), Indonesia (-0.9%) and Thailand (-0.6%).  However, on the flip side, Korea (+4.3%) continues to be the biggest beneficiary of the semiconductor craze and setting yet another closing record.  As you can see from the chart below from Bloomberg.com, the market is going parabolic right now.  For those who are long, this is great, but history has shown that these moves will revert to the mean over time, and likely pretty quickly when it happens (remember gold and silver in late January?).  Beware here.  Meanwhile China (+1.6%) was amongst the other half of markets there with gains, although no others had substantial movement. 

In Europe, there is broad weakness on the continent, but only France (-1.0%) has shown any movement of note. Otherwise, major bourses here are +/- 0.25% or less.

In the bond markets, yields are higher across the board, with European sovereigns following Treasury yields and all higher by between 2bps and 4bps.  The UK (+6bps) is the outlier here after BOE member, Greene, in an interview explained that all the inflation risks were to the upside in the UK.  Right now, I suspect that is the case around the world.

In the commodity markets, perhaps the surprising feature today is not that gold is lower amid higher oil prices, but that silver (+0.25%) and copper (+1.4%) are both firmer.  In fact, copper is pushing back to its all-time trading highs set in a spike in late January.  But as you can see from the chart below from tradingeconomics.com, this move is gaining some strength.

Finally, the dollar is a bit stronger this morning, although hardly running away.  Other than the rupee discussed above and KRW (-0.65%) which is odd given the equity performance there, the bulk of the movement has been dollar strength on the order of 0.1% to 0.2% against both G10 and EMG currencies.  The dollar is not driving the market bus right now.  For those who follow the DXY, it is right at 98.00, again in the middle of its year long range.

On the data front, it is inflation week around the world with China reporting last night higher than forecast numbers of 1.2% Y/Y and PPI of 2.8% Y/Y with the latter, as you can see in the chart below, the highest number since July 2022.  Perhaps China’s long deflationary slog is over.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Here are this week’s offerings:

TodayExisting Home Sales4.05M
TuesdayNFIB Small Biz Optimism96.1
 CPI0.6% (3.7% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.4% (2.7% Y/Y)
WednesdayPPI0.5% (4.9% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.3% (4.3% Y/Y)
ThursdayInitial Claims205K
 Continuing Claims1775K
 Retail Sales0.5%
 -ex autos0.6%
FridayEmpire State Manufacturing7.8
 IP0.3%
 Capacity Utilization75.9%

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As well, we get inflation readings from Germany, India, Brazil, France, Spain and Italy this week.  There are several Fed speakers, five in total, but they just don’t seem to matter that much right now.

And that’s what we have, everybody is waiting on the next Iran conflict news with hope for a resolution seeming to ebb slightly.  Frankly, until there is more clarity there, it is difficult to determine what comes next.

Good luck

Adf

Futures Are Juiced

At first, it was open then not
As small boats attacked and were shot
But now, all eyes turn
To what we will learn
From Payrolls and if things are hot

While yesterday saw risk reduced
This morning stock futures are juiced
So, as we await
More news from the Strait
We’re hoping Jobs give things a boost

The top story was the minor skirmish in the Strait of Hormuz when three US destroyers transited the Strait and escorted one or two ships trapped in the Persian Gulf out.  Iranian small boats attacked and were sunk, but missiles were fired and it seems they hit a Chinese tanker.  I’m guessing President Xi is none too pleased with that outcome.  In the end though, while oil (-0.2%) traded higher through most of yesterday, as you can see in the chart below, it subsequently faded back from its highest levels of the day and remains well below $100/bbl as I type.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In the end, the major market themes and correlations continue to play out with oil the primary driver and other markets responding either in sync (the dollar and bond yields) or in opposition (stocks and precious metals).  I imagine we are going to see this continue to play out until such time as an agreement is definitively reached to end all the hostilities there, whether that is by signing an accord or the complete destruction of the IRGC leadership.

Which means, we need to turn elsewhere for our news and happily, we have the payroll report to observe this morning.  Leading into this report, we saw the ADP number on Wednesday print at a better-than-expected 109K, while Initial and Continuing Claims yesterday both printed at lower than forecast numbers, indicating that the labor market is in pretty good shape.  With that in mind, here are this morning’s expectations:

Nonfarm Payrolls62K
Private payrolls75K
Manufacturing Payrolls5K
Unemployment Rate4.3%
Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (3.8% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours34.2
Participation Rate61.7%
Michigan Sentiment49.5

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Of course, it is key to remember that revisions to this report have been consistently lower over the past several years as per the below chart.  Of course, headlines are everything in today’s world, and while there are many economists and analysts who try to explain the revisions matter and offer a much dimmer view of the labor market, as we all know, the correction to a misleading story published on page 24 never impacts the narrative.

In fact, based on this, and what is apparently a fatally flawed birth/death model at the BLS, and based on the stronger performance in the ADP data as well as the continued low readings from Initial Claims, I anticipate a better than expected number and would not be surprised to see something on the order of 100K.  There is one other thing worth noting that I believe is a major positive, and that is that government payrolls continue to shrink, something that can only help the overall fiscal position in the US.

We can only hope that the recent trend, as seen below, continues.  As I have written in the past, given the remarkable lack of productivity in the government, if these people become baristas at Starbucks, it would add more to economic prosperity for the nation than their current role.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

And with that as preamble, let’s visit the overnight market results in the wake of the little skirmish and President Trump’s comments that the cease fire was still in effect.

Yesterday’s US weakness has been followed around the world, pretty much, with declines in Asia (Japan -0.2%, HK -0.9%, China -0.6%) and the regional exchanges there as well (India -0.7%, Taiwan -0.8%, Australia -1.5%, Indonesia -2.9%) with only Korea (+0.1%) managing to hold its ground during the session.  There is much discussion regarding the upcoming Summit between Presidents Trump and Xi, and the other stories of note are yet another Chinese plan to support domestic consumption.  (It strikes me that these plans are akin to European sanctions on Russia, full of fanfare and producing zero results).

Speaking of Europe, equity markets are weaker there as well with the DAX (-0.7%) leading the way lower after IP was released at a much worse than expected -0.7% in March along with a smaller than forecast trade surplus.  A quick look at the last 3 years of German IP and you can see that Energiewende, their insane energy policy, is effectively deindustrializing the nation, once the heartbeat of Europe.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As to the rest of the continent, red is today’s color with France (0.7%), Spain (-0.3%) and the UK (-0.1%) all under water.  However, US futures are higher by about 0.5% across the board ahead of NFP.

In the bond market, Treasury yields (-1bp) are reversing part of yesterday’s climb, but are still higher than yesterday morning.  Most of Europe is little changed although UK gilts (-5bps) have performed best after (despite?) local elections where the ruling Labour Party lost half the seats they were defending with the MAGA-like (MUKGA? MEGA?) Reform Party of Nigel Farage and the Green party the big beneficiaries.  Pressure is increasing on PM Starmer to step aside as his favorability plummets, but like most politicians, he is clinging to power with a death grip.  I’m not really sure I understand the mechanics of why gilts would rally, although perhaps as Reform’s power increases, investors believe there will be more fiscal rectitude.

Precious metals, which rallied yesterday again, are continuing higher this morning (Au +0.8%, Ag +2.8%) with Silver back above $80/oz.  I have not mentioned copper (+1.7%) lately, but it is worth noting that the red metal has been powering higher and is approaching the spike high seen in late January, which is the all-time high in the market there.  While there are clearly market internals regarding positioning that are helping the move here, it does portend a positive outlook for the economy given its importance in virtually all manufacturing these days.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is under pressure again this morning with the DXY (-0.1%) back below 98.00, but just barely.  Again, the collapsing dollar narrative makes no sense to me and if I look at the DXY over the last year, 96.50 – 100.00 does a pretty good job of containing the entire range as per below.  If the dollar gets down to that lower level and breaks it convincingly, we can discuss the merits of a short-term vs. long-term view on the dollar’s future.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

And it is important to note that the long-term future, at least compared to other fiat currencies, remains positive in my view.  Looking at specific movers, both the euro and pound are higher by 0.35% while the yen (+0.1%) remains caught between its negative fundamentals and fears of another round of BOJ intervention.  NOK (+1.3%) is kind of surprising given the lack of impetus in the oil market, but it is no surprise to see ZAR (+0.6%) and CE4 currencies benefit alongside the euro.  LATAM currencies are also doing well although CLP (0.0%) is somewhat surprising given copper’s strong move higher.

And that’s really it today.  We see payrolls in a bit and that should drive the discussion unless there is some other breakthrough in Iran and the ongoing conflict.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Quite Sublime

Though skeptics do not yet believe
That Trump, a peace deal, will achieve
The markets are saying
This sunshine they’re haying
And fading this move is naïve

So, oil continues to fall
And stocks are just having a ball
It’s peace in our time
And all quite sublime
To many, though, this tale is tall

It is not clear what else to say about the current situation other than the markets are starting to believe that the Iran conflict is coming to a close.  The headlines from the administration and news from Pakistan seem to indicate a deal is near, something we all should welcome.  Certainly, the market is ready to accept this as gospel, at least based on the current risk appetite being demonstrated across all markets.  So, this morning, oil (-2.8%) continues its rapid decline, down more than $18/bbl from its highs just one week ago.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

The commentariat refuses to accept that the conflict is ending and I cannot tell if that is because they hate President Trump so much, they cannot stand the idea of him concluding things having achieved objectives, or because if the conflict is over, they will need to find the next thing to prove their ‘expertise’ and they don’t know what that is yet (hantavirus anyone?)  Regardless, markets are on board with this narrative as the moves we saw yesterday are simply extending this morning.  

Meanwhile, the data from yesterday showing that ADP Employment was a stronger than expected 109K and the JOLTs quit numbers rose, meaning more people are willing to quit their jobs for a new one, indicating a growing confidence in the labor market, point to a continuation of the US equity rally, and by extension, the global rally.  (As an aside, I chuckled at the article in the WSJ this morning about how the next target of taxes should be ‘compute’ since AI is going to replace human workers.  My comment here, which has been confirmed by my time this week at the Consensus 2026 cryptocurrency conference, is that machines are great, but people still want to deal with people they can trust!)

Anyway, with the conflict ostensibly coming to a close, there is not much else to discuss outside actual market activity, so let’s see how things responded to this news.

By this time, you have all checked your PA’s and saw the green from yesterday there.  Overnight, Asian markets were also quite positive with Japan (+5.6%) exploding higher after their Golden Week holidays ended.  Excitement on tech as well as a market that is looking forward to Treasury Secretary Bessent’s visit were the drivers.  But we also saw strength in China (+0.5%), HK (+1.6%), Korea (+1.4%) and Taiwan (+1.9%).  In fact, looking across the region, you are hard pressed to find a true laggard, as India (0.0%) was the worst performer of note.  European markets, though, are not quite in as fine a fettle with most of them essentially unchanged this morning although the UK (-0.7%) is lagging after some underwhelming earnings reports as it appears profit taking is today’s motive.  As to US futures, at this hour (6:45), they too, like Europe, are essentially unchanged

In the bond markets, yields continue to slide with Treasury yields lower by -2bps and virtually all European sovereign yields slipping -1bp.  Overnight, JGB yields fell -3bps as markets there reopened and essentially all Asian government bonds saw yields decline as well.  Apparently, fears over rampant inflation are ebbing.  You may recall on Tuesday I discussed the 30-year Treasury as it traded above 5.0% on Monday and stayed there for about a minute.  That had engendered a great deal of apocalyptic discussion.  However, here we are this morning with 30-year yields slipping another -2bps, and now 10 bps below that little spike, and back below 5.0%.  But I think it is worthwhile to offer a little perspective on the 30-year bond and the idea that 5.0% is deadly.  Here is the chart of 30-year Treasury yields since 1985.  Perhaps the anomaly was much lower yields, not 5.0%!

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Precious metals are continuing to benefit from the peace initiative and oil’s delice with gold (+1.0%) and silver (+4.0%) both stronger again after big gains yesterday.  In fact, I am starting to read more about why silver is set to make massive gains because of shortages, a narrative that was set aside for the past two months but seems to be reawakening.  Now, I am no technician, but I am given to understand that if you look at this trend line in silver from its January peak, we have broken above the line and that portends a massive move higher.  (full disclosure, I am long silver so would be happy to see that but have not spent the extra money yet!)

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is softer again this morning, which should be no surprise based on the overall market zeitgeist this morning.  So, the DXY (-0.15%) is a pretty good approximation of what is happening, although we have seen some larger moves, notably NOK (+0.8%) which seems to be responding to the fact that the country is going to reopen some shuttered oil and gas drilling sites in the North Sea as Europe tries to figure out where to get energy from.  As to the yen (0.0%) after a series of what appeared to be modest interventions by the BOJ during Golden Week, it appears the market may be explaining that the fundamentals are still pointing to yen weakness and while the BOJ may be able to cap the dollar for a short time, establishing real JPY strength will take a lot more effort, and real policy changes (i.e. much higher interest rates).

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Turning to the data this morning, we get the weekly Initial (exp 205K) and Continuing (1800K) Claims data, which continues to hover near historic lows despite the angst over the labor market.  We also see Nonfarm Productivity (1.4%) and Unit Labor Costs (2.6%) and hear from several more Fed speakers, although most of their comments are back page news.  Of course, tomorrow we will see the NFP report, and that will certainly garner all the attention.  Personally, I will be focused on the Manufacturing Payrolls outcome as a proxy for the reshoring initiative and the potential for continued strong economic activity going forward.

And that’s really it.  Despite the ongoing narrative of the dollar’s demise, it remains well within its recent trading range, and I keep reading about other nations issuing dollar debt as that is the market with the most liquidity.  Over time, I continue to see the dollar as the best fiat around, although I still like stuff more than paper.

Good luck

Adf

Stories, Compelling

The latest pronouncements appear
To indicate Hormuz is clear
As well, Trump explained
He’ll soon have attained
A deal where both sides will adhere

Investors responded by selling
Their oil, as fears, Trump, was quelling
While metals and stocks
Embraced Goldilocks
And rallied with stories, compelling

The word from President Trump is that the Iranians have moved closer to a deal and the ceasefire will remain in place.  From what I have read, it appears several ships have, indeed, crossed out of the Strait, although many remain trapped.  At this time, nothing is clear, but markets very clearly believe we have passed the peak of the problems as is evident by the below char of WTI (-7.7%) which continues yesterday’s decline and is now back well below $100/bbl.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Now, we have seen previous situations during this conflict where it appeared that the end was nigh only to be disabused of that notion within days.  And we all must still contend with the issue that unless you are in the White House situation room, or the Iranian equivalent, none of us really know what is happening.  Propaganda is rife from both sides official pronouncements and then there is a whole cottage industry of pundits who claim expertise in the inner workings of Iranian military capabilities and explain the US is losing the war.  But as always, I go back to those with real skin in the game, traders and investors, as opposed to the pundits who when proven wrong simply pivot and say they knew the outcome all along. I certainly hope, for everyone’s sake, that we are in the final stages as we shall all benefit from that outcome. 

One other thing helping this story is word that the Chinese have been leaning on the Iranians to reopen the Strait as despite all their preparations and their SPR, the lack of outbound flow is clearly starting to cause Xi some concern.  And remember, Xi and Trump are slated to meet in 10 days and I’m guessing he really doesn’t want to have to answer as to why his Iranian allies are holding up the world.

It should be no surprise that with oil prices having retreated so far, the market response elsewhere was strength in equities, strength in precious metals, strength in bonds and weakness in the dollar.  After all, those correlations have been solid during this entire engagement.  But before we discuss the markets, which are quite positive everywhere, a word about the economy in the US.

We all know that a key focus of President Trump has been to reshore industry and reduce the trade deficit.  While economists have been proselytizing that it’s a great deal for the US; we get cheap stuff and just have to give up paper we print, the Covid pandemic, and more importantly the government responses to it, highlighted just how much the US, and most nations, were at the mercy of China when it came to critical supplies.  We all have heard about rare earth metals, but it is a much deeper problem as the US has lost a great deal of institutional knowledge regarding how to simply produce certain things.  I raise this point because yesterday the Trade Balance data was released right on expectations of -$60.3B.  but I think it is instructive to look at the export data as an indication of just how much change we have seen in the economy over the past several years.  as you can see in the chart below, exports have been growing quite significantly of late.  Now, one of the reasons is because the US has been exporting significant amounts of oil and gas rather than manufactured goods.  But ask yourself, would that have happened under a potential Harris administration who likely would have continued the fight against energy.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It will be very interesting to see the NFP data on Friday and I will especially be looking at the Manufacturing employment result, as that is something which has clearly been a focus of the administration.  I suspect those numbers will look pretty good.

Ok, on to the markets.  It is far easier to show a screenshot from tradingeconomics.com of futures prices at 6:30 this morning, than list all the outcomes as below.

Needless to say, there is a lot of happiness in equity markets today.  I must note that Japan was still closed last night, so that is not updated, but otherwise, these are all current or from the overnight session.  One thing to remember about the US markets as they make consistent new highs is that earnings releases have been remarkably solid thus even though P/E ratios are historically high, there is some rationale behind the moves.

Turning to the bond markets, once again a screenshot, this time from Bloomberg, tells the story eloquently.  At this hour, Canada, Brazil and Mexico markets have not yet opened, but I assure you yields there will fall sharply when they do.

As I said, it is happy days everywhere.

Turning to precious metals, both gold (+3.4%) and silver (+6.4%) are rocketing higher this morning as the recent negative correlation with oil is almost perfect.  You can see that below in the chart of price action during the past month.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Historically, gold and oil tended to trade together, but this event has really destroyed that narrative.  I have read an analysis describing gold’s troubles despite the war as a result of fears over higher inflation leading to higher real interest rates and thus less demand for gold.  Maybe that is correct, but my take on the bigger picture remains that fiat currencies will remain under general pressure against ‘stuff’ and gold is the most desirable of ‘stuff’ there is.  I remain long-term bullish here.

Finally, the dollar is under pressure this morning, as you would expect given the overall market movement.  The most noteworthy price action has been in JPY (+1.35%) which appears to have seen some further intervention from the BOJ last night as per the below chart.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

When asked, there was no comment from the BOJ/MOF, but certainly given the velocity of the decline in the dollar and given the type of movement we have seen during the past week, with the first major intervention essentially confirmed, it makes sense.  Tokyo markets remain closed, so the timing made sense as liquidity was light allowing a lot of bang for their buck.  But remember the history of intervention is that while it can provide a temporary solution to a weakening currency, until policies change, the pressure will remain.

But broadly the dollar has been routed overnight.  One more tradingeconomics.com screenshot will give the flavor for the market this morning.

 The outliers here are NOK (-0.1%) which is suffering from oil’s sharp decline, along with CAD (+0.25%) which also is feeling that pressure.  Not in the shot is ZAR (+2.3%) which has been feeling double pain of weak gold and high oil and seeing a real relief rally today. 

If you ask, is this the end of the dollar and now it will decline sharply going forward? I would answer no, but that doesn’t mean we won’t test the bottom of the DXY range at 96.50 before this move is over.

On the data front, today brings ADP Employment (exp 99K) and then the EIA oil inventory data with another draw expected.  But I don’t see the data as critical with the peace story driving markets and headlines for now.  In this situation, the dollar will likely remain under pressure in the near term, but nothing has changed my longer-term view of relative strength.

Good luck

Adf

Greatly Vexed

For weeks it appeared that the war
Was something we all could ignore
As equities rallied
And most people tallied
Their gains as those prices did soar

But yesterday, things took a turn
And suddenly, stocks, folks, did spurn
While oil went higher
As missiles did fire
And UAE oil did burn

The question today is what’s next?
Will Hormuz soon wind up annexed?
Or will Iran’s forces
Back up their discourses
And keep Mr Trump greatly vexed?

For nearly two weeks, it appeared that the market was completely willing to accept the narrative that the Iranians were on their last legs and that the Strait would be reopened soon, thus relieving the pressure on the oil markets, and global markets in general.  After all, US equity markets, as well as those in Korea and Taiwan, were making new all-time highs regularly despite the ongoing stress in Iran.  

But yesterday, those happy thoughts were called into question as evidenced by the equity markets’ collective sharp decline throughout Europe and the US.  Of course, most of Asia was closed on Monday, but the few markets that were open performed well then.  Alas, last night was a different story with more losers (HK, India, Australia, New Zealan, Singapore) than gainers (Malaysia, Indonesia).  Even if markets don’t decline much further, there has been a distinct change in sentiment about things, at least in my view.

The timing of the progress in potential negotiations and the question of potential escalation of fighting again are suddenly weighing more heavily on investor perceptions than they had for the last several weeks.

In the meantime, if we turn our attention to economic data, yesterday’s Factory Orders came in much stronger than expected, just the latest in a line of “surprisingly” strong data points from the US.  If we look at the chart below from macromicro.me, showing the Citi Surprise Index and their earnings index, we can see that both the economic indicators and US corporate earnings results are moving higher.  This seems at odds with the narrative of imminent collapse that is still making the rounds but is likely the cause of the equity market’s resilience.

In fact, this morning, markets are once again pointing in a more favorable direction as yesterday’s skirmishes in the Gulf have been quickly forgotten, it seems, and European bourses are all higher (Germany +1.0%, France + 0.6%, Spain +1.1%) recouping yesterday’s losses although UK equities (-1.0%) are suffering on a combination of yesterday’s concerns as well as a surprisingly negative HSBC earnings report.  And US futures are also higher at this hour (5:45) by about 0.4% across the board.  It is difficult to get markets downbeat for very long these days, which is remarkable given the sentiment indicators which have consistently been reading quite poorly.

This dichotomy is quite interesting to me as I am currently reading “Narrative Economics” by Robert Shiller, where he describes how social narratives have, throughout history, led to economic outcomes, whether positive or negative.  His implication is that the data tends to follow the current zeitgeist, and then almost regardless of any government efforts to change that narrative, the zeitgeist is what drives the economy.  For those of us who have been observing markets for any extended length of time, I don’t think this is a surprising revelation, although Shiller does a great job highlighting all the different times the narrative drove the bus.  

And that is what makes the current situation so remarkable, the narrative is that things are terrible with the nation dramatically split politically while gasoline prices have risen so much and inflation is a major problem.  You can see that in the Michigan Sentiment Survey and the political polls.  Yet Retail Sales remain firm and we just saw those strong Factory Orders, two things which one would expect to soften given the current narrative.

Perhaps what we have seen is the impact of social media and ‘influencers’ whose goal is to show the good life and why/how you should live it.  Given they only maintain their followers if they show an ideal situation, there will be no shaming for ostentatious consumption, that is their stock in trade.  So, while during the Great Depression, social pressures were such that buying anything new, like cars or houses, was seen as inappropriate, today, buying new cars is seen as a requirement, the more expensive the better.  Or going on an expensive holiday, or some other extravagance.  I wonder if the gloomy narrative will end up overcoming the influencers.  I suppose much will depend on just how much longer the war in Iran continues, as a clear end soon would almost certainly see a major sentiment change and another wave higher in risk assets while the longer it drags on, the more likely negativity overwhelms.

But this morning, having already looked at equity markets, we see a key piece of that story is oil (-2.0%) having slipped back.  Perhaps the fact that there have been no new skirmishes has people back to a brighter outlook.  Or perhaps, as the conspiracy theorists would explain, governments are in manipulating the price lower again.  As I look at the chart, though, it remains remarkable to me that despite the Strait having been closed for two months now, oil prices have not risen further.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

The question at this point is how quickly things can return to any semblance of normal when the hostilities end.  From what I have read, and I am not an expert, it almost seems like every day the Strait remains closed will require one and a half days more before things get back to the pre-war situation.  Of course, even if that is the case, if the war ends, the zeitgeist will change far faster and that will likely be overlooked.

Meanwhile, given the current gold/oil relationship, we cannot be surprised that gold (+0.6%) and silver (+1.3%) are higher this morning.

In the bond market, after yields rose sharply yesterday (Treasuries +8bps), this morning, things are less dramatic with 10-year Treasury yields slipping -1bp and European sovereign yields all softer with Greece and Italy (-5bps) seeing the largest declines although German bunds (-1bp) were more in line with Treasuries.  There has been much discussion lately about 30-year Treasuries and how they have traded back above 5.0% again, indicating it is a sign of the apocalypse.  However, if you look at the chart below, you can see we have been at or above that level several times in just the past year.  I understand 5.0% is a big round number, but I don’t see this as an imminent disaster because of the move. (Don’t misunderstand, the US fiscal situation is a major problem with many potential problems going forward, I just don’t think this is the final straw.)

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, turning to the dollar, after modest gains yesterday, it is little changed this morning.  The RBA raised rates by 25bps, as expected and AUD is unchanged, as are the euro and pound.  With the BOJ on holiday, JPY (-0.2%) is slipping slightly, but not showing any major activity.  However, we have seen several EMG currencies improve with MXN (+0.3%) and BRL (+0.4%) both benefitting from the increased risk appetite we are seeing in overall markets.  The thing about the dollar is it has not been interesting for quite some time, trading within a fairly narrow range.  However, while we continue to hear many pundits describe the dollar’s ultimate demise, there is an interesting story in the FT about the dollar’s dominance in global markets as can be seen in the chart below from Kobeissi on X.

This is not a demonstration of the world shunning dollars, just sayin!

On the data front, this morning brings the Trade Balance (exp -$60.5B) along with ISM Services (53.7) and JOLTs Job Openings (6.83M).  We also see New Home Sales (668K) and hear from two Fed governors, Bowman and Barr.

But it is all still about the war and oil, and until something definitively changes there, I expect we will chop with every headline.

Good luck

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Ere Fears They Shed

The status is still very quo
As ships still cannot come or go
However, Iran
Proposed a new plan
With nukes as a part of the show

But thus far, whatever they said
Has not moved discussions ahead
So, oil’s crept higher
As traders require
More certainty ere fears they shed

While President Trump has announced a new plan to help escort ships trapped in the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz, thus far, none have taken the chance.  Over the weekend, Iran ostensibly put forth another peace proposal, and this time their nuclear activities were part of the plan, a major change, although President Trump has rejected it overall.  To me, though, this is major progress as it demonstrates that there is a negotiation ongoing.  

My armchair analysis, FWIW, is that Ahmed Vahidi is watching his nation crumble and beginning to really feel the pinch of the US naval blockade as his revenues shrink rapidly.  While there are many estimates of how long Iran can withstand a lack of revenue, and I have no idea what that answer is, I feel it is reasonable to assume that if he doesn’t have enough to pay his soldiers, many of them will simply go home.  Already I have read reports that many of their payments to soldiers and proxies have been dramatically reduced as the US continues to tighten the financial screws via sanctions on banks and companies that have been acting as Iran’s middlemen.  I believe it is widely agreed on all sides of the conversation that the Iranian economy has been virtually collapsing with the rial having fallen 95% in value, access to basic staples limited and suffering widespread.  

The one thing of which I feel certain is that Vahidi wants to remain in power, and I would estimate as the pain increases, and the money stops flowing, his grip on power is slipping.  Staying in power without nuclear weapons is likely much preferred to being deposed.  

In the end, like every negotiation, the parties start far apart and get closer over time.  Now, my view is likely not worth all that much, but the oil market’s view is worth billions of dollars and if we look at how the price of oil has behaved, while uncertainty remains, (especially after a report this morning that Iran fired on and struck a US naval vessel, although that report has been denied), the market does not appear to believe that this is going to continue that much longer.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Several things continue to occur as at $100/bbl; there is some level of demand destruction; production elsewhere in the world continues to grow (I read that Venezuelan production rose to 1.25 mm bpd ,more than had been assumed prior to the Iran war); and the Saudi east-west pipeline is now pumping its capacity 7 million bpd, thus the amount of oil ‘missing’ has been reduced from the initial headline 20 mm bpd to somewhere along the lines of 12 mm bpd, still extremely painful to the global economy, but obviously not (yet) catastrophic.  However, since oil prices remain around $100/bbl, and have not risen to $150/bbl or $200/bbl as many pundits had forecast, there remains a great deal of confidence that this is going to end before too much more time has passed.  I certainly hope so for everyone’s sake.

Away from that, there is precious little other news to note as Asia is basically on holiday until Thursday and the UK is closed today, so market activity has been more muted.  But let’s take a look.  In the equity markets, weirdly HK (+1.2%) was open despite both China and the UK being closed and given HK’s history, I would have thought it would have responded to one of those situations.  But the big news was Korea (+5.1%) which was dramatically higher on rallies in Samsung and SK Hynix shares, both of which have been major beneficiaries of their semiconductor businesses booming alongside AI demand.  I guess we shouldn’t be surprised Taiwan (+4.6%) followed that path and in truth, there were more positive outcomes (India, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, New Zealand) than laggards (Australia).  Remarkably, everything I read is that Asia is the region most negatively affected by the Iran war, yet here we continue to see equity markets rising.

In Europe, things are less optimistic this morning with red across the screen led by Spain (-1.6%) and France (-1.0%) although both the UK and Germany are nigh on unchanged.  One of the weekend stories is that the US is now going to be raising tariffs on European auto imports to 25% from the 15% initially agreed as Trump claims the Europeans weren’t following the agreement.  As to US futures, this morning they are marginally lower as I type (7:30) but remain just ticks away from the all-time highs set last week.  Again, it is difficult to accept the idea that the world is about to end based on the market’s current behavior.  Look at the chart below and worry does not seem to be prevalent, nor has it been for any extended length of time in the past 5 years.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In the bond market, yields are higher this morning with Treasuries (+4bps) leading the way and European sovereigns all higher by between 3bps and 4bps as well.  It’s interesting that this is the behavior but I suppose it has to do with the Keynesian view that higher economic activity leads to higher rates.  If we look at the PMI data from around the US and Europe, manufacturing has been doing quite well.  Look at the ISM Manufacturing chart below for the past 3 years and it is clear that investment is growing there.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It is a similar tale in Europe with Manufacturing PMI data this morning all being released healthily above the 50 level and rising from last month.  The market response to lift yields seems anachronistic, but such is life.  However, it is worth highlighting that if we take a bit of a longer-term perspective on 10-year Treasury yields, while they are pushing toward the top of a 4.00% – 4.50% range, you can see that range has largely been intact for the past 3 years.  It is not clear to me that it is time to panic on yields yet.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In the commodity space, with oil (+3.3%) having risen on the reports of a US ship being attacked, we cannot be surprised to see gold (-1.2%) and silver (-2.6%) both slipping along with copper (-1.6%). This is especially true with China and most of Asia on holiday as official buying of gold is probably on hold for now.  

Finally, the dollar is firmer this morning as risk is under pressure across the board.  US futures are lower, European stocks are lower and oil is higher.  So, gains of 0.25% for the dollar against most currencies are the norm.  There was a very sharp appreciation in the yen early in the overnight session and another one a few hours ago, as you can see in the chart below, with many believing the BOJ was in again during quiet markets, but it has completely reversed.  My take is the BOJ would not have spent reserves like this and would have been far more emphatic if they wanted to move the market again.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But, as market in Asia were quite thin, any large sell order would have been able to force a move like these.  In addition, with the dollar now several percent below their level of concern, I suspect they will save their ammunition.  In the EMG bloc, ZAR (-0.5%) continues to feel most of the pressure from Iran as the combination of higher oil prices and lower gold prices are a double whammy.  As well, NOK (+0.35%) continues to respond positively to the oil price.   Net, the dollar remains in demand for now.

On the data front this week, it is a mixed week until Friday’s NFP data is released.

TodayFactory Orders0.5%
 -ex Transport0.7%
TuesdayTrade Balance-$60.5B
 ISM Services53.7
 JOLTs Job Openings6.83M
 New Home Sales668K
WednesdayADP Employment99K
ThursdayInitial Claims205K
 Continuing Claims1800K
 Nonfarm Productivity1.4%
 Unit Labor Costs2.6%
 Consumer Credit$11.0B
FridayNonfarm Payrolls60K
 Private Payrolls73K
 Manufacturing Payrolls5K
 Unemployment Rate4.3%
 Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (3.8% y/Y)
 Average Weekly Hours34.2
 Participation Rate61.7%
 Michigan Sentiment49.5

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In addition, Fed speakers are back on the circuit (I sure hope Warsh shuts them all up) with 12 speeches from 9 different speakers.  The funny thing is, we already know their views, Miran wants to cut and everybody else is on hold, so what are they going to say?

The war remains the only thing that matters right now, so watch for headlines that an agreement is coming closer.  If that happens, oil will slide along with yields and the dollar while metals and stocks will rally.  (Of course, apparently, we don’t need anything else to get stocks to rally!)

Good luck

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