The Issuance Tap

The Saudis thought oil was cheap

So, figured that they’d rather keep

More stuff in the ground

And in a profound

Move, cut back production quite steep

 

 

Meanwhile now the debt ceiling’s gone

The Treasury’s set to turn on

The issuance tap

To refill the gap

In finance that started to yawn

 

The biggest story over the weekend was the Saudi’s decision to cut oil production by 1 million barrels per day as they are concerned the pending recession is going to further destroy demand and so are aiming to keep prices supported.  No other OPEC+ members joined with the Saudis as it seems they all want the money.  And who can blame them?  Not surprisingly, oil prices are firmer this morning, up nearly 2%, but remain far below levels seen prior to the last OPEC+ production cut when WTI was pushing $80/bbl.   However, if we look back to pre-covid times, oil was trading a full $10/bbl lower than the current level of ~$73/bbl.  In the interim, we have seen significant structural changes in the oil market, and I continue to expect these changes to force prices higher over time.

 

First, the election of President Joe Biden led to an immediate change in US energy policy with a destruction in production capabilities in the name of global warming.  Second, the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing sanctions on Russian oil (and NatGas) exports have helped reduce the amount of energy molecules available to be used worldwide.  Add to this the longer-term lack of energy infrastructure investment given the ESG push for the past decade, and the supply side of the equation does not look robust. 

 

On the demand side, however, things are likely to continue to trend higher for the foreseeable future.  Despite trillions of dollars of investment in alternative sources of energy, namely wind and solar, fossil fuels continue to represent more than 80% of total energy usage worldwide.  As well, every advancement in civilization throughout history has been driven by access to cheaper energy, and all those nations that we currently call emerging markets are quite keen to continue to advance their economies to the benefit of their populations.  They are far less concerned about global warming than they are about better living standards.  According to the IEA’s most recent forecasts, 2023 will set yet another record for oil demand regardless of the recession calls and the war in Ukraine.  Ultimately, this supply/demand imbalance is going to resolve toward higher prices still.  Mark my words.

 

As to the other discussion making the rounds in markets this morning, the upcoming deluge of Treasury security issuance, there are many claiming that this may have a significant impact on risk asset pricing, notably equities.  The idea is that as the Treasury refills its TGA (checking account) with up to $500 billion to get it back to its more normal balance, it will draw liquidity from potential equity investors who decide that earning a risk-free 5+% on their money is quite attractive, thus reducing demand for stocks.  However, this is a more nuanced discussion as there are other features in the money markets that will be impacted as well, and that are likely to offset a significant portion of that impact.

 

On the surface, that argument has validity, but digging a bit deeper is worthwhile to get a better understanding here.  The Fed runs a Reverse Repo program (RRP), where they essentially pay a small subset of investors to hold their securities at the Fed funds rate.  This program currently has about $2.2 trillion in it and is widely used by Money Market funds as an investment.  And that money in the RRP program is stuck at the Fed and not available for other investment.  However, T-bills have been yielding higher than Fed funds, and it is expected that those same Money Market funds will be snapping up the newly issued T-bills while running down their RRP balances, thus absorbing a great deal of the new issuance.  If this is the case, it will reduce the amount of available risk-free assets to which the equity investors described above will have access.  In other words, the feared demand drain is likely to be far smaller than the $1 trillion that has been bandied about lately.  Do not count on this as a rationale for equity weakness, although that doesn’t mean there are no problems ahead.

 

And, as we begin another week, those are really the noteworthy stories around.  After Friday’s blowout NFP number of 339K new jobs with a revision higher in the previous months, US equities took off and had a big day.  That has mostly been followed by Asia, which saw strength almost everywhere (mainland China being the most prominent exception) although Europe has had a less robust session today.  Arguably, that is because the Services PMI data in Europe released this morning was softer than expected across the board, and they had already reacted to the US payroll data on Friday as those markets were open during the release.  Meanwhile, US futures are either side of unchanged this morning, clearly not feeling any additional love from the payroll story.

 

Of more interest is the fact that bond yields are higher around the world this morning, with Treasuries (+5.4bps) seeing selling pressure along with all of Europe (Bunds +7.2bps, OATs +7.0bps, Gilts +5.8bps, BTPs +8.1bps) as it seems the flood of issuance due from the US is being felt everywhere.  After all, given the dollar’s recent trend higher, which is very evident today, for non-USD investors, higher yielding Treasury securities are likely to be very attractive. As to domestic investors, selling ahead of significant issuance is a time-honored tradition.

 

Aside from oil, metals markets are under very modest pressure this morning, which has more to do with the rising dollar than anything specific to those markets.

 

And speaking of the dollar, it is on top of the world yet again this morning, rising against all its G10 counterparts and almost all its EMG counterparts.  SEK (-1.1%) is the worst G10 performer, after its PMI data was substantially worse than forecast with the Composite index tumbling to 47.6, a level only ever achieved during Covid, the GFC and the Eurozone banking/bond crisis.  In other words, things don’t look too good there.  But even NOK (-0.55%) is under pressure despite the strong rally in oil.  This is unadulterated USD strength.  Similarly, EMG currencies are all under pressure save ZAR (+0.6%), which seems to have responded positively to news that there would be reduced blackouts going forward. 

 

On the data front, there is not very much this week, so activity is likely to be driven by other markets given the FOMC is in their quiet period.

 

Today

Factory Orders

0.8%

 

-ex Transport

0.2%

 

ISM Services

52.4

Wednesday

Trade Balance

-$75.5B

Thursday

Initial Claims

237K

 

Continuing Claims

1802K

Source: Bloomberg

 

And that’s really all we’ve got for today.  To me, the biggest risk to markets is the fact that US equity performance is entirely reliant on 7 companies, all of which are very good companies, but whose performance has been extraordinarily outsized and does not seem representative of the economy or market as a whole.  At some point, those stocks are likely to come back to earth and that will result in a very large adjustment to views about the Fed, the economy, and the stock market.  But for now, it is hard to fight the trend, and that includes the dollar higher trend.

 

Good luck

Adf

 

 


			

Worries Now Past

With debt default worries now past

And jobs data set for broadcast

Risk preference has grown

As folks want to own

The highest of flyers, and fast

 

 

Meanwhile, the idea that the Fed

Will raise rates this month is now dead

Inflation is sliding

And pundits are chiding

Those who think price gains are widespread

 

In what can only be surprising to those who traffic in fear porn, the Senate passed the debt ceiling bill, and it heads to President Biden’s desk today for his signature and enactment.  This outcome was always going to be the case, especially once the House passed its debt ceiling increase bill.  All the histrionics about the president’s unwillingness to negotiate were simply part of the theater that goes with the current form of politics.  However, there were enough people who bought into the drama and created hedges so that this outcome has had a market impact.  You may recall that there were fears of a US debt default and if that were to occur, equity markets would sell off sharply.  And that is likely very true, if the US were to default on its debt, that is what would happen.  However, as I wrote from the beginning, that was a highly unlikely outcome.  Nonetheless, yesterday did see a rally in equity markets in the US with the rest of the world following suit overnight.  Risk is back baby!

 

Meanwhile, we got further confirmation that the Fed is going to pause skip a rate hike this meeting and the Fed funds futures market has now fallen to a 25% probability of any movement.  One of the interesting things about this ongoing repricing is that the data is not showing any signs of a slowdown that would help reduce inflationary pressures.  For instance, yesterday’s ADP Employment data was a much stronger than expected 278K, beating forecasts by more than 100K, while Initial Claims data continue to slide from their recent peak in March.  In other words, as we await today’s NFP data, the latest data points show continued strength in the US labor market.  Helping that story was the employment sub index of the ISM report, which while the headline remains weak at 46.9, saw the employment index rise to 51.4.  In other words, companies, at least manufacturing companies, are still looking for employees.

 

So, what is on the cards for today?  Here are the latest median forecasts according to Bloomberg:

 

Nonfarm Payrolls

195K

Private Payrolls

165K

Manufacturing Payrolls

5K

Unemployment Rate

3.5%

Average Hourly Earnings

0.3% (4.4% Y/Y)

Average Weekly Hours

34.4

Participation Rate

62.6%

 

Certainly, none of this data is vaguely representative of a recession, at least in the traditional definition, where growth turns negative, and Unemployment rises sharply.  While Powell and company may skip a hike this meeting, looking at this data, as well as at the fact that the inflation data, whether CPI or PCE, continues to run well above their target, even if that target is an average, certainly does not indicate the Fed is done hiking.  And remember, while we had all gotten quite used to the idea that interest rates at 0% or 1% were the norm, that is not the long-term reality.  Going back to 1970 (all the data I have), the average Fed funds rate has been 4.92%, essentially where we are today, with a peak of 20.0% in March 1980 and of course a floor of 0.0%, which was the level until the recent hiking cycle for the bulk of the previous 13 years. 

 

My point is that anticipation of the Fed stopping because Fed funds are so much higher than they were for the last decade is a serious mistake.  Rates can go much higher, and at this point, as long as the Unemployment rate remains at or near its current level, all the evidence of this Fed points to higher rates in the future.  In fact, it has been this thesis that drives my dollar expectations for continued strength because I believe the US economy is far better placed to handle higher rates than are most others, and these high rates will continue to support the greenback.  Once again, this is why I continue to believe the NFP data is far more important than CPI, as NFP will be the trigger for a policy change, not CPI (or PCE).

 

As we await the data, the market is clearly in a good mood.  As mentioned above, equity markets worldwide have rallied nicely with every virtually every major market higher by 1% or more (the Hang Seng jumped 4% last night on rumors of further Chinese government support for its still faltering economy.)  Naturally, US futures are also pointing higher this morning as well, with all three major indices up at least 0.5%.

 

Meanwhile, bond yields have edged higher this morning with Treasury yields up less than 1bp while European sovereigns are seeing yields creep up 2bp-3bps.  This has all the feel of a risk-on move with investors moving from fixed income to equity investments at the margin.  After all, no US default combined with a Fed pause skip is as good as it gets!

 

In a reversal of recent moves, commodity prices are feeling quite frisky this morning with oil (+1.5%) and copper (+1.5%) both benefitting from the same story that helped the Hang Seng, further Chinese stimulus on the way.  Meanwhile, gold (+0.1%) is holding onto yesterday’s sharp gains as the dollar is under pressure this morning.

 

Speaking of the dollar, despite my medium-term view of pending strength, it is definitely on its back foot this morning. The bulk of the G10 is firmer, with the highest beta currencies leading the way (SEK +0.85%, AUD +0.75%, NOK +0.6%) as commodity strength feeds through the market.  In addition, there is a growing belief that the RBA may have one more hike in them if data continues to show strength.  In the emerging markets, the story has largely been the same with almost the entire bloc firmer vs. the dollar led by KRW (+1.25%) and ZAR (+1.0%).  The rand story is clearly a commodity one, while the won story is in sync with the Chinese stimulus idea given how dependent South Korea is on Chinese growth.  I should note the renminbi has also rallied about 0.5% this morning on that very same story.

 

And that’s really it.  At this point, all we can do is wait for the labor market data to be released.  Until then, don’t look for any movement of note.  If we see another strong NFP print, something like last month’s 253K, I expect that the dollar should benefit and reverse some of its overnight losses, although equities may very well remain supported on the soft landing scenario that continues to reappear.  FWIW, this poet sees continued NFP strength for now, but we shall see shortly.

 

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

 

This Time They’ll Skip

Twas clearly much more than a quip

When several Fed speakers did flip

The narrative’s tune

‘Bout rate hikes in June

Implying that this time they’ll skip

 

However, don’t think that they’re done

As they know that in the long run

Inflation’s not dead

And Jay Powell’s said

They’ll not stop til this battle’s won

 

We learned some important new things yesterday regarding the economy and the Fed’s current reaction function, namely that the Labor market continues to be pretty hot and, more importantly, that despite that fact, the Fed is almost certainly going to forego a rate hike this month.  Regarding the Labor market, yesterday’s JOLTs Job Openings data printed back above 10 million openings after a dip below that level in the previous two months indicated that there was less labor demand.  This is crucial because the Fed clearly watches this number closely as part of their employment situation dashboard, and more openings implies more wage pressure higher, the key thing Powell and friends are trying to ameliorate.  After the release, stocks, which had opened lower already, fell a further 0.5% as expectations for a 25bp rate hike in two weeks rose further.

 

But never fear, when it comes to supporting financial markets, the Fed is always there to help and yesterday was no different than normal.  While, as noted yesterday, non-voter and uber-hawk Loretta Mester was clear she saw no reason to pause, we subsequently heard from two other Fed speakers, Philadelphia’s Patrick Harker and Governor (and vice-chairman select) Phillip Jefferson, that now would be a good time to pause skip a meeting and look around at how the already 500 basis points of rates hikes are impacting the economy. 

 

I am in the camp increasingly coming into this meeting thinking that we really should skip, not pause, but skip an increase.  A pause would mean the Fed is going to hold its policy interest rate steady for a while.  It is too soon to make that call,” explained Harker at the OMFIF* Economic and Monetary Policy Institute. [emphasis added]

 

Meanwhile, Philip Jefferson explained, “a decision to hold our policy rate constant at a coming meeting should not be interpreted to mean that we have reached the peak rate for this cycle.  Indeed, skipping a rate hike at a coming meeting would allow the Committee to see more data before making decisions about the extent of additional policy firming.” [emphasis added]

 

Rounding out the guidance was an article from the Fed Whisperer, the WSJ’s Nick Timiraos, highlighting these two speeches and clearing any doubt that a rate hike on June 14th is a dead issue.  So, summing things up, the Fed is going to hold fire in two weeks but fully well expects to tighten policy further starting in July unless something really significant occurs.  It should be no surprise that the Fed funds futures market has adjusted its pricing to a 30% probability of a hike in June (down from ~65% yesterday morning) and an additional 45% probability of one by July.  I am confident, that barring a remarkably strong NFP number on Friday, that we will see that June probability shrink even further, likely to around 20%.

 

How will this impact markets?  Well, yesterday saw the first equity weakness in a while, although US markets only fell about -0.6% on the day.  However, we are already seeing a rebound as Asian markets were broadly higher, albeit not dramatically so, and we are seeing real strength in Europe this morning with the DAX higher by more than 1.1% and leading the way.  The interesting thing about Europe is that early this morning we saw the PMI Manufacturing data releases and it was not a pretty picture.  Germany (43.2) was the laggard, but the Eurozone as a whole (44.8) was hardly something to write home about.  In fact, these PMI readings have been sub-50 since last July, a pretty strong indication of a recession.  Adding to the dysfunction was German April Retail Sales, falling -8.6% Y/Y, back to Covid levels, and before that, last seen in 1980!  Arguably, this ongoing weakness in economic data is going to stay Madame Lagarde’s hand when it comes to the ECB’s policy tightening.  The combination of lower headline CPI data and clearly weaker economic activity will make any more rate hikes, especially in the face of a Fed that is not hiking this month, much more difficult.

 

As to bond yields, this morning they have stabilized after their recent sharp declines.  Right now, we are looking at slightly higher yields, on the order of 1bp to 2bps, which seems to be merely a trading reaction to the previous week’s decline of 18bps.  With the House having passed the debt ceiling bill last night (it now moves to the Senate), that market drama seems to have ended so I expect we will get back to talking about the economy and the Fed again, as well as, of course, inflation.

 

Oil prices (-0.4%) are continuing their downward slide as regardless of any supply questions, this market sees demand as cratering as we head into a recession.  It is, of course, this price action, that has the deflationistas back crowing again about the inevitable collapse of CPI and how the Fed will need to reverse course quickly.  I am not in that camp, but only time will tell.  Meanwhile, gold (+0.25%) and copper (+2.3%) are telling a different story, especially copper.  It is hard to make sense of a rising copper price, the metal most closely associated with economic activity, and a simultaneous decline in oil.  But hey, nobody ever said markets made sense.  This will resolve itself at some point, but clearly not today.

 

Finally, the dollar is a non-event today, with about half the G10 and EMG blocs rising and the other half sliding, none more than about 0.3%.  Movement like this is hard to define as anything more than position adjustments and trading activity with no real catalysts seen.

 

On the data front, we get a bunch of releases today as follows:

 

  • ADP Employment 170K
  • Nonfarm Productivity -2.4%   
  • Unit Labor Costs 0%    
  • Initial Claims 235K   
  • Continuing Claims 1800K
  • ISM Manufacturing 0
  • ISM Prices Paid 3

 

The ADP number is a day late due to the Memorial Day holiday on Monday, but I cannot help but look at the productivity and ULC data and consider how negative that is for the economy writ large.  As well, we hear again from Patrick Harker, the last scheduled speaker before the FOMC meeting on the 14th.  Of course, we heard his views yesterday so I doubt there will be anything new.

 

A skip is not a pause, and I believe that the Fed will not be deterred from their mission at this stage.  This means that the market will continue to price in tighter Fed policy and the dollar is likely to benefit accordingly.

 

Good luck

Adf

 

 

 

*OMFIF is the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, a think tank devoted to banking and central banking.  I, too, have never heard of this before.

Far From a Floor

As energy prices decline

Inflation, at least the headline,

Continues to shrink

As central banks think

Their actions have been quite benign

 

The problem is that at its core

Inflation is far from a floor

So, Christine and Jay

Ain’t ready to say

They’re done and won’t hike anymore

 

European inflation readings continue to fall alongside the ongoing decline in energy prices.  Headline numbers in France, Italy and Germany, as well as Spain and most of the Eurozone, have fallen sharply in the past month and seem likely to continue to do so.  Core inflation readings, however, for those countries that measure such things, and for the Eurozone as a whole, are demonstrating the same stickiness that we have seen here in the US.  Ultimately, the problem is that an inflationary mindset has begun to take hold in many people’s view.  While there is a great deal of complaining about rising prices, people continue to pay them, and the hangover of fiscal stimulus that was seen everywhere and continues to be pumped into economies around the world has allowed companies to raise prices while maintaining sales. 

 

There continues to be a strong disagreement within the analyst community regarding the future of inflation as there are many who have watched the trajectory of energy price declines and anticipate a return to 0%-2% inflation by the end of the year.  At the same time, there is another camp, in which the Fxpoet falls, that expects inflation to remain sticky in the 4% range for the foreseeable future.  Arguably, until such time as the massive amount of liquidity that was injected into the economy in response to Covid (and the GFC) is removed, I fear prices will err on the side of rising faster than we had become used to for so long.

 

Taking this one step further, the central bank playbook on inflation, as written by Paul Volcker in the 1980’s, was to tighten monetary policy enough to cause a severe recession and break demand.  We all know that Chairman Powell has read that book and is following it as best he can these days.  And, he has most of his team on board with that view.  Just this morning, Cleveland Fed President, and known hawk, Loretta Mester explained to the FT, “I don’t really see a compelling reason to pause – meaning wait until you get more evidence to decide what to do.  I would see more of a compelling case for bringing rates up…and then holding for a while until you get less uncertain about where the economy is going.”  These are not the words of someone who is concerned that rising interest rates are going to derail the US economy.  It is sentiment like this that has the Fed funds futures market pricing in a 64% probability of a rate hike in two weeks’ time.  It is also sentiment like this that is supporting the dollar, which has traded to its highest level in more than two months and is crushing the large, vocal contingent of dollar short positions around.

 

But, heading back to the recession argument, the data that we continue to receive shows no clear signs in either direction, rather it shows lots of conflict.  Yesterday I mentioned the decline in GDI, a seeming harbinger of weaker growth.  Meanwhile, yesterday’s data releases perfectly encapsulated the issue, with Consumer Confidence printing at a higher than expected 102.3, while the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index fell to a wretched -29.1, far worse than expected and a level only reached during recessions in the past.  And there’s more to this story as last night China’s PMI data was all released at worse than expected levels (Manufacturing 48.8, Non-manufacturing 54.5, Composite 52.9) with all 3 readings slowing compared to April and an indication that the Chinese reopening story seems well and truly dead. 

 

This poses a sticky problem for President Xi as the clearly slowing Chinese economy seems likely to require further stimulus, whether fiscal, monetary, or both, with the ‘smart money ‘betting on monetary easing.  However, the renminbi (-0.4%) fell again last night and has been sliding pretty steadily since January.  Now, firmly above 7.10, it is fast approaching levels that the PBOC has previously indicated are inappropriate.  The question is, what will they do?  Easing monetary policy opens the door to rising prices, a potentially severe problem in China, while standing pat will likely result in further economic decline, not exactly what Xi is seeking.  My money is on easier policy and if necessary, price controls, something at which the Chinese government excels.

 

One cannot be surprised that with news like this, risk is taking a breather today, despite the ongoing euphoria over NVDA and AI.  Yesterday’s mixed performance in the US led to substantial weakness overnight in Asia, with all main indices falling by at least -1.0%.  Meanwhile, Europe this morning is also largely in the red, albeit only to the tune of -0.5%, and at this hour (8:00) US futures are pointing lower by -0.3% across the board. 

 

At the same time, the combination of falling inflation rates in Europe and the fact that a debt ceiling deal appears to be coming together has yields continuing to slide with Treasuries (-4.4bps) actually underperforming European sovereign yields which are all lower by between 7bps and 8bps.  The other thing to note here is that the yield curve inversion in the US, currently back to -78bps, is showing no signs of righting itself soon.  It has been nearly one year since the curve inverted, and recession alarms have been ringing everywhere, although one has not yet been sighted.  I expect continued volatility in this market as the debt ceiling bill will allow for a significant uptick in issuance right away and the question is, who will buy all this debt? 

 

Oil prices (-2.8%) continue to point to slowing economic activity and that is confirmed by weakness in the base metals as well.  While the Fed sees no signs of a recession, it seems pretty clear that some markets disagree.  Do not be surprised to see another production cut by OPEC+ as the summer progresses.

 

Finally, the dollar is king again, rising against virtually all its G10 and EMG counterparts, with the G10, sans JPY, all falling between -0.4% and -0.6%.  This is a broadscale risk-off move and one which is likely to continue as long as we see the combination of tough talk from the Fed and slowing economic data.

 

Speaking of economic data, today brings Chicago PMI (exp 47.2), JOLTS Job Openings (9.4M) and the Fed’s Beige Book this afternoon.  It is pretty clear that manufacturing activity remains in the doldrums here but pay close attention to the JOLTS data as the Fed is watching it closely for clues as to labor market tightness.  A weak number there is likely to have a bigger market impact than anything else today.

 

Net, I see no reason to dispute the dollar’s strength at the current time.  Talk to me when the Fed changes its tune, and we can see a dollar reversal.  Until then, higher for longer is both the interest rate and USD mantra.

 

Good luck

Adf

 

The New Bling

Though pundits on all sides maintained

A debt default soon was ordained

Instead, what we got

Was spending a lot

Of cash sans debt issues restrained

 

So, fear has now faded away

While risk preference is on display

AI is the thing

That is the new bling

And everyone wants it today!

 

This poet is in no position to discuss the particular merits, or lack thereof, regarding the debt ceiling deal that was reached over the weekend.  The only thing that ultimately matters is that a deal was reached and that despite a great deal of huffing and puffing yet to come, will almost certainly be passed and signed into law this week thus preventing any chance of a debt default by the US Treasury.  As such, another “crisis” has been averted and the market can go back to focusing on its favorite topic, the Fed.  Or is AI the market’s new favorite topic?

 

Having been around long enough to well remember the dot com bubble of 2000-2001, the AI discussion certainly seems to have a lot of parallels to that time.  Essentially, look for company after company to announce they are utilizing AI to improve their productivity and enhance the features of their products as they try to share the current positive attitude investors have on the subject.  And this is not to dispute that AI has the potential to be very beneficial over time as its strengths and weaknesses are better understood, it is just a comment that in the early stages of a new mania, association with the ‘thing’ is just as important as how that ‘thing’ is used.  I have a sense that like in the gold rush in 1849 in California, the ones making money will not be the miners (all those companies claiming AI is part of their process), but rather the sellers of the picks and shovels and supplies (NVDA and other semiconductor manufacturers) who are building the pieces needed to create AI.  But that doesn’t mean that equity markets won’t rally a bunch from here, regardless of valuations.  Be wary.

 

However, let’s head back to the macro discussion, an area more in tune with poetry.  Starting with the debt ceiling deal, as with all compromises, neither side is happy as both feel they gave away too much.  But the important thing is that, as always, the time pressure was sufficient to force movement on both sides and whatever the final shape of the bill, it will be passed.  This is especially true because you can be sure that now that a compromise has been reached, any failure to complete the process will be squarely blamed on the House Republicans by the entire global media complex regardless of the particulars.

 

With that out of the way, a quick look back to Friday’s PCE data shows that despite a growing sentiment that inflation is heading back down to, and below, 2% shortly, the Core PCE reading was a tick higher than forecast at 0.4% M/M and 4.7% Y/Y.  Meanwhile, the rest of the data Friday showed relative economic strength.  Durable Goods rose sharply, +1.0%, while Personal Income and Spending remained robust.  Not only that, but the Advance Goods Trade Balance widened to a -$96.8B deficit, indicating a lot of imports coming in, and Michigan Sentiment rose to 59.2, still largely awful, but above forecasts.

 

But all this data was in conflict with other data, notably Gross Domestic Income (GDI).  As per the below from Investopedia, GDI measures the amount of earnings while GDP measures the amount of production:

  • GDI = Wages + Profits + Interest Income + Rental Income + Taxes – Production/Import Subsidies + Statistical Adjustments
  • GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Purchases + Exports – Imports

 

The fudge factor is Statistical Adjustments, but GDP has been the benchmark as the data tends to be more recent.  In theory, they should be equal, but that is just not the case, largely because of the timing of data releases.  Here’s the thing, the GDI data released last week, alongside the GDP data, showed that in Q1, GDI fell -2.3% while Q4 2022 GDI was revised lower to -3.3%.  That is two consecutive quarters of negative GDI, a situation that, when it has occurred in the past, has always happened during a recession.  So, once again we are seeing conflicting data with some numbers indicating ongoing economic strength while others are indicating the opposite.

 

What’s a risk manager to do?  The beauty of hedging is that when done properly, it helps mitigate large movement in whatever is being hedged, whether that is profitability, cash flow or expenses.  However, if pressed, it remains very difficult to believe that we can have the Fed raise interest rates as quickly and as far as they have already done without having some negative economic consequences coming down the line.  Remember, monetary policy works with ‘long and variable lags’ which has historically varied between 6 and 29 months from the onset of policy changes.  We are only 14 months into this process (first rate hike in March 2022), and while the housing market has clearly felt an impact, it is not clear that the rest of the economy has seen that much yet.

 

Looking ahead, there is still a huge wall of debt refinancing to come with rates much higher than before thus, at the very least, significant cost pressures on companies bottom lines.  And there will be those companies that cannot find financing at a level allowing continued operations.  In fact, bankruptcies have already been running at a record rate with more than 230 so far this year (counting companies with >$50 million in liabilities).  There is no reason to believe that trend will slow down as the Fed continues to raise rates.

 

Speaking of the Fed, the market is now pricing a 60% probability of a 25bp rate hike in June, up from just 30% one week ago, 13% two weeks ago and 0% immediately following the last meeting.  In addition, the market is removing its pricing of rate cuts as well, with now just 2 rate cuts priced in one year from now.  That number had been upwards of 150bps of cuts last month.  The point is that the market is finally taking the Fed at their word that rates will remain higher for longer, and that another hike or two are well within the realm of possibility.

 

It remains difficult for me to see how risk assets can continue to outperform with ongoing monetary policy tightening as well as slowing growth elsewhere in the world, notably Germany, which is already in recession, and China, where growth continues to lag forecasts and models as the property market, which had been a primary mover for decades, continues to flounder.

 

As to markets today, risk is mixed with modest gains in Asia overnight, a mixed bag in Europe this morning and US futures pointing to continued NASDAQ gains while the rest of the market stagnates.  Bond markets have seen yields decline sharply as fears over that debt default disappear with Treasury yields falling 8.3bps and similar size yield declines throughout Europe.  In the commodity space, oil (-2.0%) is falling on concerns slowing economic growth will continue to undermine demand while both gold (+0.8%) and copper (+4.5%) are rallying, the former on a bit of dollar weakness while the latter has been getting a huge amount of press regarding the structural shortages that will be exacerbated by the attempts to electrify everything.

 

Finally, the dollar is mixed, largely stronger vs. most of the EMG basket, albeit not hugely so, while the G10 has been outperforming this morning with GBP (+0.6%) the leader after BRC shop prices hit a new all-time high of 9.0% encouraging belief the BOE will need to tighten further.

 

This is a big week for data as we get the payroll report on Friday but plenty before then.

 

Today

Case Shiller Home Prices

-1.60%

 

Consumer Confidence

99.0

 

Dallas Fed Manufacturing

-18.0

Wednesday

Chicago PMI

47.2

 

JOLTS Job Openings

9439K

 

Fed’s Beige Book

 

Thursday

ADP Employment

165K

 

Initial Claims

235K

 

Continuing Claims

1803K

 

Nonfarm Productivity

-2.6%

 

Unit Labor Costs

6.3%

 

ISM Manufacturing

47.0

 

ISM Prices Paid

52.5

Friday

Nonfarm Payrolls

193K

 

Private Payrolls

173K

 

Manufacturing Payrolls

5K

 

Unemployment Rate

3.5%

 

Average Hourly Earnings

0.3% (4.4% Y/Y)

 

Average Weekly Hours

34.4

 

Participation Rate

62.6%

Source: Bloomberg

 

Clearly, all eyes will be on NFP on Friday, but there is much to be gleaned between now and then.  On the Fed speaker front, we hear from 5 more speakers ahead of the beginning of the quiet period starting Friday.  I maintain that the NFP data is the key for the Fed.  As long as it remains strong, Powell has cover to raise rates as much as he likes.  But once it cracks, look out below.  For now, nothing has changed my dollar view of continued strength until such time as policies change. 

 

Good luck

Adf

 

 

			

On the Spot

This morning, it’s Core PCE

That markets are waiting to see

If it keeps on falling

More folks will be calling

For rate cuts ere end ‘Twenty-three

But what if the data is hot

That could put the Fed on the spot

Instead of a pause

That reading may cause

At least one more hike than was thought

As we head into the Memorial Day weekend, the market is awaiting some more key data points for the Fed’s calculus on inflation.  Today brings a plethora of things as follows (median expectations from Bloomberg):

  • Personal Income (exp 0.4%)
  • Personal Spending (0.5%)
  • Core PCE Deflator (0.3%, 4.6% Y/Y)
  • Durable Goods (-1.0%)
  • -ex Transport (-0.1%)
  • Michigan Sentiment (58.0)

Given the Fed’s preference for the Core PCE as their key inflation indicator, this data point is always a critical feature of the monthly slate.  However, since the FOMC Minutes were released on Wednesday, the market has already adjusted its views on the Fed’s future path.  Since the release, the market has removed another full 25bp cut from the medium-term outlook, with pricing for January 2024 rising from 4.50% to 4.735%.  It appears that the market is truly beginning to believe the Fed that it is going to remain higher for longer.

So, let’s look at the consequences of that policy stance and the market’s grudging acceptance.  Over the course of the past 3 weeks, 10-year Treasury yields have risen from 3.38% to 3.78% after giving up 3bps this morning. Meanwhile, 2-year Treasury yields have risen from 3.89% to 4.49%, increasing the curve inversion again, and highlighting the market view that a recession remains in the not-too-distant future.

Generally speaking, the combination of higher interest rates and recessionary indicators tends to undermine the equity market, but that picture is more nuanced these days as the incredibly narrow breadth of the price leaders has been able to overcome a more general malaise.  For instance, yesterday’s S&P 500 gain of 0.88% was largely the result of just three key tech names, NVDA, MSFT and AVGO, with the rest of the group mostly thrashing around.  This continues the trend of a handful of companies driving the value of the “broad” market indices, a situation that cannot go on forever, but for now, it seems fine.  Of course, the NASDAQ is even doing better since all those high performers are NASDAQ names.

However, one needs to ask, if the Fed continues to tighten policy further, and the market is now pricing a one-third probability that they hike another 25bps next month, and the result is a further slowdown in the economy, can these companies continue to perform?  Maybe they can, but history is not on their side.

Other markets, too, have been impacted by the slow realization that the Fed means what they have been saying all along, higher for longer.  While oil prices (+0.5%) are edging higher today, they have been significant underperformers along with base metals as concerns over future economic growth weigh on the sector.  Both copper and oil have been falling for the last several months as the largest importer of both, China, seems to find itself with its own economic malaise.  This is merely another input into the recession story.

Weakening growth in China and higher interest rates in the West to fight still too-high inflation do not bode well for economic activity for now.  Add to these factors the potential outcome from the debt ceiling negotiations, reduced Federal spending in the US, and you have a trifecta of reasons for a negative equity and risk market outlook.

Speaking of the debt ceiling, this morning’s headlines indicate that the two sides are getting closer, but that spending cuts are part of the process.  Naturally, this is controversial on the left side of the aisle, but the fact that not all the spending cuts included in the bill already passed by the House are going to be seen is controversial on the right side of the aisle.  If anything, this sounds like an excellent outcome, where neither side is happy, but both agree something must be done.  It is certainly no surprise to me that they are getting closer to agreement as this all has been part of the Congressional Kabuki that we regularly see on critical issues.  Remember, though, avoiding a debt default is not a huge positive sign, it is merely the absence of a negative one.

Where does this leave us?  Overall, the data remains mixed at best, with manufacturing indicators weakening, service indicators holding up, inflation remaining stickily high and the Fed continuing to pound its one main tool, the hammer of interest rate hikes on the economy.  Perhaps the most interesting data situation is that of Initial Claims, which yesterday printed at a much lower than expected 229K.  The fairly steady increases in layoffs that had been seen since the beginning of the year seem to be abating now.  In fact, the 4-week moving average of claims data has fallen back sharply to 231.8K, an indicator that the trend higher may be ending.  If this is the case, and the NFP data going forward remains robust, the Fed will have every reason to continue to tighten policy further, much further than is currently priced into the market.  As I have written in the past, I continue to believe that NFP is the most important data point.  As long as Unemployment remains low and jobs are created, the Fed will have all the cover it needs to maintain tight monetary policy.  Just be prepared for some other things to break, à la SVB and First Republic.

Finally, a word about the dollar, which while modestly softer today remains in a clear uptrend off the lows seen early in the month.  As long as the Fed maintains its current policy stance, one which is still being priced into the market, the dollar has further to rally.  Although other central banks have been tightening policy as well, notably the ECB and BOE, the Fed remains the leader of the pack.  Until the Fed finally halts, those two will lag and the dollar should remain strong.  It is only when the Fed finally reverses course, which may not be until the middle of next year on current pace, when we should see any substantial dollar weakness.  I would not hold my breath.

In the end, it all comes back to inflation.  Until the central banks believe that they have defeated inflation’s threats, barring a calamitous economic collapse, I would look for bond yields around the world to continue to drift higher, for equity markets to struggle, although further gains cannot be ruled out, and for the dollar to maintain its overall strength.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Much Pain

There once was a nation quite strong

Whose policies worked for so long

But war in Ukraine

Inflicted much pain

And now it seems they were all wrong

Relying on, energy, cheap

They rose to the top of the heap

But when prices rose

They’d naught to propose

‘Bout how to, advantages, keep

It turns out that Germany has fallen into a recession after all.  The German Statistics office revised down their Q4 2022 GDP reading from stagnation at 0.0%, to a -0.5% reading after adjusting for a substantial decline in government spending.  Meanwhile, Q1 GDP growth fell -0.3%, so Germany is solidly in a recession, at least based on the traditional definition of two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.  It certainly is remarkable that an economy that predicated itself on levering cheap, imported energy into the manufacture of steel, chemicals and machinery would encounter any problems simply because it became totally reliant on raw materials from a communist regime…NOT!  But in fairness, the Germans have hamstrung themselves by spending hundreds of billions of euros in their Energiewende program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  Unfortunately, this included shuttering their entire nuclear power fleet, which had produced upwards of 25% of their electricity with zero emissions and replacing it with heavily subsidized solar and wind power generation.  (By the way, whoever thought that solar power was a good idea in Northern Europe?  Arizona I get, Germany not so much.)

Granted, prior to Vladimir Putin invading Ukraine, things were going along swimmingly.  China was soaking up so much of what Germany was producing, and of course the rest of Europe were huge customers as well.  But it turns out risk management is a real thing, and not just when it comes to your foreign exchange or interest rate risks.  If we learned nothing else from the Covid pandemic it is that surety of supply of critical products or inputs is worth a lot, perhaps just as much as the price of that supply.  

Once Russia invaded, though, the world changed dramatically, and a critical flaw in the German economy was exposed.  Prior to the invasion, because of Energiewende, German electricity prices were the highest in Europe and approaching the highest in the world.  And that included cheap Russian gas as a source.  Now those prices are higher still and major manufacturers are picking up stakes and moving their facilities to places where they can get reliable, and relatively inexpensive, energy.  BASF moving key production to both China and Saudi Arabia is merely indicative of the problems Germany will have going forward.  It strikes me that Germany has a long road to hoe in order to get their economy back working as effectively as it had in the past.  This does not bode well for the euro (-0.2%) which is continuing its slow grind lower this morning, as the dollar continues to buck the majority analyst view of USD weakness.

The future belongs to AI

At least that’s what bulls glorify

So, last night we learned

Nvidia earned

A ton helping futures to fly

Obviously, this is not an equity piece and so I rarely cover specific names, but the buzz on Nvidia’s earnings is having a significant impact on markets overall.  The most instructive thing is to look at the performance of the NASDAQ vs. that of the Dow, at least in the pre-market futures trading.  At this hour (7:30), NASDAQ futures are higher by 2.0% while Dow futures are lower by -0.4%.  This dichotomy continues to grow on a daily basis, with the tech megacaps generating virtually all of the equity market performance seen this year, hence the relative outperformance of the NASDAQ vs. both the S&P 500 and the Dow.  The narrowing breadth of the market’s performance, with 7 names accounting for more than the entire S&P 500 gains this year means the other 493 names are actually lower.  From a more macro point of view, historically, price action of this nature has preceded significant bear markets every time it has occurred.  It is very easy to look at the totality of information including still high US inflation, softening growth metrics and a stock market that is reliant on just 7 names for its performance, and conclude a reckoning is coming.  Oh yeah, did I mention that the Fed remains committed to keeping its policy at current, relatively tight levels?  It is no wonder that the recession that is forecast to come soon is so widely forecast.

Quickly, the FOMC Minutes yesterday indicated that while there was a lot of discussion as to whether or not rates needed to go higher, there was zero discussion that rates would need to decline anytime soon.  The commentary we have heard since the last meeting has certainly had a less conclusive tone regarding further hikes, with several members indicating they thought a pause for observation was worthwhile.  But unless the economy craters, and Unemployment spikes much higher, there is no reason  to believe the Fed is going to change course.  And that, my friends, will continue to support the greenback for quite a while.

As to the overnight session, after a weak US equity performance yesterday, Asia was mixed and most European bourses are edging lower on the order of -0.2%.  It is certainly no surprise that the DAX is falling, and we have also seen lackluster data from France weighing on the CAC.  The problem for Europe is they don’t have any megacap tech stocks to support the indices.

Bond yields continue to mostly edge higher with gains on the order of 1bp this morning although there was a standout here, Gilt yields have risen by 9bps, still feeling the hangover from yesterday’s inflation data.

Meanwhile, in commodities, recession is the watchword as oil prices (-1.2%) are giving back some of their recent gains, although copper has seen a trading bounce.  

And finally, in the FX markets, the dollar continues to perform well, rising against all its G10 and most EMG counterparts.  Remarkably, the debt ceiling concerns seem to be the driver as the dollar is still considered the safest of havens despite the issues here.  There have been no outstanding stories to note other than the risk-off nature of things.

On the data front, we see Initial (exp 245K) and Continuing (1800K) Claims as well as the second look at Q! GDP (1.1%).  Also, Chicago Fed  National Activity (-0.2) is released, which has been pointing to slowing economic growth for a while now.   Two Fed speakers, Barkin and Collins are on the slate today, but I feel that mixed message continues unabated and won’t be changed here.

Ultimately, until the Fed backs off, the dollar is going to continue to perform well, keep that in mind.

Good luck

Adf

Possibly Burst

It turns out inflation’s not dead

At least in the UK, instead

With prices there surging

The market is purging

All thoughts rate cuts might be ahead

However, elsewhere, there’s concern

That soon there will be a downturn

Thus, stocks have reversed

And possibly burst

The bubble for which most folks yearn

Interestingly, inflation discussions are really beginning to diverge around the world.  What had been a global phenomenon, with prices rising everywhere on the back of pandemic lockdown induced shortages combined with massive fiscal stimulus pumping up demand, is starting to shake out a bit more idiosyncratically.  While in the US we have seen a clear reduction in the trend of prices over the past year, albeit still far above the Fed’s comfort level, elsewhere, this is not necessarily the case.  Today’s example is the UK, where CPI printed at 8.7%, far above the median forecast of 8.2%, although mercifully lower than last month’s 10.1%.  However, core CPI, which excludes energy, food, alcohol and tobacco in the UK, rose to 6.8%, a new high level for this bout of inflation and the highest in the UK since 1992.

One cannot be surprised that the market responded with Gilt yields jumping more than 6bps while the rest of global bond markets have seen yields decline in the face of a broad risk-off sentiment.  More impressively, the OIS market has immediately priced in more than 30bps of additional rate hikes before the end of the year this morning.  While UK stocks are lower, so are equity markets everywhere around the world and perhaps most surprisingly, the pound has only fallen -0.2%.  I suspect that is due to the tension of higher interest rates supporting the currency while worries over the future of policy and the economy are undermining it.  That said, year-to-date, the pound is still the best performing G10 currency vs. the dollar, with gains on the order of 2.5%.  If pressed, I would expect that the pound is likely to range trade going forward as the market continues to reprice Fed expectations higher (removing those forecast rate cuts) while the UK side remains stagnant for now.

Turning our attention to the economy writ large, there is a growing sense that the widely expected recession is coming soon to a screen near you.  Data continues to show weakening trends with, for instance, today’s German IFO Expectations falling to 88.6, far below forecasts, on the back of weakening manufacturing trends in Germany.  As well, yesterday’s US data had its lowlights with the flash manufacturing PMI falling to 48.5, while the Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index fell to -15, both well below expectations.  Layer on the background debt ceiling concerns, where the most recent word is that talks have stalled right now, and there is plenty of reason to turn pessimistic on things.  Arguably, these were keys to yesterday’s equity market declines in the US and we have continued to see red on the screens in every market in Asia and Europe. 

One of the biggest market concerns is China, where talk of slowing growth is continuing as this month’s production and investment data, released last week, was generally softer than expected with property continuing to drag things down, but fixed assets in general softening further.  There continue to be expectations that the PBOC is going to be easing monetary policy further and the renminbi’s recent slide shows no signs of stopping.  This view is also evident in commodity markets, specifically metals markets where copper (-1.5% today, -4.1% in the past week) and aluminum (-0.6%, -3.7%) are under increased pressure as concerns over slowing Chinese growth are impacting demand for these key industrial metals.  

There is, however, one place where this is not so evident, oil prices (+1.5%) as the market continues to respond to prospective production cuts by OPEC+ in the coming months.   The thing about oil is that its demand elasticity is nearly vertical.  Certainly, at the margins there can be more or less demand based on the economic conditions extant, but there is a baseline of demand that is simply not going to disappear.  It is important to remember that despite all the efforts at reduction in the use of fossil fuels, global oil demand hit a record last year.  It is also key to remember that for the past decade, investment in the production of new oil and gas reserves has been severely lacking.  The implication is that while oil prices have fallen well below the highs seen in the immediate wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, nothing has changed the long-term supply demand equation which greatly favors demand over supply, i.e. oil prices are likely to rise consistently, if not steadily, over the coming decades.

Summing it all up, today appears to have investors and traders thinking the worst, not the best of things going forward.

A quick look at overnight markets shows that equity market declines have largely been greater than -1.0% with the biggest markets, DAX, CAC, FTSE 100, pushing -2.0%.  There has been no place to hide here, and from a technical perspective, yesterday’s price action looks like an outside bearish reversal, which simply means that the closing level has market technicians selling for right now.  We have seen a significant equity rally in the face of a lot of negative news, so perhaps that run is now over.

Global bond yields are consolidating recent gains, with small declines today not nearly enough to offset what had been 30bp-40bp increases in the past two weeks.  In this market, clearly the debt ceiling talks are the primary story with macroeconomics a distant second for now.  There is just one week before the X-date, at least the latest one, and I suspect that we will hear of an agreement early next week helping to reduce at least some of the pressure on risk attitudes.

Lastly, the dollar is largely stronger this morning with an outlier in NZD (-1.85%) which fell sharply after the RBNZ essentially promised that last night’s 25bp rate hike, to 5.50%, is the last one coming, a big change from market expectations of a 50% probability of a 50bp hike last night.  Essentially, they explained that property market pressures and slowing consumer activity convinced them rates are appropriate to fight inflation.  Kiwi dragged Aussie (-0.5%) lower as well, but the rest of the bloc has seen far less damage with the yen (+0.15%) actually managing a small gain.  But make no mistake, over the past week and month, the dollar has regained its footing, at least against the G10.

In the emerging market bloc, the picture is more mixed with both winners and losers overnight with HUF (+0.8%) the leader, bouncing after the central bank cut its Deposit rate by 1 full percentage point yesterday, as expected and the forint fell sharply.  Meanwhile, MXN (+0.6%) is also showing signs of life after having fallen every day in the past week as the market now assumes Banxico has finished its rate hikes.  On the downside, MYR (-0.45%) and KRW (-0.4%) are both feeling the pressure of the weaker Chinese growth story given its importance to their own economies.

On the data front, the FOMC Minutes are released this afternoon and have a chance to be quite interesting given what appears to be the beginning of a split of opinions regarding the appropriate next steps.  As well, we hear from Governor Waller around lunch time, and ahead of the Minutes.  Waller certainly leans toward the hawkish end of the spectrum, so keep that in mind.

Adding it all up and the combination of declining risk appetite and a growing belief that the Fed is not going to pivot anytime soon implies that the dollar should maintain its footing for now.

Good luck

Adf

Widened the Spread

Twixt ceilings for debt and the Fed

The market has widened the spread

Of rates here at home

Despite what Jerome

Last weekend ostensibly said

Thus, dollars remain to the fore

As traders want so many more

The megacaps rise

But in a surprise

There’s less and less talk of the war

The debt ceiling negotiations remain at the top of the market’s list of concerns as the ostensible X-date of June 1stapproaches.  Certainly, the positive aspect is that both sides are talking as opposed to merely grandstanding, but as is always the case in a political standoff with a non-political impact, it is clear no deal will be reached until the Nth hour.  The other thing to remember is that the June 1st date is not a hard deadline, it is the current estimate by Secretary Yellen and subject to change.  In the end, nothing has changed my view that a deal will be reached as both sides desperately want one, but also, no deal will be reached until both sides can explain to their supporters that they did everything possible to achieve their agendas.

However, this process is clearly having an impact on the markets, especially in the interest rate space as we have seen 10-year Treasury yields, which are higher today by 3.3bps, rise 36 basis points in the past two weeks.  In addition, the yield curve inversion, which at one point had fallen to as low as -41bps, is back to a -64bp difference.  Not only that, but the 4-week T-bill, the nearest expiry past the X-date, is now yielding 5.47%, far above Fed funds and the highest spot on the yield curve.  That is clearly a direct response to fears over a possible default.  My sense is this process will go on right through Memorial Day and US interest rates may well have further to rise between now and then.

But this begs the question, are US rates dragging up rates around the world?  I would argue the answer is yes.  Looking at European sovereigns, which have all seen yields rise by around 3bps-4bps today (Gilts are actually +8bps), they have all risen in concert with Treasury yields.  During the same time frame that Treasuries rose 36bps, Bunds are +28bps, OATS +25bps and Gilts +43bps.  Yet during that period, the dollar has gained more than 1% vs. both the euro and the pound (and all the other G10 currencies as well). 

Perhaps what we are seeing is a new safe haven asset being born, the US megacap tech stock.  The likes of Apple, Microsoft and Alphabet have seen steady strength, helping to drive the NASDAQ 100 Index up nearly 5% during this same two-week period.  In fact, a quick look at YTD performance in US equity markets shows that the Dow Jones Industrials are +0.4% YTD while the NASDAQ is up 21.5%.  In the past, there was a concept during bouts of USD strength that investors were buying dollars to buy Treasuries.  I think right now investors are buying dollars to buy Apple!  In fairness, one can see the premise as regardless of the debt ceiling outcome or timing, the belief that Apple (or Microsoft or Alphabet) shares will react to that news rather than their own positive stories generates no concerns.

Of course, those names are the exceptions to the rule as the bulk of the rest of the market has been under pressure recently on the back of all the catastrophic predictions if the debt ceiling isn’t raised and the US defaults on its debt.  This can be seen in the fact that the other major indices have seen almost no movement, just sideways trading, during the recent period in question.

Turning to the Fed, it appears that we are reaching an inflection point in the tightening process, or at least in the rate hiking cycle.  While prior to the last FOMC meeting, virtually every speaker was on the same message, we are starting to see some differences.  Most importantly, Powell, last weekend, hinted that there was some concern that the continued rate hikes were starting to impact financial stability (seriously, after 4 major bank failures it is now a concern?). But the implication is that while inflation remains job number one, there are other issues on the agenda.  That seems to be the dovishness that was attributed to Powell over the weekend.

Meanwhile, yesterday we heard from two regional Fed presidents.  James Bullard from St Louis, who said that he saw at least two more rate hikes (50bps total) as necessary to be certain they have slain the inflation dragon.  As per Bloomberg news, “I think we’re going to have to grind higher with the policy rate in order to put enough downward pressure on inflation and to return inflation to target in a timely manner,” Bullard said at an event in Florida on Monday.  “I’m thinking two more moves this year — exactly where those would be this year I don’t know — but I’ve often advocated sooner rather than later.”

However, we also heard from Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari with a different message, “I think right now it’s a close call, either way, versus raising another time in June or skipping.  What’s important to me is not signaling that we’re done.”  I guess the Eccles Building will be rocking in June when they next meet.

As it stands currently, at least according to the Fed funds futures market, the market is pricing in a 23% probability of a 25bp rate hike on June 14th.  Remember, though, between now and then we see a lot of critical data including this week’s Core PCE release, next week’s NFP data and finally the May CPI data, scheduled to be released the day before the FOMC announcement.  In the meantime, all eyes seem to be on the debt ceiling negotiations, and reasonably so, given the fallout could begin before the big data comes. 

Looking at today, the big movers overnight were the bond markets with equity markets mildly in the red in both Asia and Europe.  US futures are also edging lower, but barely -0.1% at this hour (7:45).  As to commodities, oil (+0.5%) is edging higher on word that the Saudis are going to push for another production cut, while gold (-0.5%) is sliding on the back of the strong dollar and the base metals are falling again, clearly anticipating a recession.

As to the dollar, it remains king of the hill, continuing to rally vs. virtually all its G10 counterparts with only the yen (+0.1%) managing to hold its own.  In the emerging market space, the story is similar with HUF (-1.0%) the laggard on expectations of a rate cut today and the bulk of the bloc lower.  The one outlier seems to be KRW (+0.4%) which saw substantial equity inflows as the driver.  I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that CNY has rallied substantially in my absence and is now well above 7.0500 as there is a growing belief the PBOC will continue to ease policy to support the Chinese economy.

On the data front today, we see preliminary PMI data (exp 50.0 Mfg, 52.5 Services) and New Home Sales (665K).  The European flash PMI data was slightly soft, but pretty close to expectations.  Meanwhile, only Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan is on the docket today, but don’t be surprised to hear from others on CNBC or BBG as they basically cannot shut up.

In the wake of the Silicon Valley Bank failure, I was convinced the Fed was going to be finished and accordingly, changed my views on the dollar.  I had been bullish until a clear pivot was seen and I thought that was the case.  However, it increasingly appears that no pivot is coming and that higher for longer is the future.  In that case, I have to revert to my original stance and look for continued dollar strength until we get that signal.

Good luck

Adf

Bombarded

There once was a poet who wrote
‘Bout foreign exchange in a note
Right now he’s at home
Though, yet, he may roam
For now, though, enjoy, please, each quote

Meanwhile, for the week that has passed
The debt drama has some aghast
So, markets are guarded
While we are bombarded
With stories this drama can’t last

Since I last wrote, the dollar is broadly stronger, stocks have managed to continue to rally, and bond yields have risen to the top end of their recent trading range with the 10-year at 3.65%.  But really, it seems that despite a weak Retail Sales print last week, and some other mixed data, all eyes are really turning to Washington and the ongoing debt ceiling negotiations between President Biden and House Speaker McCarthy.  At this point, while the House has passed a bill that includes a significant, $1.5 trillion, debt ceiling increase, although combined with spending cuts over the next decade that amount to ~$4.5 trillion, the President has proffered nothing other than a resounding No.  Ultimately, this is a political calculation as to the President’s belief he can blame any negative outcome on McCarthy and the Republicans, although that remains to be seen.

At the same time, we continue to receive apocalyptic warnings from Treasury Secretary Yellen, as well as various other officials, politicians, and bank CEOs.  And there is no doubt that an actual US default would be extraordinarily bad for pretty much everyone.  However, as Winston Churchill has been credited with saying (though remains true whoever said it), Americans can always be counted on to do the right thing…once every other choice has been exhausted.  We have seen these political dramas before, and I have no doubt we will see them again in the future but in the end, nothing has changed my view that a deal will be struck and there will be no apocalypse, at least not this time.

So, what does that mean when that deal is struck?  Well, ironically, one of the drivers of recent equity market strength has been the running down of the Treasury General Account (TGA) at the Fed.  That is the Treasury’s ‘checking’ account from which they pay all the US’s bills.  As can be seen from the below chart, post the GFC, the average balance has been in the $200 billion range, although there have obviously been several enormous peaks during the Covid situation.  For context, prior to the GFC, the TGA balance averaged just $5.8 billion.  Perhaps there is no better description of what QE has done than this, as well no better signal of today’s inflation and its causes than this fact.
Data Source, FRED database

The problem is that number has been shrinking, maintaining liquidity in the market that might otherwise not be available.  In fact, one of the key concerns in the market right now is that when the debt ceiling is finally raised, the Treasury, which through its extraordinary measures has been running down balances as well as delaying payments into government pension accounts and the like, will need to issue a significant amount of new debt, perhaps up to $1 trillion pretty quickly, which will suck a lot of liquidity out of the equity market as investors look at the return on T-bills and conclude safety at a 5% yield is very attractive.  Clearly, tax receipts are another part of the puzzle, but recent receipts have been coming in lower than forecast adding more pressure to the Treasury.  

The point is that one needs to be careful in expecting that the resolution of this issue will automatically have a bullish impact on risk assets.  In fact, it could be just the opposite, so beware.

As to this morning’s markets, mixed is an apt description.  While Friday’s US equity market performance was dull, with very modest declines, Asia saw gains overnight and Europe opened in the green.  Alas, European bourses have since turned lower although US futures are currently unchanged (7:30).  Given the potential impact on financial markets in the event the US does default, it seems likely that risk assets will struggle to gain much until there is a conclusion of this drama.

Bond yields, meanwhile, are continuing their drift higher from last week, although Treasury yields are unchanged at this hour.  In Europe, though, sovereign yields are edging up between 1bp and 2bps.  There is one place, though, where yields remain in check, Japan, where the 10yr yield, at 0.378%, remains far below the YCC cap and is exerting no pressure on Governor Ueda.

Oil prices (+0.3%) are a touch higher this morning having bounced off their lows from the beginning of the month but remain far below the post OPEC+ production cut highs from April.  As I have been writing, the commodity market seems to be the only one that is really pricing in a recession, with metals prices also continuing under pressure, including gold despite its haven characteristics.

Finally, the dollar is showing both gains and losses today in both the G10 and EMG blocs.  CHF (+0.4%) is the leading G10 gainer on what appear to be technical trading patterns more than new information.  On the flip side, the commodity bloc (AUD, NOK, CAD) is under very modest pressure this morning, but really not much to say here.  In the EMG bloc, ZAR (+0.65%) and KRW (+0.6%) are the top of the heap, ostensibly on the back of a dovish reading of some comments by Chairman Powell over the weekend.  However, there are a number of laggards, notably MXN (-0.5%) despite those same remarks.  Arguably, if they were truly that dovish, we would see the dollar softer across the board, something that has not been the case for a while.

Until the debt ceiling drama is over, I anticipate a relatively limited amount of market movement.  And when it is finally concluded, it will depend on the actual agreement, I think, to really get a sense of any medium- or long-term impacts.  Until then, trade the range.

Good luck
Adf