Though oil continues to be
The lens through which most of us see
The current events
In dollars and cents
There’s more going on causing glee
For instance, as stock markets rise
It cannot be such a surprise
The narrative writers
Are pulling all-nighters
Adjusting their views to seem wise
But naysayers need to say nay
And here’s what they’re pushing today
The Bank of Japan
And their current plan
Will lead to a leverage doomsday
We might as well start off with oil this morning since it is still the top story in markets, and still the major catalyst. It is lower again this morning, down a further -2.8%, and despite many questions as to whether the deal will hold, both sides appear to be moving toward a signing on Friday. The below chart from tradingeconomics.com shows WTI prices for the last year. As you can see, the current price is the lowest since March 10th, which was a reaction low after the spike high on March 9th when it touched its highs for the entire situation.

I eyeballed a line at about $65.00/bbl as an estimate of what prices were like prior to the Iran conflict. Based on that, the current front month futures price remains about 20% above the pre-war price, certainly high, but it doesn’t seem crippling. I believe it is very clear that the analysts who were calling for $150/bbl or $200/bbl are now working hard to determine what they got wrong. Doomberg wrote an interesting piece this morning (it is paywalled, but their stuff is fantastic) describing two likely reasons for the fact that oil prices never rose that high. First, the original estimates of how much oil was stuck behind the Strait were overstated as all the players there found ways to export some, whether through tankers going dark or via rail or truck or pipeline. But the more interesting observation was that China was able to reduce its imports by between 3mm and 4mm bpd and things were just fine. China has altered their energy mix such that oil, while still important, can be substituted out as necessary. That is a very interesting outcome with respect to one of China’s greatest perceived weaknesses, its lack of natural energy capacity. If they don’t need as much oil to run their economy (which by the way based on overnight data is struggling) then they have less geopolitical weakness.
Enough on oil, but while I’m here, it is not surprising that as oil slides, metals prices rise so gold (+0.9%) and silver (+0.8%) are continuing to benefit as is copper (+0.1%) although the latter not so much today.
Turning to the other story that has tongues wagging, the BOJ raised their base rate to 1.00% last night as had been universally expected by markets. Now, the interesting thing here is that there is a group of analysts who believe that this will lead to net position liquidation by leveraged fund managers (i.e. hedge funds) as their funding costs will have risen. I disagree, and so far, markets are on my side. This is evident by the fact that equity markets continue to perform well, and USDJPY has shown no inkling of reversing its multi-year trend of rising. Below is a table of the base interest rates of the G20 nations. While Switzerland does have a lower rate, and Singapore is the same, if you are thinking about borrowing in a currency to lever up positions, Japan, given the yen’s depth and liquidity, remains the currency of choice by a long shot.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
Ask yourself if your borrowing costs rose 0.25% but you were still earning a net 13.5% return on your BRL deposits, would you flee the trade? And if you have been buying equities, you are even less likely to get out. Japan’s problem is not specifically that their base rate is low, it is that they currently are fighting a terrible demographic position of a shrinking population and they have a massive debt/GDP ratio. They cannot afford to raise rates enough to have a meaningful impact on the yen without bankrupting the country and decimating the yen. It is not clear to me how they get out of their current situation, but despite concerns elsewhere in the world about the yen’s weakness being a competitive advantage, I think it has further to go. Basically, there needs to be another Plaza Accord type agreement to change things, and that doesn’t seem likely right now. After all, in Evian, it doesn’t sound like things are going smoothly.
So, how have markets behaved overnight? Well, risk is still in vogue. Following yesterday’s strong US performance, where the DJIA made another all-time high, there were far more gainers (Korea, India, Taiwan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Indonesia) than laggards (HK -1.4%, China -0.2%) while Tokyo was little changed. As I mentioned above, the Chinese data was pretty lousy as per the below table:

So, the housing market continues to suffer, and the domestic economy along with it, although the export economy continues to grow.
In Europe, the decline in oil prices is clearly helping as all major indices are higher between 0.4% and 0.75%. As to US futures, at this hour (7:20), they are pointing slightly higher, about 0.15% across the board.
In the bond market, yields continue to decline with Treasuries (-3bps) back below 4.5% which had been seen as a real problem just a few weeks ago. European sovereigns are also lower by between -3bps and -4bps, duly following both Treasury yields and oil prices. The outlier here is JGB yields (+6bps) which responded to the rate hike by rising, perhaps an indication that investors don’t believe the BOJ is doing enough. However, my wager would be the BOJ is done.
Finally, the dollar is a touch softer, as one would expect given the movements in other markets, but there is very little excitement in the FX markets. Using the DXY (-0.05%) as proxy, you can see things are little changed. The biggest movers are BRL (+0.4%) and KRW (+0.4%) both of which are seeing capital inflows supporting the currency. But otherwise, +/-0.2% defines the session in both G10 and EMG currencies. Note that despite the BOJ rate hike, USDJPY sits at 160.32 showing no sign of heading lower, even in an environment where the dollar is modestly softer.
On the data front, this morning brings Housing Starts (exp 1.43M) and Building Permits (1.42M) and that’s really it. With the FOMC tomorrow, and Iran ostensibly solved, Mr Warsh and his press conference will get a great deal of focus. Until then, I don’t see any reason for recent trends to change absent a complete collapse of the Iran deal, which seems unlikely at this point.
Good luck
Adf











































