Still a Threat

For Boris, and all Brexiteers
They can’t wait for this, Eve, New Year’s
Alas, as of yet
There is still a threat
That no deal might bring both sides tears

Investors, however, seem sure
The UK, a deal, will secure
That’s why Britain’s pound
Is robustly sound
Let’s hope that view’s not premature

EU official sees UK trade deal “imminent” barring last-minute glitch

This Reuters News headline from this morning, aside from being inane, is a perfect example of the market narrative in action.  The broad view is that a deal will be reached, despite the fact that deadline after deadline has been missed during these negotiations.  The pound has rallied nearly 10% since the only deadline of consequence on June 30.  That was the date on which both sides would have been able to extend the current negotiations.  However, no extension was sought by the UK and none granted, so we are heading into the last four weeks of the year with nothing concrete completed.  And yet, markets on the whole continue to trade under the assumption a deal will be reached and there will be no meaningful disruption to either the UK or EU economy on January 1st.

And that is the point of the headline.  It is essentially telling us a deal is a given, and both sides are now just playing to their domestic constituencies to show how hard they are working to achieve a ‘good’ deal.  In fact, once again today, the French held out the possibility that they would veto a deal as French European Affairs Minister, Clement Beaune, told us, “If there is a deal which is not good, then we would oppose it.  We always said so.”  This comment appears to be just another part of the ongoing theater.  A senior UK official, meanwhile, claimed talks had regressed because of a change in the EU’s position regarding the fishing issue.

But let’s go back to the pound.  A 10% rally in five months is a pretty impressive outcome.  Can this movement be entirely attributed to Brexit beliefs?  At this stage, I think not.  Consider, that during that same period, both SEK and NOK have rallied nearly 11%.  And even the laggard of the G10, JPY, has rallied 3.5% in the second half of the year.  The point is that perhaps the market has not priced in as high a probability of a successful outcome as many, including me, had thought likely.  After all, if the other nine G10 currencies have rallied an average of 8.0% in a given time frame, at the margin, the additional 1.6% that cable has rallied does not seem that impressive after all.

What are the potential ramifications of this line of thinking?  Well, assuming that a deal is actually reached on time, and I believe that is the most likely outcome, it seems possible that the pound has considerably more upside than the rest of the G10.  Looking back to the original referendum in the summer of 2016, the pound touched 1.50 the night of the vote, before it became clear that Brexit was going to be the outcome.  Since then, in Q1 2018, the pound traded above 1.40, but that too, was simply a reflection of the times as the euro was trading above 1.25.  In other words, the Brexit impact on the pound, other than in the immediate aftermath of the vote, seems to have been remarkably modest.  Certainly, month-to-month movement has been in lockstep with all the other G10 currencies, and it is only the level of the pound, which adjusted back in June 2016, which is different.  The implication is that the announcement of a successful deal is likely to see the pound outperform higher.  This is opposite my previous views but appears to account for the historical price action more effectively.  Remember, within two days of the Brexit vote, the pound fell 11%.  While a deal seems unlikely to recoup that entire amount, perhaps half of that is available, which from current levels means that a move above 1.40 is viable without a corresponding rise in the euro.  At that point, the pound will revert to being just another G10 currency, with price movement locked into the dollar narrative, not the Brexit narrative.  Food for thought.

As to today’s session, it is payrolls day with the following expectations according to Bloomberg:

Nonfarm Payrolls 470K
Private Payrolls 540K
Manufacturing Payrolls 45K
Unemployment Rate 6.7%
Average Hourly Earnings 0.1% (4.2% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours 34.8
Participation Rate 61.7%
Trade Balance -$64.8B
Factory Orders 0.8%

The question, of course, is has this data yet returned to its prior place of importance in investors’ minds.  And arguably, the answer is no.  There continues to be a strong market narrative that the current data is unimportant because everyone knows that the ongoing lockdowns are going to make things look worse.  This is true all over the world (except, perhaps, China).  But given the near universal central bank promises of low rates forever for the foreseeable future, investors continue to add risk to their portfolios with abandon.  In order to change that mindset, I believe we would need to see a number so shocking, something like -1000K, that it could indicate the impact of Covid might not be temporary.  But barring that, my sense is the payroll number has lost its luster.

It will be interesting to see if that luster returns in the post-Covid environment, or perhaps some other statistic will embody the zeitgeist in the future.  Remember, NFP has not always been that important.  When Paul Volcker was Fed Chair, M2 money supply was the only number that mattered.  Once Alan Greenspan took over, it was the trade data that drove markets.  Perhaps inflation will be deemed “THE” number going forward, especially in the event that MMT becomes the norm.

Ahead of the data, a tour of markets shows that risk appetite is positive, if modest.  European equity markets are generally firmer (CAC +0.3%, FTSE 100 +0.8%) although the DAX just gave up its earlier gains and is now lower by 0.2%.  Overnight, things were also fairly dull as the Nikkei (-0.2%) slipped modestly while both the Hang Seng (+0.4%) and Shanghai (+0.1%) edged higher.  In fact, the best performer overnight was South Korea with the KOSPI (+1.3%) rallying on continued strong data and KRW (+1.35%) rallying on the back of inflows to the KOSPI as well as market technicals.  Meanwhile, US futures are higher by roughly 0.3% at this hour.

The bond market has slipped a bit with yields rising by 2bps in Treasuries, but European govvies, which had been softer (higher yields) earlier in the session, have found support with yields now edging lower by about 0.5bps.  It seems a Bloomberg story released a short time ago indicated that the ECB is likely to extend their PEPP by a full year, not the 6 months mooted by most analysts.

As to the dollar, it is actually mixed in the G10, but movement has been modest in both directions.  So, CHF (+0.25%) and GBP (+0.2%) are leading the way, but realistically don’t tell us much given how insignificant the moves have been.  On the downside, NZD (-0.4%) and AUD (-0.2%) are lagging, but neither has released data of note.  Essentially, this all seems like position adjustments.

Emerging markets, however, have seen a bit more demand with the commodity bloc supported after OPEC+ reached a compromise and helped oil prices back above $46/bbl.  This is the highest they have been since before the Covid panic, so it is quite important from a market technical perspective.  In the meantime, RUB (+0.55%) and MXN (+0.5%) are leading the way (after KRW of course) with most others in this space higher by much lesser amounts.

And that’s where we stand heading into payrolls and then the weekend.  Nothing has changed the dollar weakening narrative, and the pound remains the true wildcard.  Despite my change of heart regarding the pound’s upside, that does not change my view that if the negotiations fall apart and no Brexit deal is reached, the pound can decline 5%-7%.  Arguably, we are looking at some symmetry there.  In any event, a case for a larger move in the pound is very viable, one way or the other.

Good luck, good weekend and stay safe
Adf

Further Afflictions

Each day there is growing conviction
The buck is due further affliction
More views now exist
The Fed will soon ‘Twist’
Thus, slaking the market’s addiction

But even if Powell and friends
Do act as the crowd now contends
Does anyone think
Lagarde will not blink
And cut rates at which her group lends?

You cannot read the financial press lately without stumbling across multiple articles as to why the dollar is due to fall further.  There is no question it has become the number one conviction trade in the hedge fund community as well as the analyst community.  There are myriad reasons given with these the most common:

1.     The introduction of the vaccine will lead to a quicker recovery globally and demand for risk assets not havens like the dollar
2.     The Biden administration will be implementing a new, larger stimulus package adding to the global reflation trade
3.     The Fed is going to embark on a new version of Operation Twist (where they swap short-dated Treasuries for long-dated Treasuries) in order to add more stimulus, thus weakening the dollar
4.     The market technical picture is primed for further dollar weakness in the wake of recent price action breaking previous dollar support levels.

Let’s unpack these ideas in order to try to get a better understanding of the current sentiment.

The vaccine story is front page news worldwide and we have even had the first country, the UK, approve one of them for use right away.  There is no question that an effective vaccine that is widely available, and widely taken, could easily alter the current zeitgeist of fear and loathing.  If confidence were to make a comeback, as lockdowns ended and people were released from home quarantines, it would certainly further support risk appetite.  Or would it?

Consider that risk assets, at least equities, are already trading at record high valuations as investors have priced in this outcome.  You may remember the daily equity rallies in October and November based on hopes a vaccine would be arriving soon.  The point is, it is entirely possible, and some would say likely, that the vaccine implementation has already been priced into risk assets.  One other fly in this particular ointment is that so many businesses have already permanently closed due to the government-imposed restrictions worldwide, that even if economic demand rebounds, supply may not be available, thus driving inflation rather than activity.

How about the idea of a new stimulus package adding to global reflation?  Again, while entirely possible, if, as is still widely expected, the Republicans retain control of the Senate, any stimulus bill is likely to disappoint the bulls.  As well, if this is US stimulus, arguably it will help support the US economy, US growth and extend the US rebound further and faster than its G10 and most EMG peers.  Yes, risk will remain in favor, but will that flow elsewhere in the world?  Maybe, maybe not.  That is an open question.

Certainly, a revival of Operation Twist, where the Fed extends the maturity of its QE purchases in order to add further support to the economy by easing monetary policy further would be a dollar negative.  I thought it might be instructive to see how the dollar behaved back in 2011-12 when Ben Bernanke was Fed Chair and embarked on the first go-round of this policy.  Interestingly enough, from September 2011 through June 2012, the first leg of Operation Twist, the dollar rallied 8.7% vs. the euro.  When the Fed decided to continue the program for another six months, the first dollar move was a continuation higher, with another 2.75% gain, before turning around and weakening about 6%.  All told, through two versions of the activity, the dollar would up slightly firmer (2.5%) than when it started.

And this doesn’t even consider the likelihood that if the Fed eases further, all the other major central banks will be doing so as well.  Remember, FX is a relative game, so relative monetary policy moves are the driver, not absolute ones.  And once again, I assure you, that if the euro starts to rally too far, the ECB will spare no expense to halt that rally and reverse it if possible.  Currently, the trade-weighted euro is back to levels seen in early September but remains 1.75% below the levels seen in 2018.  It is extremely difficult to believe that the ECB will underperform next week at their meeting if the euro is climbing still higher.  Deflation in Europe is rampant (CPI was just released at -0.3% in November), and a strong currency is not something Lagarde and her compatriots can tolerate.

Finally, looking at the technical picture, it may well be the best argument for further dollar weakness.  To the uninitiated (including your humble author) the variety of technical indicators observed by traders can be dizzying.  However, some include satisfying the target of an “inverted hammer” pattern, recognition of the next part of an Elliott Wave ABC correction and DeMark targets now formed for further dollar weakness.  While that mostly sounded like gibberish, believe me when I say there are many traders who base every action on these indicators, and when levels are reached in the market, they swarm in to join the parade.  At the same time, the hedge fund community, while short a massive amount of dollars, is reputed to have ample dry powder to increase those positions.

In sum, ironically, I would contend that the technical picture is the strongest argument for the dollar to continue its recent decline.  Risk assets are already priced for perfection, the vaccine is a known quantity and any Fed move is likely to be matched by other central banks.  This is not to say that the dollar won’t decline further, just that any movement is likely to be grudging and limited.  The dollar is not about to collapse.

A quick recap of today’s markets shows that risk appetite, not unlike yesterday’s lack of enthusiasm, remains satisfied for now.  Asian equities were mixed with the Hang Seng (+0.7%) the leader by far as both the Nikkei (0.0%) and Shanghai (-0.2%) showed no life.  European bourses are mostly lower (DAX -0.4%, CAC -0.25%) although the FTSE 100 is flat on the day.  And US futures are also either side of flat.

Bond markets, are rebounding a bit from their recent decline, with Treasuries seeing yields lower by 1 basis point and European bonds all rallying as well, with yields falling between 2bps and 3bps.  The latter may well be due to the combination of weaker than expected Services PMI releases as well as the news that Germany is extending its partial lockdown to January 10.  (Tell me again why the euro is a good bet here!)

Gold continues to rebound from its correction last week, up another $10 while the dollar, overall, this morning is somewhat softer, keeping with the recent trend.  GBP (+0.6%) is the leading gainer in the G10 on continued hopes a Brexit deal will soon be reached, but the rest of the bloc is +/-0.2%, or essentially unchanged.  EMG gainers include HUF (+0.7%) as the government there expands infrastructure spending, this time on airports, while the rest of the bloc has seen far smaller gains, which seem to be predicated on the idea of US stimulus talks getting back on track.

Initial Claims (exp 775K) data leads the calendar this morning with Continuing Claims (5.8M) and then ISM Services (55.8) at 10:00.  Yesterday’s Beige Book harped on the negative impact that government shutdowns have had on companies with no sign, yet, of vaccine hopes showing up in businesses.  At the same time, Chairman Powell, in his House testimony yesterday, explained that there was no rift between the Fed and the Treasury, and the Fed response when Treasury Secretary Mnuchin said he was recalling unused funds from the CARES act, was merely reinforcement of the idea that the Fed was not going to back away from their stated objectives.

In the end, the dollar remains under pressure and the trend is your friend.  With that in mind, though, it strikes that a decline of more than another 1%-2% will be very difficult to achieve without a more significant correction first.  Again, for receivables hedgers, these are good levels to consider.

Good luck and stay safe
Adf

Many Pains

In England and Scotland and Wales
The vaccine will soon be for sale
But Brexit remains
A source of more pains
If talks this week run off the rails

What a difference a day makes, twenty-four little hours.  Yesterday morning at this time, the bulls ruled the world.  Equity markets were rallying strongly everywhere, bond markets were under pressure, and the dollar was breaking below two-year support levels.  Although most commodity prices were having difficulty extending their recent gains, gold did manage to rebound sharply all day, and, in fact, is higher by another 0.7% this morning, its death being widely exaggerated.

However, aside from gold, this morning looks quite different on the risk front.  Perhaps, ahead of a significant amount of data coming the rest of the week (ADP this morning, NFP on Friday), as well as next week’s ECB meeting, this is, as a well-known Atlanta based beverage company first told us in 1929, the pause that refreshes.

Arguably, the biggest news this morning is that the UK has cleared the first vaccine for use against Covid-19 with the initial doses to be injected as early as next week.  I don’t think anyone can argue with the idea this is an unalloyed positive for just about everything.  If it proves as effective as the initial testing indicated, and if a sufficient percentage of the population gets inoculated, and if that leads to a rebound in confidence and the end of all the government imposed economic restrictions and lockdowns, it could open the door for 2021 to be a gangbuster-type year of growth and activity.  But boy, that sure is a lot of ifs!

And a funny thing about the market response to this news is that…nothing has happened.  The FTSE 100 is higher by a scant 0.2%, and has not shown the strength necessary to support other European markets as both the DAX (-0.3%) and CAC (-0.2%) are in the red.  Is it possible that the markets have already priced in all the ifs mentioned above?  And, if that is the case, what does it say about the future direction of risk appetite?

This being 2020, the year with imperfect hindsight, it should also be no surprise that the good news regarding the vaccine was offset with potential bad news about Brexit.  Michel Barnier, the EU’s top negotiator, indicated that while the mood was still positive in the round-the-clock negotiations, it is very possible that no deal is reached in time to be ratified by all parties.  And that time is drawing near.  After all, the previous deadlines were all artificial, to try to goose negotiations, but December 31st is written into a treaty signed by both sides.  The contentious issues remain access to UK waters by EU fishing vessels and the idea of what will constitute a level playing field between UK and EU companies given their newly different legal and regulatory masters.  In the event, GBP (-0.8%) is today’s worst G10 currency performer as it quickly fell when Barnier’s comments hit the tape.  Something else to keep in mind regarding the pound is that it feels an awful lot like a successful completion of a Brexit deal is entirely priced in.  So, if that deal is reached, the pound’s upside is likely to be quite limited.  Conversely, if no deal is agreed, look for a substantial shock to the pound, certainly as much as 5%-7% in short order.

And with that cheery thought in mind, let us peruse the overall market condition this morning, where eyeglasses are losing their tint.  Equity markets in Asia overnight were as close to unchanged as a non-holiday session would allow, with the largest movement from a main index, the Hang Seng, just +0.1%.  Both the Nikkei and Shanghai moved less, as investors seemed to be coping with a bit of indigestion after the recent sharp rally.  As mentioned above, European bourses have been no better, with only Spain’s IBEX (+0.4%) showing any hint of life, but the rest of the continental exchanges all in the red.  Even US futures markets are under modest pressure, with all three lower by about 0.2%.

The Treasury market saw an impressive decline yesterday, with yields rising 7 basis points in the 10-year, as the risk rally exploded all day long.  European bond markets also declined, but not quite like that.  Given the ECB’s reported -0.3% CPI reading, the case that bond yields on the continent should be rising is very difficult to make.  This morning, though, movement is measured in fractions of basis points, with only Italian BTP’s having recorded anything larger than a 1 basis point move today, in this case a decline in yields.  Otherwise, we are + / – 0.5 basis points or less in Treasuries, Bunds, OAT’s and Gilts.  In other words, nothing to see here.

Oil is feeling a bit toppish here, having rallied 36% during the month of November, but how ceding about 4% during the past few sessions.  OPEC+ talks remain mired in disagreement with the previous production cuts potentially to be abandoned.  However, taking a longer-term view, analysts are pointing to the changes in the US fracking community (i.e. bankruptcies there) and forecasting a significant decline in US oil production in 2021, which, if that occurs, is likely to provide significant price support.

And finally, the dollar, which fell sharply against virtually every currency yesterday, led by BRL (+2.7%) in the emerging markets and EUR (+1.2%) in the G10, has found its footing today.  Looking at the G10 first, NOK (-0.65%) is the laggard alongside the aforementioned pound and SEK (-0.5%).  The euro (-0.25%) has maintained the bulk of its gains after having finally pushed through key resistance at 1.2011-20, the levels seen in early September. Remember, short USD is the number one conviction trade for Wall Street for 2021, and EUR positions remain near all-time highs.

An aside in the euro is that markets continue to look to next week’s ECB meeting with expectations rife the PEPP will be expanded and extended.  Madame Lagarde promised us things would change, and every speaker since, including the Latvian central bank President, who this morning explained that €500 billion more in the PEPP with a timing extension to mid-2022 would be acceptable, as would an extension in the maturity of TLTRO loans to 5 years.  The point is that despite the confidence so many have that the dollar is destined to collapse next year, there is no way other central banks will allow that unimpeded.

Back to markets, on the EMG slate, the situation is similar with more losers than gainers led by ZAR (-1.1%) and PLN (-0.6%).  Of course, both these currencies saw stronger gains yesterday, so this seems to be a little catch-up price action.  Actually, CLP (+0.65%) has opened stronger this morning, simply adding to yesterday’s gains without an obvious catalyst, while KRW(+0.5%) continues to benefitt from better than expected trade and GDP data.

On the data front, this morning brings ADP Employment (exp 430K) as well as the Beige Book this afternoon.  As well, we will hear again from Chairman Powell, who in the Senate yesterday told us all that there needed to be more fiscal stimulus and that the Fed would do all they can to support the economy.  Given this has been the message for the past six months, nobody can be surprised.  However, one idea that seems to be developing is that the Fed could well announce purchases of longer dated bonds at their December meeting in two weeks’ time, which would certainly have an impact on the bond market, and would be seen as easier money, thus likely impact the dollar as well.  When he speaks to the House today, don’t look for anything new.

All told, today is a breather.  Clearly momentum is for a weaker dollar right now, but I continue to believe these are excellent levels for receivables hedgers to act.

Good luck and stay safe
Adf

Nothing but Cheerful

While yesterday traders were fearful
Today they are nothing but cheerful
The vaccine is coming
While Bitcoin is humming
It’s only the bears who are tearful

Risk is back baby!!  That is this morning’s message as a broad-based risk-on scenario is playing out across all markets.  Well, almost all markets, oil is struggling slightly, but since according to those in the know (whoever they may be) we have reached so-called ‘peak oil’, the oil market doesn’t matter anymore.  So, if it cannot rally on a day when other risk assets are doing so, it is of no consequence.

Of course, this begs the question, what is driving the reversal of yesterday’s theme?  The most logical answer is the release of the newest batch of Manufacturing PMI data from around the world, which while not universally better, is certainly trending in the right direction.  Starting last night in Asia, we saw strength in Australia (55.8), Indonesia (50.6), South Korea (52.9), India (56.3) and China (Caixin 54.9).  In fact, the only weak print was from Japan (49.0), which while still in contractionary territory has improved compared to last month.  With this much renewed manufacturing enthusiasm, it should be no surprise that equity markets in Asia were all bright green.  The Nikkei (+1.35%), Hang Seng (+0.85%) and Shanghai (+1.75%) led the way with New Zealand the only country not to join in the fun.

Turning to European data, it has been largely the same story, with Germany (57.8) leading the way, but strong performances by the UK (55.6) and the Eurozone (53.8) although Italy (51.5) fell short of expectations and France (49.6) while beating expectations remained below the key 50.0 level.  Spain (49.8), too, was weak failing to reach expectations, but clearly, the rest of the Continent was quite perky in order for the area wide index to improve.  Equity markets on the Continent are also bright green led by the FTSE 100 (+1.95%) but with strong performances by the DAX (+1.0%) and CAC (+1.1%) as well.  In fact, here, not a single market is lower.  Even Russian stocks are higher despite the weakest PMI performance of all (46.3).

The point is, there is no risk asset that is not welcome in a portfolio today.  However, while the broad sweep of PMI data is certainly positive, it seems unlikely, given the market’s history of ignoring both good and bad data from this series, that this is the only catalyst.  In fairness, there was some other positive data.  For example, German Unemployment fell to 6.1%, a tick below last month and 2 ticks below expectations.  At the same time, Eurozone CPI was released at a slightly worse than expected -0.3% Y/Y in November, which only encourages the bullish view that the ECB is going to wow us next week when they unveil their latest adjustments to PEPP.

And perhaps, that is a large part of the story, expectations for ongoing central bank largesse to support financial markets continue to be strong.  After all, the buzz in the US is that the combination of Fed Chair Jay Powell alongside former Fed Chair Janet Yellen as Treasury Secretary means that come January or February, the taps will once again open in the US with more fiscal and monetary assistance.  Alas, what we know is that the bulk of that assistance winds up in the equity markets, at least that has been the case to date, so just how much this new money will help the economy itself remains in question.

But well before that, we have a number of key events upcoming, notably next week’s ECB meeting and the Fed meeting the following week.  Focusing first on Frankfurt, recall that Madame Lagarde essentially promised action at their late October get together, and the market wasted no time putting numbers on those expectations.  While no rate cut is anticipated, at least not in the headline Deposit rate (currently -0.50%), the PEPP is expected to be increased by up to €600 billion with its tenor expected to be extended by an additional six months through the end of 2021.  However, before we get too used to that type of expansion, perhaps we should heed the words of Isabel Schnabel, the German ECB Executive Board member who today explained that while further support would be forthcoming, thoughts that the ECB would take the Mario Draghi approach of exceeding all expectations should be tempered.  Of course, the question is whether a disappointing outcome next week, say just €250 billion additional purchases, would have such a detrimental impact on the markets economy.  Remember, while Madame Lagarde has a great deal of political nous, she has thus far demonstrated a tin ear when it comes to market signals.  The other topic on which she opined was the TLTRO program, which she seems to like more than PEPP, and which she implied could see both expansion and even a further rate cut from the current -1.00%.

And perhaps, that is all that is needed to get the juices flowing again, a little encouragement that more money is on its way.  Certainly, the bond markets are exhibiting risk on tendencies, although yield increases of between 0.2bps (Germany) and 1.1bps (Treasuries) are hardly earth shattering.  They are certainly no indication of the reflation trade that had gotten so much press just a month ago.

And finally, the dollar, which is definitely softer this morning, but only after having rallied all day yesterday, so is in fact higher vs. yesterday morning’s opening levels.  The short dollar trade remains one of the true conviction trades in the market right now and one where positioning is showing no signs of abating.  Almost daily there seems to be another bank analyst declaring that the dollar is destined for a great fall in 2021.  Perhaps they are correct, but as I have repeatedly pointed out, no other central bank, certainly not the ECB or BOJ is going to allow the dollar to decline sharply without some action on their part to try to slow or reverse it.

A tour of the market this morning shows that CHF (+0.4%) is the leading gainer in the G10, although followed closely by SEK (+0.4%) and EUR (+0.35%).  Of course, if you look at the movement since Friday, CHF and EUR are higher by less than 0.1% and SEK is actually lower by 0.45%.  In other words, do not believe that the dollar decline is a straight-line affair.

Emerging markets are seeing similar price action, although as the session has progressed, we have seen more currency strength.  Currently, CLP (+0.9%), ZAR (+0.85%) and BRL (+0.8%) are leading the way here, all three reliant on commodity markets, which have, other than oil, performed well overnight.  The CE4 are also higher (HUF +0.6%, CZK +0.5%), tracking the euro’s strength, and Asian currencies had a fair run overnight as well, with INR (+0.5%) the best performer as a beneficiary of an uptick in stock and bond investments made their way into the country.

On the data front, today brings ISM Manufacturing (exp 58.0) and Construction Spending (0.8%), with the former certainly of more interest than the latter.  This is especially so given the PMI data overnight and the market response.  But arguably, of far more importance is Chairman Powell’s Senate testimony starting at 10:00 this morning, which will certainly overshadow comments from the other three Fed speakers due later.

Yesterday at this hour, with the dollar under pressure, it seemed we were going to take out some key technical levels and weaken further.  Of course, that did not happen.  With the dollar at similar levels to yesterday morning, and another dollar weakening sentiment, will today be the day that we break 1.20 in the euro convincingly?  As long as CNY remains strong, it is certainly possible, but I am not yet convinced.  Receivables hedgers, these are the best levels seen in two years, so it may not be a bad time to step in.

Good luck and stay safe
Adf