Ahead of today’s CPI Jobs data from England showed why Inflation remains The greatest of pains That central banks can’t wave good-bye Despite all their hiking of rates In seeking to reach their mandates The job market’s growing Which seems to be showing Their models are in desperate straits
Today’s key feature is the monthly CPI report from the US where expectations are for a 4.1% headline reading and 5.2% core reading, with both still far higher than the Fed’s 2.0% target. While the headline number is certainly good news, the Fed’s problem is that the core reading continues to bump along pretty steadily above 5.0% and is not showing any indication of a sharp move lower. While an exceptionally weak headline reading will almost certainly result in a further rally in risk assets on the premise that the Fed’s pause skip is now baked in, the greater question is how long can the Fed tolerate such a high core CPI reading before resuming their rate hikes? As we head into the data, the Fed funds futures market is currently pricing just under a 25% chance of a hike tomorrow but nearly an 87% chance of at least one hike by July. However, that is the peak with a cut then assumed by December.
Of course, the thing that is not getting any attention at this point is what happens if the reading is hot? I have literally not read a single analysis that anticipates a higher outcome showing inflation has become even more intractable than it had seemed for the past several months. My take is a higher-than-expected reading, especially in the core print, could see the market substantially increase their pricing for a rate hike tomorrow as well as another one or two before the year is over, and that may not be a positive for risk assets.
And that’s where the UK’s employment data comes into the discussion, as it is showing the same characteristics as the US employment data, surprising strength. Briefly, instead of a rising Unemployment Rate, it fell to 3.8% with wages rising by 6.5% Y/Y, well above last month’s and well above forecasts. There was a reduction in the number of jobless claims and a significant growth in employment of 250K on a quarterly basis, also far above forecasts. In other words, despite a lot of doom and gloom regarding the UK economy and the irreparable damage that Brexit has done to the nation, it seems that there is continued economic activity at a decent pace and businesses are still hiring and paying up to do so. I have to say that sounds suspiciously like the commentary regarding the US economy, where despite an ongoing belief that Unemployment is set to rise, each monthly data point has been surprising on the high side, often by a significant amount. As I have written before, perhaps it is time for the central banking community to review the efficacy of their models as they no longer seem to represent any sense of reality.
The other noteworthy news overnight was that the PBOC reduced their 7-day Reverse Repo rate by 10bps to 1.90% in a surprising move. Tomorrow night the PBOC has their monthly meeting and expectations are for a 10bp reduction in their medium-term lending facilities as the Chinese government struggles with a much slower than expected rebound from their latest Covid reopening. In fairness, it is not just the Chinese government that is surprised as one of the main themes we have seen for the past several months was the expectation that China’s rebound would result in a significant increase in demand for commodities and that has just not occurred. However, the fact remains that China is easing policy, both fiscal and monetary, while the G7 remains in a tightening phase. The natural outcome here is that the renminbi has continued to slide. While the onshore market closed little changed, with CNY -0.1%, the initial reaction upon the announcement of the rate cut was a little more substantial. Net, though, the renminbi has been weakening steadily all year long and given recent very low inflation data, it is abundantly clear that the PBOC is not concerned at current levels. I expect that USDCNY and USDCNH have much further to climb as the summer progresses, especially if CPI continues to run hot here in the US.
And those are really the key stories as we await that CPI print shortly. Asian equity markets followed the US higher last night with the Nikkei continuing its sharp rally, rising 1.8%, and the rest of the markets trailing along behind. Europe, though, is having a less formidable session with minimal movement as the major indices are +/-0.1% from yesterday’s closing levels. As to US futures, only NASDAQ futures are showing any movement, gaining 0.3% at this hour (7:30).
Bond markets are similarly dull, save the Gilt market which has seen 10yr yields rise 5.7bps, as both Treasuries and the rest of the European sovereign market are within 1bp of yesterday’s prices. The Fed continues to be active in the Treasury market, taking down a significant portion of the issuance yesterday, albeit not directly as they bought off-the-run bonds instead of the issuances. However, today’s data could easily have a significant impact as traders try to reassess the Fed’s response to a data surprise.
Oil prices have stopped falling and have bounce 1.8% from yesterday’s lowest levels of just below $67/bbl, although the trend continues to be lower. As I have repeatedly written, this is the one market that is all-in on the recession call. Gold (+0.4%) has been pretty uninteresting lately as it stopped falling but has basically flat-lined for the past month just below $2000/oz. Meanwhile, copper has rallied 2% this morning but is still well below highs seen earlier this year. However, I think a large part of these movements are the fact that the dollar is generally softer this morning.
Versus its G10 counterparts, the dollar is softer across the board with GBP (+0.5%) the leading gainer but decent strength everywhere. Versus the EMG bloc, there is a bit more variety with KRW (+1.3%) by far the leading gainer on a combination of reported corporate repatriation of overseas cash flows as well as hopes that China’s rate cut will support further growth in Korean exports. However, after that, the bloc is basically split between gainers and laggards with the biggest moves just 0.3% either way, not enough to get excited about.
And that’s really it for today. It is all about CPI this morning and depending on the data, we have the opportunity to get a better sense of how the Fed might behave tomorrow.
Good luck
Adf