A Bad Dream

The narrative’s gaining more steam
With landings, so soft, the new theme
In England today
They’re trying to say
Inflation was just a bad dream

The problem is that on the ground,
In Scotland and Wales and around,
Is incomes keep lagging
With purchases sagging
Which pressures the Great British pound

The biggest story of the morning has clearly been the UK inflation data which saw CPI fall back below 8.0% Y/Y for the first time in more than a year.  Granted, 7.9% is not that far below 8% and certainly still miles above the BOE target, but the decline was substantially more than had been expected by the analyst community as well as the market.  For instance, 10-year Gilt yields have tumbled -17.5bps and are now lower by 50bps since the peak two weeks’ ago and back to their lowest level since early June.  2-year Gilt yields have fallen even further, -25bps, so the market is really quite positive on this outcome.

It should be no surprise that UK equity markets have rallied as well, with the FTSE 100 the leading gainer in Europe, up 1.5%, nor should it be a surprise that the pound has fallen sharply, -1.0%, as traders re-evaluate the idea about just how much the BOE is going to raise rates going forward.  Prior to this release, the OIS market had been pricing in a terminal interest rate at 6.1%, implying at least 4 more rate hikes by the BOE.  But this morning, traders have removed one of those hikes from the curve and the excitement over further potential declines is palpable.

Now, the inflation news in Europe is not all rosy as the final release on the continent showed that core CPI turned out to be a tick higher at 5.5% in June, clearly an unwelcome result.  And remember, it was just yesterday that we heard from Klaas Knot implying that while a hike next week is a given, nothing is certain past that.  So, the question, currently, is will the ECB look through a revision to continue their more dovish stance?  I guess we’ll find out next week.  

But here’s an interesting tidbit regarding Europe, and something you need to consider when it comes to both investments and market outcomes there, electricity demand is falling there amid deindustrialization on the continent.  The IEA just issued their latest Electricity Market Report and the reading was not pleasant for Europe.  Consider that in the US, the combination of reshoring and the impact of the (ironically named) Inflation Reduction Act, as well as the CHIPS Act, has driven a marked increase in industrialization in the US.  Meanwhile, in Europe, the loss of their cheap energy from Russia combined with their climate goals has resulted in industry fleeing the continent.  For everyone who is long-term bearish the dollar, you better be far more bearish the euro given this new reality.  Remember, energy consumption is the mark of a growing and healthy economy.  When it is declining, absent extraordinary productivity/efficiency gains, it bodes ill.  If anything, the increasing reliance on less dense energy sources like wind and solar just reduces energy efficiency.  Be wary.

But, away from that news, things are a bit more confusing.  For instance, virtually all European bourses are higher this morning, albeit not as much as the FTSE 100, but in Asia, while the Nikkei (+1.25%) had a good session, Chinese equities were under pressure.  Yes, US markets yesterday continued their rally as earnings data has been able to beat the much-reduced estimates although futures this morning are essentially unchanged.  But arguably, we can describe the equity picture as risk-on.  

The same cannot be said for the bond market though, where yields have fallen everywhere, again, just not as much as in the UK.  Treasury yields are down another 2bps, and most European sovereigns are also seeing modest yield declines, not the typical risk-on behavior.  In fact, given the Eurozone CPI release, it would not have been surprising to see yields climb a bit.

As to the commodity space, oil is essentially unchanged on the day, but WTI is back above $75/bbl with Brent right at $80/bbl after several strong sessions.  There has definitely been a renewed focus on the bullish supply story in oil as opposed to the recession discussion of late.  At the same time, gold (-0.3%) which has rallied nicely during the past week, up nearly 2%, is holding the bulk of its gains.  Alas, the base metals continue to lag, with both copper and aluminum softer on the day.  Perhaps they didn’t get the bullish memo!

Finally, the dollar is quite robust this morning, which is not what one might expect given the equity and bond moves.  In fact, it is firmer vs. the entire G10, with the pound the laggard, as would be expected given the inflation data and falling UK rates.  But as well, the yen (-0.8%) is under pressure along with AUD (-0.7%) and the whole lot.  Regarding the yen, it has been rallying sharply of late, up more than 5% during July until yesterday.  That seems to be on an increasing belief that the BOJ, which meets next Friday, is going to tweak its policy in a tighter fashion, whether that involves YCC or rates or QE.  Now, these stories have not disappeared, I just think that we are seeing a bit of a breather for this move.  Remember, the yen has been the funding currency of choice for every asset all year as the BOJ remains the only central bank that hasn’t tightened policy at all.  This month appeared to be profit-taking ahead of potential BOJ activity, and last night appears to be a simple trading bounce.  FWIW, I do not believe the BOJ is ready to adjust its policy yet as the big review has just begun.  And as I have written before, it doesn’t appear that the rising inflation pressures in Japan have yet become a major political liability for PM Kishida, so there is only limited pressure to make a change.  For now, I would rather be short than long the yen.

Turning to the EMG bloc, only THB (+0.5%) is firmer this morning as the political machinations continue there in the wake of the recent election. In a nutshell, the winner of the election to replace the military junta is clearly not favored by the powers-that-be, and is being disqualified on a technicality, but another member of the coalition seems to be getting closer to taking the reins, with optimism building.  But aside from that story, the dollar is firmer vs. the entire bloc as we are seeing a solid trading bounce in the greenback after several days/weeks of weakness.

On the data front, yesterday’s Retail Sales data was disappointing, and the IP and Capacity Utilization data were awful.  Obviously, that didn’t hurt equities which remain disconnected from any macro data at this point.  This morning brings the Housing Starts (exp 1480K) and Building Permits (1500K) data, although if Retail Sales didn’t have an impact, it is hard to believe the housing data will.  

I remain uncomfortable with the equity market’s ongoing rally as I fail to see the underlying strength in the economy or earnings.  Certainly, recent dollar weakness has helped goose the stock market a bit, but I would not be surprised to see things start to turn around in the near term, meaning the dollar rebounding after its recent sell-off and the equity market seeing some profit-taking.

Good luck
Adf