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It’s Payrolls Day and market participants are all anxiously awaiting the news at 8:30. Recall, last month, for the first time in more than a year, the NFP number printed slightly lower than the median forecast and that was seen as proof positive that the soft landing was on its way. Subsequently, headline CPI fell to its lowest in two years as a confirmation of that process, and market participants decided, as one, that risk was the thing to own. Equities rallied, bond yields fell and there was joy around the world markets.
But lately, that story is having a rougher go of things as 10-year Treasury yields have jumped 43bps from their levels following the CPI release even though the PCE data was similarly soft. What gives? Arguably, part of this is because energy prices have rebounded sharply since last month, so it is increasingly clear that next week’s CPI data is going to higher than last month’s number. As well, the growing confidence in the soft-landing scenario, which is touted across mainstream media constantly, implies that rate cuts may not be necessary. After all, if Fed funds are at 5.5% and GDP is growing at 2.5% and Unemployment remains below 4.0%, why would the Fed change its policy rate? The answer is, they wouldn’t. At the same time, in the event the economy is clearly growing with positive future prospects, it is very likely that the yield curve will steepen back to a ‘normal’ shape with longer dated yields higher than short-dated yields. If the Fed is not going to cut, that means the back end of the curve must see yields rise. The current 2yr-10yr inversion is down to -74bps, so another 100bp rise in 10-year yields would seem realistic.
Of course, the question is, how would risk assets behave in that scenario? And the answer there is likely to be far less positive. After all, if risk free returns for 10 years were at 5+%, equities would need to offer a very good return opportunity to attract investors. While there will be some companies that offer that, I suspect there are many more that would be shunned and need to reprice substantially lower to become attractive. In other words, investors will want much lower entry prices to get involved and that could see a pretty big sell-off in the equity markets. Just one possible scenario, but one with a decent probability of occurring, I think.
But that is all future prognostication. In the meantime, let’s look at what the current consensus forecasts are for today:
| Nonfarm Payrolls | 200K |
| Private Payrolls | 180K |
| Manufacturing Payrolls | 5K |
| Unemployment Rate | 3.6% |
| Average Hourly Earnings | 0.3% (4.2% Y/Y) |
| Average Weekly Hours | 34.4 |
| Participation Rate | 62.6% |
Source: Bloomberg
Wednesday’s ADP number was much higher than expected at 324K although the prior blowout number, 497K in June, was revised lower by 42K. Still, 455K was much larger than the BLS report so there are many questions as to whether we will see a similar outcome today, a softer NFP number despite a very strong ADP number. Looking at other indicators, the Initial Claims data continues to improve, hovering around 225K. The JOLTS data was slightly softer than expected, but still right around 9.6 million and well above levels prior to the pandemic. And finally, if you look at the employment subsets of the ISM data, they were soft in manufacturing, but solid in services, and services is a much larger part of the economy.
My take is the market is going to behave very clearly based on the actual outcome. A strong number, anything over 225K, is likely to see the bond market sell off further and I wouldn’t be surprised to see 10-year yields, which have edged up another basis point this morning to 4.19%, trade back above the levels seen last October at 4.25% or more. That will not be a positive for the stock markets as it will reintroduce the idea the Fed is going to continue to raise rates, something the market has completely priced out at this point. Similarly, a soft number will open the door to a sharp equity rally and bond rally, with yields likely to even test the 4.0% level if the NFP number is soft enough. I think we need a 100K or less number for a reaction like that.
Ahead of the data, there seems to be a growing concern over the outcome. While Asian markets rebounded a bit, European bourses have started to fall across the board from earlier levels and are now all down by between -0.2% and -0.5%. US futures, too, are now back to unchanged having spent the bulk of the evening higher on the back of a strong earnings report from Amazon.
Bond markets are under pressure as energy prices around the world are rising, as are food prices, and so inflation prospects seem to be worsening. This is despite the very earnest efforts of central banks around the world to convince us all that inflation has peaked, and they are near the end of their hiking cycles. After the BOE raised rates by 25bps yesterday, the market has reduced the expected UK terminal rate down to 5.75%, two more hikes despite CPI running at 7.9% with Core at 6.9%. In the Eurozone, the ECB has released a new report claiming that inflation has peaked as well, and the market has priced out any further rate hikes. This all smacks of whistling past the graveyard in my view.
For instance, oil (+0.35%) is higher again, up more than 14% in the past month, and shows no signs of slowing down. Not only did Saudi Arabia extend their one million bbl/day production cut for another month, but Russia now claims it will cut production by 300K bbl/day in September as well. I haven’t discussed food prices in a while as they had eased off from the immediate post invasion highs, but the FAO Food price index rebounded last month and despite a sharp decline from its highest levels last year, is still at levels that have caused riots in the streets of African nations in the past. Metals prices are also under pressure today, but that seems more to do with the strong dollar than anything else.
Turning to the dollar, it is once again seeing demand as only NOK (+0.2%) has managed to gain on the greenback in the G10 space, although the other currencies’ losses are not large. The same cannot be said for the EMG space where the APAC bloc is under real pressure led by KRW (-0.8%) and THB (-0.4%) on the dual concern of a slower growing China and broad risk-off sentiment. One thing that seems likely is the dollar will benefit from a strong NFP print and suffer from a weak one.
And that’s really it for the day. No Fed speakers are on the docket, but do not be surprised to hear some interviews if the number is very different from the forecasts. In the end, nothing has changed my view that inflation will remain stickier than forecast and the Fed will hold tight thus supporting the dollar. Remember, the combination of tight monetary and loose fiscal policy is the recipe for a strong currency. And the US is running that in spades!
Good luck and good weekend
Adf