Not Preordained

The first cracks have started to show
In Jay’s, up til now, status quo
When Harker explained,
Though not preordained,
That rate cuts, next year, they’d bestow

While he is the first of the Fed
To claim that rate cuts are ahead
Do not be surprised
When views are revised
By others now this road’s been tread

While things looked dire yesterday morning with respect to risk assets, along around lunchtime there was a reversal of attitudes and while equity markets did finish in the red, they were all well off their lows by the close. So, the question is, what could have caused that reversal?  Interestingly, an argument can be made that Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker’s comments may well have been the catalyst.  

After explaining, “I think there is a path to an economic soft landing,” Harker went on to the money quote, “Sometime, probably next year, we’ll start cutting rates.”  While the first comment was a nice sentiment, the second comment was the first time we have heard any Fed speaker consider that rate cuts would be appropriate in 2024.  Remember, the entire mantra has been, ‘higher for longer’ with no indication that the FOMC was even close to considering rate cuts.  Importantly, Mr Harker is a current voting member, so his views carry a touch more weight than the non-voters.

Of course, the Fed funds futures market has been pricing in that exact scenario for months, with the current expectation that by the end of 2024, Fed funds will be back to 4.0%.  The conundrum here, though, is that if the economy comes in for a soft landing, meaning we do not have a recession while inflation falls back to their target, why would they adjust rates at all?  It would seem under that scenario that interest rates could be termed ‘appropriate’, neither too high nor too low.  I get why equity investors want lower rates, but then seemingly, rate cuts could well bring on another bout of inflation as an already growing economy overheats with extra monetary stimulus.

Yesterday’s other Fed speaker, Richmond’s Thomas Barkin (a non-voter this year) had a less dovish message.  He was unwilling to ‘predeclare’ where rates are going, explaining they have time before the next FOMC meeting to monitor the data.  He also explained that there are competing outlooks for the economy, “one where inflation will glide down to 2%, another where it remains persistent.”  But that message is far more in line with what we have been hearing.  It was the Harker comments that got things rolling.

And so, as we walk in this morning, there is a lot of green on the screen in the equity markets as risk is once again in favor.  Not surprisingly, this has pushed commodity prices higher, especially oil, which while higher by 1.3% this morning, and back over $83/bbl, is more than 5% above the lows seen yesterday morning.  That is a big reversal!  Metals markets, too, are firmer this morning with gold, copper and aluminum all benefitting from this change in sentiment.

In the equity space, Asian markets were more mixed with the Nikkei (-0.5%) which had been holding its own giving back a bit, but the Hang Seng managed to reverse a small portion of yesterday’s losses.  The real story, though, is in Europe, where all the markets are higher, mostly by 1% or more, notably Italy’s FTSE MIB (+1.75%) which has benefitted from both the overall risk sentiment as well as a change in plans by the Italian government regarding the bank windfall profit tax mooted yesterday.  It seems that they got a little nervous over the market’s reaction, which wiped out more than €10 billion in market cap from the banking sector, and so reversed course a bit.  As to US futures, they are modestly firmer (+0.3%) at this hour (7:45).

In the bond market, after sharp declines in yields yesterday, we are seeing a bit of a reversal with 10yr Treasury yields up 1bp this morning.  While early yesterday that yield had fallen below 4.0%, it was a short-lived move, and we are back above that key level today.  The easy part of the quarterly refunding was well received yesterday with the 3yr note clearing at 4.398% and a 2.90 bid/cover ratio.  In other words, there were plenty of buyers for that $42 billion tranche.  Today could be a bit trickier as the Treasury seeks to sell $38 billion of 10yr notes.  We shall see where bonds trade as the auctions progress.  And tomorrow comes the 30yr, with $23 billion set to be auctioned, so there is still plenty of new supply coming.  Meanwhile, European sovereign bonds are all seeing yields higher as well this morning, mostly on the order of 1bp to 2.5 bps, after yesterday’s sharp yield declines.

Finally, the dollar is under a bit of pressure this morning, as would be expected given the change in risk attitude.  NOK (+0.5%) leads the way in the G10 on the back of oil’s performance, but in truth, the rest of this bloc has not moved very far at all, although I would argue that gainers mean more than laggards.  In the EMG space, the situation is similar with quite a few more currencies gaining ground, albeit not too much, while only a few are under pressure.  ZAR (-0.5%) is the laggard although there is no obvious catalyst for the movement, especially given the commodity rebound.

There is no data of note today and no Fed speakers are on the docket either.  With this in mind, and as we all await tomorrow’s CPI data, I suspect that risk will remain in favor today.  That means that commodities should continue to perform well along with equities, while the dollar remains under pressure.

Good luck

Adf