A Havoc Nightmare

While real wages fall
Kishida’s polls fall faster
Will Ueda act?

The first big thing this week is tonight’s BOJ meeting where many in the market are anticipating another tweak to the current YCC framework.  I have seen several analysts calling for a widening of the band to +/- 1.25% from the current +/- 1.00%.  While current yields have yet to reach the cap, they continue to grind higher and are currently at 0.88%, new highs for the move.  Ironically, it is likely the BOJ will need to buy even more JGB’s if they make an adjustment as the wider band would give the green light for speculators to short bonds even more aggressively.  Recall, since they widened from 0.50% to 1.00%, there have been at least five unscheduled bond buying episodes by the BOJ, with the last one, just a week ago, being the largest to date.

One thing to remember about the BOJ is that the concept of central bank independence is not as strong in Japan as it is, perhaps, elsewhere in the Western world.  (Of course, it is not that strong elsewhere either, but Japan is closer to China on this front than the US).  At any rate, the most recent polls in Japan show that PM Kishida’s approval ratings have fallen to new lows for his tenure, with an approval of just 33% according to the most recent Nikkei poll.  And this was after the announcement that he was cutting taxes to help people deal with the consistently rising inflation in Japan.  While it has not grown to levels seen in the US or Europe, it is clearly far higher than they have seen there in more than a generation.

But it doesn’t seem to be enough.  Now, there is no requirement for an election until sometime in 2025, but that doesn’t mean Kishida-san won’t feel the pressure to do more.  And arguably, one of the things they can do to fight inflation is raise rates and see if the yen can recapture some of the 35%+ that it has declined over the past two years.  

So, will they act?  My one observation on this is that unlike the Fed, which never likes to surprise the market, the BOJ has figured out that they only way they can have an impact is if they do surprise the market.  Given that an increasing number of people are starting to look for this outcome, I think the probability of a BOJ policy change tonight is quite low.  I would not be surprised, if I am correct, to see USDJPY head back through 150 and start to grind to new highs above the 152+ peak seen just before the intervention last year.

Meanwhile, for the rest of the week
Both meetings and data might wreak
A havoc nightmare
So, traders, beware
Of comments or data that’s bleak

Beyond tonight’s BOJ meeting, the week is jam-packed with other potential market moving catalysts between central bank meetings (FOMC on Wednesday, BOE on Thursday) and important data including ISM (Wednesday) and NFP on Friday.  However, there is one other thing set to be released Wednesday morning, well before the FOMC announcement and that is the Quarterly Refunding Announcement (QRA).  While, as its name suggests, this is released every quarter, it has generally been relegated to the agate type of market information as a technical feature for bond traders.  But this time, it has gained far more interest given the combination of the bond market’s performance since the last QRA (yields are higher by 80ish basis points) and the fact that the government budget deficit is continuing to grow with many new forecasts for a $2 trillion deficit this year thus a need for even more borrowing. 

Back in August at the last QRA, the Treasury increased issuance more than anticipated which has been seen as one of the drivers of the recent bond market decline.  If they were to increase it significantly again, there is certainly concern that bond yields can move much higher still.  Now, the Treasury could issue more short-term T-bills to take pressure off the bond market but bills already represent about 22% of the total debt outstanding.  That is a couple of points higher than the top of the historic range of 15%-20% and may be seen as a point of contention.  The positive is that given T-bill yields are all above 5.3%, there will be plenty of demand for their issuance.  However, on the flip side, that means that refinancing will need to occur far more frequently and that makes it subject to market dislocations and disruptions.

Another key part of the discussion will be just how large Secretary Yellen wants to keep the Treasury General Account (TGA), which is the government’s ‘checking’ account at the Fed.  As of Thursday, it held $835 billion and there has been talk she wants to increase it to $1 trillion to make sure the government has ample liquidity going forward, especially if there is another issue regarding government financing in Congress.  Historically, the Treasury has issued bills when they are seeking to build up balances in the TGA, which would tend toward seeing even more bills issued rather than substantial growth in the longer-dated maturities.  All in all, it is possible the QRA is going to have the largest potential impact on markets this week so beware.

In truth, the overnight session has been somewhat dull.  While the Israeli-Palestinian situation has seemed to enter a new phase regarding Israel’s incursion into Gaza, markets are non-plussed over the matter with bond yields little changed across the board, the dollar little changed across the board and oil prices sliding (-1.5%) this morning.  Even gold (-0.6%), which has been the best performer in the wake of the middle east crisis, has slipped back below the $2000/oz level, although remains higher by almost 10% in the past month.

In fact, the one area where things are moving is in equity space where we are seeing gains across the board in Europe, somewhere between 0.5% and 1.1%, in the major bourses as inflation data there showed that price rises have begun to slow down and Germany’s economy “only” shrunk by -0.1% in Q3, a much better than expected outcome!  US futures are also higher at this hour (7:15), up by 0.5% or so after a pretty awful week last week.  In fact, the only real outlier was Japan where the Nikkei slid -0.5% as Chinese shares were stronger along with most of the APAC markets.

As mentioned earlier, though, we do have a lot of news coming out this week so let’s go through it here:

TuesdayBOJ Rate Decision-0.1% (unchanged)
 BOJ YCC+ / – 1.00% (unchanged)
 Case Shiller Home Prices1.6%
 Chicago PMI45
 Consumer Confidence100
WednesdayADP Employment150K
 QRA$114 billion (+$11 billion)
 ISM Manufacturing49.0
 JOLTS Job Openings9.2M
 Construction Spending0.4%
 FOMC Decision5.5% (unchanged)
ThursdayBOE Decision5.25% (unchanged)
 Initial Claims210K
 Continuing Claims1795K
 Nonfarm Productivity4.0%
 Unit Labor Costs0.8%
 Factory Orders1.9%
FridayNonfarm Payrolls188K
 Private Payrolls145K
 Manufacturing Payrolls0K
 Unemployment Rate3.8%
 Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (4.0% Y/Y)
 Average Weekly Hours34.4
 ISM Services53.0

Source: tradingeconomics.com

So, as you can see, there is a lot of stuff coming our way starting tonight in Tokyo.  What that tells me is that we are not likely to see very much movement today as traders and investors await the plethora of new information that is due.  However, by the end of the week, we could have a very different narrative.  

Good luck

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