Their confidence clearly was lacking
So, now on rate cuts they’re backtracking
As well, they’re concerned
Some banks have not learned
To manage their risk and need smacking
But really the news of the day
Is AI remains the key play
NVIDIA beat
And all of Wall Street
Is buying to bears’ great dismay
Starting with the FOMC Minutes, the two things that stood out to me were these two lines, “The staff provided an update on its assessment of the stability of the U.S. financial system and, on balance, characterized the system’s financial vulnerabilities as notable. The staff judged that asset valuation pressures remained notable, as valuations across a range of markets appeared high relative to fundamentals.” Arguably, this was why the Fed removed the line from the statement about “The U.S. banking system is sound and resilient,” which had been included since the Silicon Valley Bank debacle. Perhaps they see something amiss. As well, there was discussion regarding the timing of the end of QT with July seeming to be the latest thinking for its initial reduction. But otherwise, as evidenced by the fact that virtually every Fed speaker has indicated they lack confidence inflation is dead, and that while policy is currently restrictive, it is still too soon to think about cutting rates, was clearly the broad theme of the meeting. Next week we see the PCE data so perhaps that can change some opinions, but right now, given what we have just seen from CPI/PPI, they cannot have gained confidence it is time to cut.
As to NVIDIA, huge results, beating expectations and the word from the CEO is that demand will outstrip supply at least through the end of the year. The market response here has been as one would expect; a big rally in stocks, especially tech. ‘Nuff said.
Nikkei all-time high
Thirty-four years in waiting
Has finally come
Under the heading a picture is worth 1000 words, behold the relationship between NVIDIA and Nikkei 225 (chart from Weston Nakamura’s Across the Spread substack):

Pretty tight correlation, no? Arguably, the question is which is driving which? Does a stronger Nikkei drive NVIDIA’s performance or the other way around? The first thing to note is that breaking down the Nikkei’s performance, similar to the NASDAQ, there are a handful of AI related stocks that have been the drivers of the move. If you read Nakamura-san’s take, he believes that it is the Nikkei which is driving things, but I would argue while the Nikkei’s move happens earlier in the global day, the reality is that everything is an echo of the current AI craze which NVIDIA started.
The next question is, just how long can this continue? Remember two things here; first, trees don’t grow to the sky, and neither will NVIDIA’s stock; and second, new technologies take MUCH longer to assimilate than the initial hype would have you believe. We are already seeing issues with Google’s Gemini AI with respect to drawing remotely accurate historical images of US presidents, as an example. We are still in the very early innings of the AI phenomenon and there will be more hiccups along the way. One last thing regarding AI is its power consumption, which is off the charts high. If the world is going to be run by AI, we need a lot more electricity than is currently being produced and that alone will slow its incorporation into things.
Ok, on to more macro views, last night and this morning saw the release of the Flash PMI data all around the world. Of the seven major releases thus far, only India is in expansion with it continuing to motor along in the low 60’s. Otherwise, everything else (Australia, Japan, Germany, France, the Eurozone and the UK) are all in contraction in manufacturing. Services is more mixed with several slightly above the 50 boom/bust line, but overall, while things might be seen as slightly improving, they are still pointing to recessions in Europe, Japan and the UK.
Despite this weakening data, virtually every one of these nations’ currencies is stronger vs. the dollar this morning. In fact, the dollar is having a pretty rough session, down between 0.3% and 0.5% against most G10 counterparts with a slightly smaller decline vs. its EMG counterparts. One of the odd things about this is that US yields have not really fallen much (Treasuries -1bp) which is right in line with the price action in European sovereigns and what we saw overnight in Asia across the board.
Add to the bond story the message from the Fed of higher for longer and it doesn’t appear that interest rates are today’s driver of the markets. We already have seen that equity markets are rocking with the Nikkei (+2.2%), Hang Seng (+1.5%), CSI 300 (+0.9%), and most of Europe higher by 0.9% or more. US futures, of course, are really flying with the NASDAQ (+2.2%) leading the way, but everything in the green. I grant that a typical risk-on reaction is a weaker dollar but given the amount of funds that are flowing into the US equity markets, it is very hard to understand why the dollar is under pressure. Something seems amiss.
If we look at the commodity markets, energy is softer across the board with oil (-0.2%) edging lower and basically unchanged on the week, while NatGas (-2.7%) is suffering as well. As to the metals markets, gold (+0.2%) is edging higher on the back of the weaker dollar but both copper and aluminum are little changed on the day, less than 0.1% different from yesterday’s closing levels.
Perhaps this is the new risk-on look, strong equity markets, a weak dollar and nobody cares about bonds. But bonds have been far too important a driver of market activity to suddenly be ignored. Now, yesterday, the Treasury auctioned some 20-year bonds and it did not go well, with a tail of 3.3bps, implying demand for the long-end remains tepid. Given my personal view on inflation, that makes perfect sense, but arguably, the longest duration assets around are tech stocks and the divergence between bonds and those stocks is hard to reconcile. I guess we will learn more as time progresses, but for now, I would be at least a little wary. Absent a change in the inflation narrative back to the Fed has won, it does feel like there is still some risk to be seen.
On the data front, this morning brings the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (exp -0.15) which is a comprehensive view of financial conditions around the country and closely followed by the Fed. As well we get Initial (218K) and Continuing (1885K) Claims and the Flash PMI’s (50.5 Manufacturing, 52.0 Services). We close with Existing Home Sales (3.97M) and the oil inventory data and throughout the day we hear from four different Fed speakers, Jefferson, Harker, Cook and Kashkari. Will any of this data matter? I doubt it. Can we expect anything new from the Fed speakers? I kind of doubt that as well as there has been exactly zero evidence that the economy is slowing and dragging inflation lower since last week’s CPI and PPI data. So, look for that lack of confidence in the demise of inflation to be widespread.
As to the dollar, something doesn’t smell right today. I feel like it should be better bid and expect that by the end of the day, it will see that type of movement.
Good luck
Adf