In looking ahead to this week
Eleven Fed members will speak
And Core PCE
On Thursday, we’ll see
But otherwise, not much mystique
And one other thing we will hear
Is maybe a shutdown is near
But history shows,
And everyone knows,
Investors, this problem, don’t fear
After a dull session on Friday across all markets, the weekend delivered exactly zero new information that might alter investor perspectives. Hence, we are in the same place we left things before the weekend. Of more concern for traders, although not for hedgers or investors, is that there are few potential catalysts on the horizon for at least the first part of the week. Thursday’s Core PCE data is clearly the biggest data release, but there will be ample time to discuss that as we get closer.
In the meantime, based on everything we have seen of late; the entire narrative will remain focused on NVIDIA as well as AI in general in the stock market. For bond junkies, there will be more questions about the sustainability of the current spending plans in the US and whether the market will absorb all the issuance that is coming. Planned this week are auctions for $398 billion of T-bills, 2-year, 5-year, and 7-year notes. That’s a lot of issuance, and there is no sign that it is going to slow down at any point in the near future. Last week, the 20-year bond auction had its worst outcome in its history, with a 3.3bp tail, an indication that investors are getting full or at the very least concerned in some manner and need higher yields to be persuaded to continue investing.
The issue here stems from the fact that interest payments are utilizing an increasing part of the Federal budget and as old debt matures and is rolled over at current yields, those payments will continue to grow. While theoretically, the Treasury can simply continue to issue more debt in order to pay off whatever comes due, that means the stockpile of debt continues to grow, and with it, the interest needed to be paid each year. Alternatively, the Fed can change their QT back to QE, purchase Treasury securities and cap rates or drive them lower. However, if Powell goes down that road, the results are very likely to be a serious uptick in inflation and a serious decline in the dollar. The point is the current pace of issuance is not sustainable in the long run. Although, to be fair, people have been saying the same thing about Japan for the past twenty years, so it could still go on for a while.
I continue to believe that a bear-steepening outcome is the most likely, with bond yields rising above current the Fed funds target and the excessive supply of new bonds is one of the things driving that view. However, that seems more like a late summer or autumnal issue, not something for right now.
But away from the bond discussion, there is little else to note. A quick recap of the overnight session shows that Asian equity markets were on the sleepy side with Japan up a bit, 0.4% or so, while Chinese shares resumed their longer-term trend declines with the Hang Seng (-0.5%) and CSI 300 (-1.0%) both ceding ground, as there were no new stimulus programs announced. It is seeming increasingly as though absent stimulus; Chinese shares are a sale. In Europe, the action is mixed with both gainers and losers but nothing moving very far at all, 0.3% being the largest change on the day. It is the same story in the US, with futures at this hour (7:30) basically unchanged from Friday’s closing levels.
In the bond market, Treasury yields (-1bp) are edging lower this morning, although we are seeing the opposite tendency in Europe with most sovereigns gaining 1bp in yields. The outlier here is the UK, where 10-year Gilts have seen yields climb 6bps after a better-than-expected CBI Retail Sales print added to the Flash PMI data from last week and is pointing to a somewhat better economic outlook. A quick look east shows that JGB yields slipped 3bps overnight as investors, looking ahead to tonight’s CPI data are expecting a soft print and less incentive for the BOJ to tighten policy.
Oil prices (-0.6%) continue to slide slowly as production continues apace but there are questions about demand given the weakness seen in Europe, the UK and China. A stronger US economy is not enough, by itself, to drive oil prices higher. In the metals markets, copper is the big loser, down -1.4%, as concerns over Chinese economic resurgence continue to dog the red metal. It appears the relationship between copper and the CSI 300 is tightening up a bit.
Finally, the dollar is under modest pressure this morning as US yields continue to soften slightly after Friday’s decline. But to indicate just how modest things are, the biggest mover today is the euro (+0.3%). Literally every other major currency, whether G10 or EMG has had less movement than that. In other words, there is no story here. We need to see some monetary policy changes before this is going to heat up again.
On the data front, as indicated above, it is a pretty quiet week as follows:
| Today | New Home Sales | 680K |
| Dallas Fed Manufacturing | -8.0 | |
| Tuesday | Durable Goods | -4.5% |
| -ex transport | 0.2% | |
| Case Shiller Home Prices | 6.0% | |
| Consumer Confidence | 115 | |
| Wednesday | Q4 GDP | 3.3% |
| Thursday | Initial Claims | 210K |
| Continuing Claims | 1874K | |
| Personal Income | 0.4% | |
| Personal Spending | 0.2% | |
| PCE | 0.3% (2.4% Y/Y) | |
| Core PCE | 0.4% (2.8% Y/Y) | |
| Chicago PMI | 48.0 | |
| Friday | ISM Manufacturing | 49.5 |
| ISM Prices Paid | 53.0 | |
| Michigan Sentiment | 79.6 |
Looking at everything, although there seems to be a lot of stuff, most of it is just not really that important. I have to remark on the Case Shiller data as recall, a big piece of the disinflation theory is the decline in housing prices. A 6.0% Y/Y print does not feel like it is declining to me, but then I am just an FX poet. Obviously, all eyes will be on the PCE data Thursday morning. In addition to this, we hear from eleven different Fed speakers including Waller and Williams, two of the more important voices, although Chairman Powell remains mum.
Nothing we have seen over the past weeks has changed my longer-term views and quite frankly, the first part of the week is shaping up as a sleeper. Quiet markets are a boon to hedgers as executing is greatly eased, and banks will compete hard for your business. In the end, the dollar continues to follow the yield story, so, if yields in the US slide from current levels, the dollar will likely follow. The opposite is also true.
Good luck
Adf