Whispers in the wind
Imply rates may be rising
Sooner than we thought
In the wake of Friday’s noncommittal payroll data, which I will discuss below, the topic garnering the most interest this morning is the BOJ and whether they will be adjusting monetary policy one week from today rather than in April. There have been several articles published on the topic which is usually a sign that the BOJ is floating trial balloons. At this point, the market is pricing about a 2/3 probability of a move next week based on current Japanese OIS swap data. That is a significant increase compared to the pricing just two weeks ago. In addition, we have seen a number of analysts from the major Japanese banks move their call to March from April previously
You may recall that a key discussion point on this subject has been the Spring wage negotiations and whether the new round will embed higher wages into the economy. Last week I mentioned that Rengo, one of the labor associations, was seeking a 5.85% increase, which would be the largest such move in more than 30 years. As it happens, the results will be released this coming Friday, so if the outcome is high enough, arguably Ueda-san and the BOJ would have enough information for a move.
One other interesting tidbit was the fact that last night, the BOJ remained out of the equity market despite the fact that the TOPIX (Japan’s other major index) fell more than 2% in the morning session. Ever since Covid and the market panics then, on every occasion when the morning session saw the index decline that much, the BOJ was a buyer in the afternoon. While this was not an official policy per se, it was the reality. The upshot is that the BOJ is the largest holder of Japanese stocks in the world, owning something on the order of 8% of the market. The fact that despite that decline, they changed their response could well be a tell that other changes are coming.
In the end, I would argue it matters less whether the first adjustment happens in March or April and more about just how far they are going to adjust policy. I remain unconvinced that this is the beginning of a true normalization of monetary policy, or perhaps more accurately, that the BOJ is going to raise rates to bring them in line with the rest of the G10. Rather, my sense is we will get to 0.0% at the first move, and that over the ensuing years, a move to even 0.3% in the overnight market will be difficult to achieve absent a major explosion of economic growth alongside rapidly rising inflation. And frankly, I just don’t see that happening at all.
Keep this in mind, 2-year JGB yields, which have been edging higher steadily for the past two months, are still at only 0.2%. That is not a sign that the market is expecting a dramatic increase in Japanese policy rates anytime soon. Since the beginning of the month, the yen has rallied about 2.65% on this story. Can it go much further? Certainly, there is room for further strength given its performance over the past several years. However, I would argue that will rely on the Fed cutting rates, and doing so aggressively, to truly narrow the yield differential. And right now, I just don’t see that happening.
On Friday, the payroll report
In some ways, came up rather short
While headlines were strong
Revisions felt wrong
For rate hikes, more folks, to exhort
By now, you are aware that despite a much stronger than forecast headline NFP print of 275K, (exp 200K), the revisions to the prior two months were -167K, which took the luster off the headline and reverted the revision story back to negative from the surprising positive result last month. In addition, the Unemployment Rate rose 2 ticks to 3.9% and Average Hourly Earnings only rose 0.1% on the month. The market response here was interesting, to say the least. While Treasury yields continued their recent slide, perhaps anticipating Fed action sooner rather than later, the equity market sold off as well, although that easily could have been simple profit taking after a huge run higher. Of more interest is the fact that NY Fed President Williams, the last Fed speaker before the quiet period started, sounded just a touch more dovish than a number of the speakers we heard last week.
At this point, market participants are focused on a couple of things I think, with the next big thing tomorrow’s CPI print. Thursday brings Retail Sales and then, of course, the FOMC statement and Powell presser is the following Wednesday. June remains the odds-on favorite for the first Fed cut but that is subject to change based on tomorrow’s data. If CPI indicates that the January number was not an aberration, and that inflation is actually stickier than many (want to) believe, I would not be surprised to see the median dot plot expectations rise to only 2 rate cuts in 2024. That is substantially fewer than the current estimate of 4+. That will have a significant impact on markets if that is the case. Alternatively, a very soft number tomorrow could easily bring May back onto the table for the first rate cut and may alter the dot plot in the other direction. We shall see,
As the market awaits all the upcoming news, here’s what happened overnight. Along with the slide in Japanese shares, most Asian markets sold off, all in the wake of Friday’s weak US equity performance. The one exception was China, where both the Hang Seng (+1.4%) and CSI 300 (+1.25%) rallied at the end of the Chinese National People’s Congress as hopes for more stimulus remain high. In Europe, bourses are all in the red, although the declines have not been excessive, just -0.25% to -0.5%. And at this hour (7:45), US futures are pointing slightly lower, -0.2% across the board.
In the bond market, yields are generally little changed in both treasury and European sovereign markets with all eyes on tomorrow’s data. Last week’s ECB meeting didn’t really add too much to the conversation although it appears that expectations are cementing around a June rate cut, regardless of the Fed’s actions. Overnight, JGB yields edged another 2bp higher, which given the increased scrutiny on a March rate hike is not that surprising.
In the commodity markets, oil (-0.5%) is sliding a bit and generally remaining right in the middle of its $75-$80 trading range for the past month. Meanwhile, gold, while little changed this morning, is holding onto its recent gains and showing no signs of slipping back soon. As to the base metals, copper (+0.3%) is edging higher while aluminum is unchanged on the day. These metals markets are looking toward China to get a sense of the chances for fresh new demand.
It can be no surprise that the dollar is largely unchanged this morning with very modest gains and losses across both the G10 and EMG blocs. In the G10, JPY (+0.3%) is the biggest mover with the rest of the bloc +/-0.1% on the day and giving no signal. In the EMG bloc, KRW (+0.5%) is the largest mover, although it is not clear what would have driven the move as equities there fell pretty sharply overnight. Also, CNY (+0.15%) is rallying after CPI data released over the weekend showed a monthly rise of 1.0% and that brought the Y/Y number back into positive territory at +0.7%.
On the data front, there is some other interesting data aside from CPI as follows:
| Tuesday | CPI | 0.3% (3.1% Y/Y) |
| -ex food & energy | 0.4% (3.7% Y/Y) | |
| Thursday | Initial Claims | 218K |
| Continuing Claims | 1911K | |
| Retail Sales | 0.7% | |
| -ex autos | 0.4% | |
| PPI | 0.3% (1.2% Y/Y) | |
| -ex food & energy | 0.2% (2.0% Y/Y) | |
| Business Inventories | 0.2% | |
| Friday | Empire State Manufacturing | -7.5 |
| IP | 0.0% | |
| Capacity Utilization | 78.4% | |
| Michigan Sentiment | 76.6 |
Source tradingeconomics.com
However, while there is a bunch of stuff coming out, I suspect that after CPI, it will all be anticlimactic. As we are in the Fed quiet period, there will be no commentary, although in the wake of the CPI report, look for anything in the WSJ from the current Fed whisperer, Nick Timiraos. This is especially so if the numbers are far from expectations.
In the end, today ought to be very quiet overall, with all eyes on tomorrow. From there we shall see.
Good luck
Adf