The data was, once again, stronger
Reminding us higher for longer
Is still on the cards
Despite the diehards’
Beliefs that Chair Powell is wronger
As well, from two speakers we heard
And none of their signals were blurred
Said Daly and Mester
To every investor
All rate cuts are likely deferred
First, our thoughts are with the people of Taiwan which suffered a massive earthquake last night registering 7.4 on the Richter Scale. The damage was substantial and while the early count of fatalities is relatively low, just seven so far, I fear there will be more. From a business perspective, roads and rail lines were damaged and some of the semiconductor fabs were taken offline. The last issue matters greatly as it has the potential to drive up costs and thus prices of finished goods even further (remember what happened to auto prices during Covid when there was no availability of chips?). It is still too early to determine what the ultimate impacts will be, but the risk is that this will add to inflationary pressures if anything.
However, away from that news, the market story from yesterday and overnight is that the data continues to point to stronger growth in the US (Factory Orders jumped 1.4%) and the latest Fed speakers we heard, Daly and Mester, explained that while three cuts are still possible this year, neither one yet has the confidence that inflation is truly heading back to their 2% goal.
And this is really the entire story for now. It remains abundantly clear that the Fed is very keen to cut interest rates. Their macroeconomic backgrounds look at all that has happened and given their underlying belief that the “proper” long-term interest rate is somewhere between 2.5% and 3.0%, they are concerned their current policy is too tight. And yet, despite these views, virtually every data point that is released shows solid economic activity and no hint that things are slowing down, especially in the labor market.
So, despite that strong desire, they are wary of acting because they know, or at least Powell knows, that if they cut and inflation resurges, it is all on him. Remember, Powell has made it clear multiple times that he wants to be Paul Volcker redux, not Arthur Burns redux. The Fed funds futures market continues to price just 66bps of cuts by the December meeting, a telling statement about the difference between market beliefs and Fedspeak, at least yesterday’s Fedspeak. Granted, we heard last week from two Fed speakers who thought either one or two cuts was the most likely outcome.
Today brings five more speakers including Chair Powell as well as both ADP Employment (exp 148K) and ISM Services (52.7), so there is ample opportunity for news to shake things up. Based on everything we have seen regarding the US economic data; it seems the risks are for hotter data rather than softer data. But of more importance, I believe, will be Powell’s comments. If he accepts the idea that the economy continues to run fairly well with the current interest rate structure and says anything about less than three cuts being appropriate, watch out!
So, let’s look at what happened in markets overnight. After a weak session in the US yesterday on the growing concern that monetary policy is going to remain tighter, Asia followed suit with declines across the sector. The Nikkei (-1.0%) and Hang Seng (-1.2%) were both feeling the weight of this evolving narrative. Surprisingly, mainland Chinese shares were also under pressure despite continued talk of more fiscal stimulus as well as a resurfacing of the idea that President Xi is willing to countenance some version of QE there. It should be no surprise that virtually every regional market was in the red.
European bourses, though, are a different story this morning as they are higher after the initial read for Eurozone inflation fell to 2.4%, two ticks lower than expected while the Core reading fell to 2.9%, one tick lower than expected and the lowest since February 2022. Equity investors saw this and decided that the ECB has far fewer impediments to cutting rates than the Fed. In fact, the only market not behaving like this is the FTSE 100, which received no such news and is somewhat softer this morning. As to US futures, they are essentially unchanged ahead of Powell’s speech today.
In the bond market, this dichotomy of policy views is also evident as Treasury yields continue to climb, edging up another basis point this morning while European sovereign yields are mostly lower, between 2bps (Spain) and 4bps (Germany) with one outlier, Italy (+2bps). The Italian situation has to do with the European commission putting pressure on the nation regarding its budget situation which may fall afoul of the current regulations.
In the commodity markets, oil (+0.45%) continues to trade higher as the tensions in the Middle East show no sign of abating while Ukraine has been successful in interrupting Russian refinery production to some extent. Meanwhile. OPEC meets today and there is no indication that they will be changing their production restrictions. Gold (-0.4%) which has been flying, is taking a breather today although the other metals continue to grind higher. Nothing has really changed this story as the industrial metals continue to respond to brighter economic prospects while the precious sector continues to worry about the ultimate debasement of the fiat world.
Finally, in that fiat world, the picture is mixed this morning, although the best description is probably unchanged. I’m hard pressed to look at my screen and see any exchange rate that is more than 0.1% different than yesterday’s levels. Just like in the equity market, I believe traders are awaiting Chairman Powell’s comments today before taking any new positions. Over the course of the past three weeks, the dollar has been quite strong, rallying about 3% on a DXY basis. If the Fed continues to highlight that it is too soon to ease policy, and with today’s Eurozone inflation data, we start to hear more from ECB officials about the ability to cut, my sense is that we could see further strength in the greenback.
Overall, almost everything in markets continues to rely on Powell and the Fed. Remember, Friday we will see the March payroll report. If it continues the recent trend of >200K new jobs, it will be very difficult for any doves at the Fed to make their case effectively. That could begin to weigh more heavily on the equity market but should support the dollar going forward. Let’s listen to Chairman Jay today for our next clues.
Good luck
Adf