The topic du jour
Is, will Japan intervene?
And will it matter?
History has shown
Until policy changes
All else is piffling
The next 30 hours have the chance to be quite meaningful for markets as we will learn a great deal about several very key issues. While this morning’s Q1 US GDP data will be mildly interesting, I believe the real keys will be the following in order of their release: 1) earnings from Alphabet Google, Intel and Microsoft; 2) BOJ meeting and Ueda press conference; and 3) US Core PCE.
Let’s unpack them in order.
1) Earnings for three key tech stocks are a critical data point to determine whether the current equity mulitples still make sense. Already this week we saw Tesla miss estimates but give positive guidance and rally sharply on Tuesday, then Meta Facebook beat earnings nicely but gave negative guidance (they said costs were rising because of all the AI spending but revenues would not show a bump anytime soon on the back of that spending) and the stock fell sharply overnight and is called down -13% to open this morning. Just remember, if the generals of the stock market rally are slipping, typically the market can follow lower.
2) Now that USDJPY has breached the 155 level and has not even consolidated, but continues marching higher, all eyes are on Ueda-san to see if he will adjust policy to help mitigate the yen’s declines. Of course, the BOJ is not in charge of yen policy, that is an MOF issue, but I assure you the two entities work closely together. Ueda’s problem is that no matter what he does, it will not have enough of an impact to make a difference. While no policy change is expected, even if the BOJ hikes rates 25bps, it would only have a very short-term effect because the interest rate differential remains huge and would still be in excess of 500 basis points. While there are reasons for Ueda to consider a hike (rising wages, higher energy prices and the weak yen all can lead to further inflation), given they hiked at the last meeting and explicitly said they would be maintaining easy policy, it seems hard to believe anything will change. (As an aside, the very fact that nobody is expecting a move would allow a disproportionate pop in the yen, although I believe it would be quite short-lived.)
3) Finally, the release of the PCE data tomorrow morning will update both market participants and policymakers on the likelihood that the Fed is going to achieve their inflation target anytime soon. Recall, we have seen three consecutive hotter than expected CPI monthly reports and the last two PCE reports were similarly hotter than expected. If this one follows that pattern, any idea that a cut is coming before the election will dissipate even further. As of this morning, the Fed funds futures market is pricing just 42bps of cuts for all of 2024 with the first cut not expected until September. The options market is now pricing a 20% probability of a rate hike in the next twelve months. I believe tomorrow’s data matters a great deal.
It is part 3 of my little exercise that is the key for USDJPY going forward. Just like the ECB (and BOE and BOC), the BOJ was counting on the Fed to begin their rate cutting cycle initially by March, but certainly by June, and expecting quite a few rate cuts. That would have been crucial to reduce the US yield advantage over the yen and likely would have seen the dollar slide against most currencies. But it appears that the US economy, which continues to be propped up by massive deficit government spending, is not going to allow the Fed any leeway to reduce rates. If that continues to be the case, and I see no reason for that to change ahead of the election, then the dollar is going to retain its bid. In fact, this is exactly why yesterday I highlighted the conversations that are apparently ongoing within the Trump camp regarding ways to weaken the dollar. Right now, it is not going to fall on its own.
So that’s how things stand as we head into a crucial period with disparate but important information. In the meantime, let’s look at the overnight activity.
Yesterday’s US session was a wash as early declines were recovered into the close, but the Meta earnings have US futures pointing lower by about 0.7% at this hour (6:45). Those earnings also seemed to impact Tokyo, which saw a sharp decline of -2.2% although Chinese and Hong Kong shares managed to rally on the session a bit, about 0.5%. The rest of the time zone was mixed with some gainers (India, New Zealand, Thailand) and some laggards (South Korea, Taiwan). The picture in Europe is also mixed with the FTSE 100 (+0.6%) having a solid session on the strength of an M&A deal regarding Anglo American, the mining giant receiving an unsolicited buyout offer from BHP Billiton. However, pretty much the entire continent is under water this morning, sagging by 0.65% or so across the board.
In the bond market, Treasury yields are unchanged this morning, but 10yr still sit at 4.64%. I expect that the data today and tomorrow will have quite an impact there. European sovereign yields are all slipping 2bps this morning, as what little data that has been released, German GfK Confidence and French Business Confidence) have been on the soft side with a few comments that the June rate cut remains the favorite. Perhaps of more interest is that 10yr JGB yields rose 3bps overnight and are now at 0.89%, their highest level since November in the wake of the ostensible end of YCC. Perhaps traders here are starting to bet on a BOJ move.
In the commodity space, oil (+0.3%) is bouncing from its worst levels recently, but in truth, remains in the middle of its trading range for the past week near $83/bbl. Yesterday’s EIA data showed a very large net draw of inventories which has helped support the black sticky stuff. As to the metals markets, it appears that the correction may be over with all the main players higher this morning (Au +0.5%, Ag +0.6%, Cu +1.7%, Al +0.2%). Remember, if tomorrow’s PCE is hot, the metals should continue to rally.
Finally, the dollar is under a little pressure overall this morning, although it remains near its recent highs. ZAR (+1.15%) is the leading gainer on the back of that metals strength, but we are seeing strength in AUD (+0.45%) and CLP (+0.6%) also helped by the metals markets. However, it is not just that story as the euro (+0.2%) and pound (+0.4%) are both firmer and dragging their CE4 acolytes along for the ride as well. The one exception remains the yen (-0.2%), which is above 155.50 as I type. Of course, that story is told above.
Today’s data is as follows: Initial (exp 214K) and Continuing (1810K) Claims as well as Q1 GDP (2.5%) with its subsets of Real Consumer Spending (2.8%) and its measure of PCE (3.4%). It is important to note that this PCE data is not the one the Fed tracks closely, although I am certain they pay attention. FWIW, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow number is currently 2.7%.
Now we wait for the data to come. When the dust settles, we should have a somewhat better idea of how things may play out, but right now there is a great deal of uncertainty. In the end, nothing has altered the fact that the dollar continues to benefit from the relative tightness of the Fed vs. other nations, and that should continue to support the dollar.
Good luck
Adf