Not Harebrained

While here in the States there’s no chance
That rate cuts, by June, will advance
In England, we learned
They’re growing concerned
The ‘conomy’s still in a trance

So yesterday, Bailey explained
By June, a rate cut’s not hairbrained
But, closer to home
The Frisco Fed gnome
Said cutting rates will be restrained

You can tell that very little continues to happen in the macro world when the key stories that are in the discussion regard secondary players and their commentary.  While it is true that Andrew Bailey is the governor of the Bank of England, the reality is that the UK is just a secondary player on the world stage.  However, after their meeting yesterday, much digital ink has been spilled over the potential for the BOE to cut rates at the June meeting.  Prior to this meeting, it seemed that the BOE was tracking the Fed rather than the ECB, but that idea has now been dispelled.  Governor Bailey indicated that come June, a rate cut “is neither ruled out nor a fait accompli.”  However, he did comment that cuts were likely “over the coming quarters” and the market took him up on the news, with yields sliding and stocks rallying.

A key to the discussion is the fact that the BOE will see two more CPI reports between now and the next meeting on June 20th.  As well, both the ECB and the Fed will have met and potentially acted before they next meet.  As such, despite the fact that the BOE’s own forecasts showed improvement in both GDP and CPI over the next 3 years with current policy, the market is all-in on the cuts for June.  Well, maybe not all-in, but has increased the probability to 50%, up from just under one-third prior to the meeting.  Regarding the pound, if we continue to hear more dovish cooing from the Old Lady, especially given the fact that the Fed is clearly on hold, I expect it could drift back toward 1.20 over time.

Which brings us to the Fed, and an unscheduled appearance by San Francisco Fed president, Mary Daly, yesterday afternoon.  The two key comments she made were as follows: “There’s considerable, now, uncertainty about what the next few months of inflation will be and what we should do in response,” and “It’s far too early to declare that the labor market is fragile or faltering.”  In essence, this is repeating everything that we have heard consistently since the FOMC meeting last week.  I would boil it down to ‘as much as we are desperate to cut rates, neither prices nor the labor market are falling quickly enough to allow us to do so soon.’

Add it all up and you get a picture of a still tight Fed with no indication of a policy ease in the next quarter, at least, while another major central bank elsewhere has opened the doors to cutting rates.  Arguably, this should be a positive for the dollar except for the fact that this has been known, and the basic narrative for a while, so is already in the price.  If these policy divergences maintain for a much longer time, through the end of the year or beyond, then perhaps we will see more aggressive dollar strength.  But for now, I think the FX markets are going to be a dull affair.  The caveat here is if we see US data move away from its current trajectory, either picking up and pushing price pressures higher, or falling more rapidly resulting in a worse employment situation.

One last thing on the prospects for the US economy; there is still a large contingent of analysts who have been parsing the data and looking at secondary indicators and sub-indices of headline data, and who believe that a recession is much closer than the market is currently pricing.  Things like credit card delinquencies and the growing number of bankruptcies, as well as the discrepancy between the establishment and household surveys in the employment data have reached levels consistent with recessions in the past.  While last year I expected that would be the case, at this point, I believe that the ongoing massive fiscal spending (budget deficits >6% of GDP) and the ongoing availability of cheap energy continuing to draw investment into the US will prevent any substantive downturn for the rest of the year, at least.

As to market activity, yesterday’s higher than expected Initial Claims data (231K, highest since October) got the bulls all excited and drove a risk rally in stocks in the US which has been followed all around the globe.  Asian markets saw gains in Japan (+0.4%), Hong Kong (+2.3%) and almost everywhere else in the region except China which was flat on the day.  Meanwhile, European bourses are all green as well, led by the UK (+0.7%) on the back of stronger GDP data as well as the hopes for lower rates in the near future.  But the entire continent is higher as well, mostly on the order of 0.5%.  As to US futures, higher by 0.25% at this hour (7:30).

In the bond market, while Treasury yields drifted lower yesterday after that claims data, this morning they are higher by 1 basis point.  In Europe, though, sovereign yields are slipping 2bps to 3bps as traders and investors get more convinced of rate cuts coming soon.  Overnight, JGB markets did nothing.

In the commodity markets, Wednesday’s declines are a distant memory as we have seen oil (+0.7%) rally again this morning despite modest inventory builds which may be being offset by concerns that Israel is ignoring the recent pressure to stop its Rafah incursion.  However, the precious metals are not ignoring that story with both gold and silver higher by more than 1% this morning and copper rising 2.4%.  The day-to-day vagaries of these markets remain confusing, but the long-term trend, I believe, remains strongly intact, and that is higher prices going forward.

Finally, the dollar is little changed this morning but maintaining its gains from earlier in the week.  Looking across my screen, no currency has moved more than 0.3% in either direction, a clear sign that very little of note is happening.  As I wrote above, absent a major change in policy, I think the dollar is range bound for now.

On the data front, this morning brings only Michigan Sentiment (exp 76) and then a few more Fed speeches from Kashkari, Bowman, Goolsbee and Barr.  Regarding the data, I believe it will need to be a big miss in either direction to get much market reaction.  Regarding the Fedspeak, given the consistency with which every speaker has thus far explained they lack the confidence that 2% is in view, I see very little is likely to be newsworthy.

For today, don’t look for much at all.  For the longer term, the dollar’s future depends on how much longer the Fed maintains its relative tightness, and if that spread widens because either the Fed brings hikes back on the table or other central banks cut more aggressively.  But for now, as we enter the summer, I don’t see much at all.

Good luck and good weekend
Adf