Not Fraught

The Retail Sales data did nought
To clarify anyone’s thought
‘Bout growth or inflation
While anticipation
Of Jay, for a change, is not fraught
 
Meanwhile, tariffs are, once again
A question of how much, not when
Just two weeks from now
The president’s vow
For more, has disturbed market zen

 

In a remarkable situation, at least these days, there is precious little new news impacting financial markets.  Perhaps that is why equities around the world are rallying, the absence of bad news is seen as good.  Here in the States, the biggest story continues to be the controversy over the deportation of several hundred Venezuelan and Salvadorean gang members that some claim ignored a judge’s order.  I’m confident this will get top billing for at least another day, but after that, we will move on.  However, market related stories are sparser.

For instance, we can look at yesterday’s Retail Sales data, which was not terrible, but not great, as the headline number rose a less than expected 0.2%, but that still translated into 3.1% growth Y/Y.  One of the things weighing on the data was the fact that gasoline prices fell, thus despite modest growth in volume, total dollar sales declined.  The same was true with autos, where allegedly prices declined though volumes remained solid.  (Remember, Retail Sales measures the dollar value of sales, not the quantity of items sold.). At any rate, investors absorbed the data and decided that the recent market declines, to the extent they are a reflection of concerns over rapidly slowing economic activity, were overdone.  The result, happily, is that equities rallied most of the day yesterday and that has followed through around the world overnight.

Alas, the other string of stories in headlines today is the Trump administration’s efforts to determine exactly how they want to implement the promised reciprocal tariffs which are due to be put in place on April 2.  It seems the fact the US trades with over 180 nations, each with their own tariff schedules, makes the details of the proposal difficult to shape and implement.  However, my take is, absent some major shifts by other nations, these tariffs will be imposed.

Ultimately, given the US is the ‘buyer of last resort’ for pretty much every other nation on earth with regards to any of their exports, I expect that there will be a number of nations that choose to adjust their own schedules rather than have diminished access to the US market.  But ex ante, there is no way to determine which nations will blink.

As a testament to just how much things have changed in the market, and just as importantly, the market narrative, the fact that three major central banks are meeting this week with the potential to adjust policy, is basically a footnote.  The FOMC starts their meeting today and tomorrow afternoon they will announce rates are unchanged.  Some attention will be paid to the dot plot, to try to see if the recent discussions of patience translate into higher long-term rate expectations, but quite frankly, it is not clear to me that Chairman Powell can say anything that is going to move markets absent a surprise rate adjustment.  The Fed funds futures market continues to price in basically one rate cut each quarter for the rest of the year at this point.

But before that, this evening the BOJ will announce their latest policy updates and, not surprisingly, there is no anticipation of a move there either.  While there has been much discussion in Japan of how companies will be, on average, increasing pay by 5.46% this year, that has not resulted in any expectations for the BOJ to adjust policy in response.  And in fairness to Ueda-san and his crew, the fact that the yen (-0.3% today) has been relatively stable of late, having rebounded from its dramatic lows last summer and held a good portion of those gains, concerns over a much weaker yen have diminished.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Looking at the chart above, while I am no market technician, there seem to be several overhead resistance levels starting with that recent trend line.  The absence of concern over a declining yen (rising dollar) will leave the BOJ on hold for a while I think.

And let us not forget Thursday morning, where the BOE will convene, also with no policy changes expected. While GDP remains desultory there, printing at 1.0% Y/Y last week for Q4, inflation refuses to fall to their 2% target and so Governor Bailey is caught between that proverbial rock and hard place.  In such a scenario, no action is the most likely outcome.

Ok, let’s turn to the overnight market activity, which has all investors excited given the fact that markets everywhere are embracing risk today.  A solid day in the US was followed by strong gains throughout Asia (Nikkei +1.2%, Hang Seng +2.5%, CSI 300 +0.3%) with the mainland a little disappointing.  There has been more discussion recently that despite some splashy headlines about more Chinese stimulus, it is less than meets the eye.  That is a view with which I agree.  The exception to this rule was Indonesia (-3.9%) which fell after concerns over slowing growth and a widening budget deficit spooked foreign investors.  In Europe, things are also bright with all markets firmly higher led by Germany (+1.2%) as continued belief in the end of the debt brake has investors anxious to take advantage of all the government spending set to come.  We shall see how that works out, but if the US is the template, it probably has some room to run.  However, all these bourses are higher this morning in a general risk-on mood.  The crimp in the story is US indices are all slightly softer this morning ahead of Housing data.

In the bond market, yields are climbing with Treasury yields up by 1bp and European sovereign yields all higher by 3bps.  Again, this seems to be focused on the mooted extra government spending which is coming down the pike, although yields have backed off the levels seen after the initial announcements as per the below.  In fact, I read a forecast this morning about German bund yields rising to 4% by the end of next year after all the borrowing.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In the commodity bloc, gold (+0.9%) is unstoppable for now, and taking silver (+1.1%) and copper (+0.4%) along for the ride.  Whatever else is ongoing, it appears that more and more investors have decided that having some portion of their portfolios in the barbarous relic is the right trade. After all, it is higher by more than 15% just since the beginning of the year and more than 40% over the past twelve months.  Oil (+1.1%) is also managing to hold above its recent lows but continues to run into resistance below $70/bbl.  The biggest news today is that Saudi Aramco has seen its stock price falling to 5-year lows, down 50% from its highs of 2022 after cutting dividends earlier this month.

Finally, the dollar is little changed at this hour (7:45), rebounding from modest weakness earlier in the session.  The euro and pound are unchanged, and the yen remains slightly softer.  However, MXN (-0.5%) and KRW (-0.5%) are both feeling the heat of the tariff story.  In the opposite camp, CL (+0.6%) continues to benefit from the rally in copper prices.  The big picture here remains unchanged, with the dollar likely to remain on its back foot as capital flows toward Europe’s government spending bonanza and away from the US, which appears to be pushing for fiscal tightness. 

On the data front, this morning we see Housing Starts (exp 1.38M) and Building Permits (1.45M) at 8:30 then at 9:15 we get IP (0.2%) and Capacity Utilization (77.8%).  With the Fed meeting ongoing, the only headlines will come from the White House, and those are virtually random these days.  Tight fiscal and loose monetary policy tends to weaken a currency and given that is the best description of the US these days, it remains my default position.

Good luck

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