On Friday, the Payrolls were strong
So, pessimists mostly were wrong
This week it’s inflation
That might change narration
Of how things are coming along
As well, this week Trump and Xi meet
And pundits, for good takes, compete
One side says Trump’s hand
Is nought but grandstand
The other cites Xi’s self-deceit
And last, but not least, all the talk
Of some kind of deal on the block
Was trashed by both sides
With massive divides
Twixt what each will offer…or walk
Last week ended on a very positive note in markets. The payroll report, at least to my eyes, was solid with NFP higher than forecast, although Manufacturing payrolls shrank slightly, and overall, things seemed pretty solid. Certainly, the equity markets were comforted as all three major indices closed higher with new record highs for both the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ. Oil prices slipped on Friday, along with bond yields and the dollar while gold and silver finished the day higher. The Iran narrative was that there were proposals going back and forth and folks were generally in a good mood.
Ahhh, the good old days. While thus far, this morning is no disaster, there has clearly been a change in tone as hopes for a peace deal collapsed after President Trump declared that the Iranian response was “TOTALLY UNACEPTABLE!” Not surprisingly, the first move in markets was oil (+2.5%) rising along with the dollar (DXY +0.1%) and Treasury yields (+3bps) while stocks (S&P -0.15%, NASDAQ -0.3%) and gold (-1.1%) fell. This is all of a piece with recent correlations and relationships.
So, what are we to make of the current situation? On the ground, at least in the US, things have not changed very much. While energy prices remain higher than before the war, there are no shortages of any type for consumers, although that is not the case in many other nations. India has gotten a lot of press this morning after PM Modi suggested that more people there work from home and that they stop buying gold as that exacerbates the shrinking FX reserve situation while the rupee continues to slide.
Now, the thing about the rupee is that it has been sliding for a very long time. Since 2003, as you can see in the below chart from Yahoo finance, the currency has more than halved in value vs. the dollar. Perhaps the trajectory has steepened a little lately, but my take is this is more about the big round number of 100 rupee/dollar than the fact that the currency is weakening.

Of course, the issue for them becomes a weakening rupee amid rising commodity prices results in rising inflation, and that never helps an elected government.
I raise the point because it is a lead article in the WSJ and I have seen discussions on Substack blogs as well this morning, so it has a little oomph. But look at that chart and ask has anything really changed? The more important fact is that India is merely the avatar of what is happening around the world, especially in developing nations as they try to cope with the current situation.
Which begs the next question, when might this change? Here the answer is far more difficult. Clearly, there needs to be a cessation of hostilities in Iran for things to begin to return to normal and while I am encouraged that, at least, the US and Iran are swapping proposals, no matter how far apart the terms, it implies that there is a goal to end the situation. One other thing that I continue to read is that the world hasn’t really felt the full impact of the war as the buffers of products that flow through Hormuz were significant and haven’t been run down yet, but there are many analysts explaining its just a matter of days/weeks/months before a total collapse occurs. And maybe they are correct, but so far it has just not been the case.
Which takes us to the key event this week, the Trump-Xi meeting and what may result. China is one of Iran’s few allies and likely has real pressure points there to help (force?) them to come to the table. And, of course, there is a great deal of economic and trade stress between the two nations. However, it is clearly in both nations’ best interest to come to an accord of some nature and de-escalate. I am far more hopeful of a positive outcome on that front than on Iran, but we shall see.
In the meantime, let’s look at how markets have behaved overnight as we await, prior to the Trump-Xi summit, CPI tomorrow.
In the equity markets, overall, Tokyo was mixed although the Nikkei (-0.5%) finished the day lower. Other laggards of note were, not surprisingly, India (-1.7%) along with Australia (-0.5%), Indonesia (-0.9%) and Thailand (-0.6%). However, on the flip side, Korea (+4.3%) continues to be the biggest beneficiary of the semiconductor craze and setting yet another closing record. As you can see from the chart below from Bloomberg.com, the market is going parabolic right now. For those who are long, this is great, but history has shown that these moves will revert to the mean over time, and likely pretty quickly when it happens (remember gold and silver in late January?). Beware here. Meanwhile China (+1.6%) was amongst the other half of markets there with gains, although no others had substantial movement.

In Europe, there is broad weakness on the continent, but only France (-1.0%) has shown any movement of note. Otherwise, major bourses here are +/- 0.25% or less.
In the bond markets, yields are higher across the board, with European sovereigns following Treasury yields and all higher by between 2bps and 4bps. The UK (+6bps) is the outlier here after BOE member, Greene, in an interview explained that all the inflation risks were to the upside in the UK. Right now, I suspect that is the case around the world.
In the commodity markets, perhaps the surprising feature today is not that gold is lower amid higher oil prices, but that silver (+0.25%) and copper (+1.4%) are both firmer. In fact, copper is pushing back to its all-time trading highs set in a spike in late January. But as you can see from the chart below from tradingeconomics.com, this move is gaining some strength.

Finally, the dollar is a bit stronger this morning, although hardly running away. Other than the rupee discussed above and KRW (-0.65%) which is odd given the equity performance there, the bulk of the movement has been dollar strength on the order of 0.1% to 0.2% against both G10 and EMG currencies. The dollar is not driving the market bus right now. For those who follow the DXY, it is right at 98.00, again in the middle of its year long range.
On the data front, it is inflation week around the world with China reporting last night higher than forecast numbers of 1.2% Y/Y and PPI of 2.8% Y/Y with the latter, as you can see in the chart below, the highest number since July 2022. Perhaps China’s long deflationary slog is over.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
Here are this week’s offerings:
| Today | Existing Home Sales | 4.05M |
| Tuesday | NFIB Small Biz Optimism | 96.1 |
| CPI | 0.6% (3.7% Y/Y) | |
| -ex food & energy | 0.4% (2.7% Y/Y) | |
| Wednesday | PPI | 0.5% (4.9% Y/Y) |
| -ex food & energy | 0.3% (4.3% Y/Y) | |
| Thursday | Initial Claims | 205K |
| Continuing Claims | 1775K | |
| Retail Sales | 0.5% | |
| -ex autos | 0.6% | |
| Friday | Empire State Manufacturing | 7.8 |
| IP | 0.3% | |
| Capacity Utilization | 75.9% |
Source: tradingeconomics.com
As well, we get inflation readings from Germany, India, Brazil, France, Spain and Italy this week. There are several Fed speakers, five in total, but they just don’t seem to matter that much right now.
And that’s what we have, everybody is waiting on the next Iran conflict news with hope for a resolution seeming to ebb slightly. Frankly, until there is more clarity there, it is difficult to determine what comes next.
Good luck
Adf