More Dire Straits

Apparently, President Xi
Is worried that his ‘conomy
Has lost all its verve
So, throwing a curve,
Reached out to the PBOC
 
The central bank promptly cut rates
As things head toward more dire straits
Investors, though, said
Seems China’s still dead
As equity buying abates

 

After yesterday’s winter doldrums session, with virtually nothing going on in Europe with the US on holiday, last night we got a surprisingly large cut in the 5-year Loan Prime Rate from the PBOC.  The 25 basis point cut was the largest since this rate was created five years ago, and 10bps larger than anticipated.  This rate is the one on which mortgages in China are based, hence the effort to try to support the property market there.  The problem is, this will only be relevant for new mortgages and does not help the outstanding loans in any way.  Perhaps it will help spur some new property demand at the margin, but as evidenced by the tepid equity market response (CSI 300 +0.2%), it was hardly a panacea for the problems in China.

Ultimately, the issue there remains that decades of inflating a property bubble combined with the demographic impact of the one-child policy have led to a situation where a large proportion of China’s middle class relies almost entirely on their property investments for their retirement nest egg.  As those continue to deflate in value, the idea of increasing consumption continues to recede and the only way to deliver any economic growth is via continued reliance on production and exports.  Alas for the Chinese, the end of the globalization phase around the world has put a crimp in that plan as well.  

I suspect that this is not the last rate cut we will see from China as it remains clear more stimulus is needed to maintain their target growth rate of GDP.  At some point, I also suspect that we will see a large bout of fiscal stimulus, but clearly Xi is avoiding that over concerns regarding the net debt position in China.  Despite their efforts to eliminate the dollar as the global reserve currency, there are precious few people or nations willing to hold renminbi for that purpose, so China does not have the flexibility to be as irresponsible as the US in this case.  Ultimately, I continue to look for the renminbi to depreciate as it is the only natural outlet valve the Chinese have.  It is clear this move will take time, but that is the direction of travel in my view.

Away from that, though, there was nothing happening overnight of any consequence as will be evident when we review the overnight session.  Elsewhere in Asia, the Hang Seng. (+0.6%) had a decent session but Japanese shares were a bit softer, and the rest of the APAC nations showed no consistency with some gains (India and Taiwan) and some laggards (Korea and Australia).  Perhaps the Aussies suffered after the RBA Minutes showed they considered an additional rate hike last month and still have the thought in their minds.  In Europe, things are also quite dull with both gainers and losers with everything +/- 0.3% or less.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:30) they are softer by -0.4% or so across the board.

In the bond market, yields have edged lower with Treasuries down by 1bp and most of Europe lower by 2bps as investors await the next signals regarding central bank activity.  Interestingly, there was an article in Bloomberg News this morning that discussed the idea some traders were preparing for a potential rate hike in the US as the next move, rather than the still consensus rate cuts.  That would not surprise me greatly, but there is no doubt the equity markets are not pricing in that scenario.

Oil prices are slipping this morning, down -1.1%, but there is no obvious catalyst as the driver.  In truth, the oil market looks like it is simply trading within a range of $70-$90 and until it breaks out of that range, there is little to do but watch.  Metals markets are mixed this morning with gold (+0.5%) leading the way higher on a weaker dollar although copper (+0.5%) and aluminum (-0.75%) are showing no consistency.

Finally, the dollar is under pressure pretty much across the board with AUD and NZD leading the way higher in the G10, both advancing by 0.5%, with EUR and GBP (+0.2% each) in tow.  The only outlier is the yen which is unchanged today.  In the EMG bloc, the direction is consistent with almost all currencies a touch stronger, but the magnitude is just on the order of 0.2%.  This appears to be a dollar weakness story on the back of softening yields, rather than anything else.

On the data front, arguably the big statistic today is Canadian CPI which is expected to slip a tick from last month’s readings, but given the heat we have seen elsewhere lately, I would not be surprised to see a stronger reading.  We also see Leading Indicators (exp -0.3%), which if it remains negative, will be the 21st consecutive negative reading, traditionally a harbinger of a recession.

And that’s really it for the day.  No major data and no slated Fed speakers.  I expect things will remain quiet, with risk assets driving any FX moves. 

Good luck

Adf

A Narrative Flaw

At first it was just CPI
With heat like the fourth of July
But Friday we saw
A narrative flaw
As PPI jumped, oh so high
 
The narrative’s now in a bind
While working so hard to remind
Investors that prices
Are not in a crisis
And Goldilocks can’t be maligned

 

It must be very difficult to be a cheerleader for the immaculate disinflation* these days given we continue to see data showing inflation is no longer receding.  Friday’s PPI was the latest chink in the deflationists’ armor as both the headline and core numbers printed well above expectations.  Of course, this followed Tuesday’s hot CPI prints as well as some lesser data like the prices paid portion of the NFIB survey and the last ISM Services survey.  Energy prices, which had fallen throughout Q4 but have since bottomed and appear to be trending higher again, are no longer a cap on inflation.  But of greater consequence is the fact that services inflation remains higher on the back of continued wage gains and rises in the price of things like insurance.  

Market participants are slowly coming around to the idea that the Fed may not be cutting rates quite like they were hoping for praying for anticipating just a few weeks ago.  This has been made clear by a quick look at the Fed funds futures market in Chicago which is now pricing in just a 10% chance of a March cut, a 35% chance of a May cut and a 75% chance of a June cut.  In fact, the market is now pricing in barely more than the Fed’s last dot plot for 2024, just 81bps for the entire year.

Of course, there is one benefit to the recent data and that is we stopped hearing about the 3-month trend and the 6-month trend showing the Fed had reached their target and so should be cutting rates NOW!  Instead, the fact that those trends are now pointing higher insures that we won’t hear about that for quite a while…I hope.

Philosophically, I remain confused as to why there is so much ‘demand’ that the Fed cuts rates at all.  While I certainly understand why the administration would like to see it, given the budget deficits that need to be financed, arguably, if nominal GDP growth is between 6% and 7% and Fed funds are at 5.5%, things don’t seem out of place.  If anything is out of place it is the 10-year yield, which even after rising 6bps on Friday, remains at 4.30%.  Historically, a more normal level of 10-year yields would be the same as nominal GDP growth.  Currently, that tells me either 10-year yields have much further to rise, or GDP is going to fall A LOT.  I sure hope it is the former.

Now, looking past Friday’s activity, this morning has been extremely quiet overall with the prospects for action looking quite limited.  Today the US celebrates President’s Day, so banks are closed as is the stock market, although futures markets are trading.  Canada is also mostly on holiday which implies that once Europe goes home, things will really die out.

But quiet is the best description of everything overnight.  One surprise was that Chinese equity markets were far less bullish than many anticipated as they reopened after the extended Lunar New Year holiday.  While the CSI 300 managed to rise 1.2% on the session, the bulk of the move came at the close with a wave of buying by their plunge protection team.  The disappointment was based on the stories that holiday travel had risen substantially which had been pumping up the Hang Seng which reopened last Thursday.  Alas, that market fell -1.1%, a perfect encapsulation of the overall disappointment.  In the meantime, European bourses are trading either side of unchanged and at this hour (7:00), US futures are doing the same, basically unchanged on the day.

Basically unchanged is an excellent description of the bond markets as well, with virtually every major European sovereign market either unchanged or higher by 1bp this morning.  Overseas trading of Treasuries has also seen limited activity and no yield change, and you will not be surprised to learn that JGB yields were also unchanged.  

In the commodity space, oil, which had a solid week last week and now shows WTI at ~$79.00/bbl, is a touch softer this morning, but only just.  I have seen a number of stories about peak oil having been reached again, but as you may know, I am no longer convinced that is the case.  Of course, that is a very long-term discussion which will have nothing to do with the daily fluctuations.  And shocks to the system can have a big impact regardless of the long-term story.  In the metals markets, gold is edging higher again, +0.3%, but both copper and aluminum are softer this morning by about -0.4%.  As with every other market, there is a lot of conflicting data that has been preventing a more coherent directional view here.  I suspect that will resolve over time, but in commodities, over time can mean months or years.

Finally, the dollar is little changed net with a mixture of gainers and losers.  For instance, in the G10, we are seeing very modest strength in NZD (+0.25%) and JPY (+0.2%, and just below 150.00 as I type), while in the EMG space there is some weakness as evidenced by ZAR (-0.4%) and KRW (-0.3%).  As with all markets today, I don’t think we are going to learn very much new.

As it is a holiday, there is no data today and, in truth, there is very little to be released all week.

TuesdayLeading indicators-0.3%
WednesdayFOMC Minutes 
ThursdayChicago Fed National Activity-0.19
 Initial Claims217K
 Continuing Claims1900K
 Flash Manufacturing PMI50.2
 Flash Services PMI52.0
 Existing Home Sales3.97M
source: tradingeconomics.com

In addition to that short slate, we hear from seven different Fed speakers including Governor Waller who seems to be the most important voice after Powell and Williams.  As it happens, five of those come Thursday with Waller the last at 7:30 that evening.

For today, I would not expect much at all in the way of market movement.  Given the lack of obvious catalysts, a quiet week seems likely as well.  Perhaps the biggest news is NVDIA is releasing their earnings Wednesday after the close, although from an FX perspective, that doesn’t seem crucial.  Big picture tells me that the Fed is not going to be easing policy soon, and that as long as the US economy continues to outperform those of Europe, Japan, the UK and China, the dollar is likely to find continued support.  Realistically, I think you could make the case for the dollar to rally substantially over the course of the year, but right now, that doesn’t feel like the move.

Good luck

Adf

*Immaculate disinflation – the idea that inflation can decline without a slowdown in growth or recession, but rather because it’s previous rise was transitory, just taking a little longer than originally anticipated.

Good…or Bad

FinMin Suzuki
Noted that a weaker yen
Might be good…or bad

One of the great things about finance and central bank officials is their ability to twist language into pretzels while trying to make their case in any given situation.  Last night offered another great example from Japanese FinMin Shun’ichi Suzuki with this being the money quote, “From that standpoint, I’m closely watching market moves with a strong sense of urgency.”  It is not clear how you watch something with urgency, but if you are the MOF official in charge of explaining why your currency has been declining so rapidly, I guess you have to say something.  (As an aside, I might simply point out that the interest rate differential between the US and Japan is now 5.5%, having risen from 0.35% over the past two years and that might have something to do with the FX move.)

As previously mentioned, the MOF is moving up its ladder of pre-intervention activities as detailed on Wednesday, arguably now somewhere between numbers 2 and 3.  The biggest problem Japan has is that there is a quickly declining probability that the US is going to be easing policy as soon as had been previously thought, and so the incentive to own yen remains diminished.  The second biggest problem they have is their economy has slipped into recession and so the urgency for Ueda-san to tighten policy is also diminished.  While USDJPY has been hovering just above 150 for a few days, I expect that it is going to grind higher still and force Suzuki-san to continue to climb that numeric ladder.  The one saving grace for Suzuki is that as we approach fiscal year-end in Japan, there is likely to be a seasonal flow of funds back home for dressing up balance sheets.  That could well keep things in check until sometime in April, but all signs are that the market is going to test him again before too long.

On Tuesday, the data was hot
On Thursday, it really was not
So, which one describes
The ‘conomy’s vibes?
Or have, now, stagflation, they wrought?

The CPI data on Tuesday certainly opened a rift between the narrative of smoothly declining inflation leading to numerous Fed rate cuts this year and what appears to be a more realistic situation where any further decline in inflation comes in fits and starts if it comes at all.  The narrative explanation for the sticky inflation was that economic activity was so strong that it should be expected.  But if the economy is truly that strong, someone needs to explain how Retail Sales can decline -0.8% in January, why Industrial Production would decline -0.1% and why Capacity Utilization would fall back to 78.5% despite all the government support for reshoring activity.  In an ironic twist, the other two releases yesterday, Philly Fed and Empire State Manufacturing, were both better than forecast.  This is a complete reversal of the pattern we have seen for the past 2 years where survey data is lousy but hard numbers remained strong.

In the end, it appears that market participants have given up on the macro data and are back to buying any dip with abandon.  I will be the first to explain that the economic outlook remains very cloudy.  To date, it appears that the excessive deficit spending has been successful in maintaining steady GDP growth.  Of course, excessive deficit spending is not something that can continue forever.  As Herbert Stein explained in 1985, “if something can’t go on forever, it will stop.”

This leads to the question; how long until forever?  If we have learned nothing else in the past decades it is that when governments involve themselves directly in economic activity and financial markets, forever is delayed. Things take MUCH more time than we expect for them to play out.  Simply consider how long Japan has been running massive budget deficits, NIRP and QE without destroying their economy.  (30 years.)

Of course, forever in the economy and forever in the markets are two very different things and while the government may be able to delay a reckoning in economic activity, we must be very careful around how markets behave with the same catalysts and inputs.  My point is any risk-off outcome will be important for your investing and hedging decisions, but not necessarily change the trajectory of GDP.  After all, there is always more money to be printed.  In fact, it is this issue that drives my longer-term inflation thesis.  Every government will do whatever they think they need to prevent a serious economic contraction and high on the list of actions will be much easier monetary policy.  Watch closely for things like QT to end or another BTFP-like program to continue to force liquidity into markets.

Ok, let’s look at how things finished the week.  As I said, the market no longer cares about bad data and simply continued to add to risk assets.  Yesterday saw gains in the major indices in the US which was followed by gains throughout Asia and most of Europe, all of them pretty substantial.  In fact, the only red numbers on my screen are in Spain’s IBEX which is suffering on the back of Spanish central banker Pablo Hernandez de Cos explained that several Spanish banks may suffer due to the ongoing drought in Spain and its negative impact on the economy there.  US futures are basically pointing higher again this morning as well.

In the bond market, though, yields are edging higher around the world.  Treasury yields are up 4bps today and pushing back to that peak seen immediately following the CPI print on Tuesday.  European sovereign yields are all higher by between 3bps and 4bps although JGB yields are unchanged on the day.  Ultimately, I continue to see the case for yields to climb from these levels as there is no indication that inflation is truly ending.

Oil markets powered higher yesterday, rising nearly 2% despite the huge build in inventories as concerns over supply being unable to keep up with ever growing demand have reemerged.  As well, the fact that any cease fire in the Israel-Hamas war seems to be a distant memory has some on edge that things can get worse in the Middle East overall.  As to the metals markets, gold managed to regain the $2000/oz level yesterday and is hanging right there this morning.  On a brighter note, both copper (+1.5%) and aluminum (+0.5%) are firmer this morning, perhaps in anticipation of China’s reopening next week, or perhaps because the dollar has stopped rising.

Speaking of the dollar, it is mixed this morning with the yen (-0.3%) and KRW (-0.3%) the laggards while ZAR (+0.3%) seems to be benefitting from the metals price action.  Broadly speaking, I still like the greenback for as long as the US maintains the tightest policy around.

On the data front, to finish the week we see PPI (exp 0.6% headline, 1.6% ex food & energy) as well as housing data with Starts (1.46M) and Building Permits (1.509M).  Finally, at 10:00 we see Michigan Sentiment (80.0).  We also hear from two more Fed speakers, Governor Michael Barr and SF President Mary Daly.  Yesterday, Atlanta Fed president Bostic explained he was not worried by Tuesday’s CPI print, but not yet convinced they had beaten inflation.  I have a feeling we will hear a lot of that sentiment for the time being.

Heading into the weekend, despite Tuesday’s shocking data, risk assets have performed well overall, with the S&P 500 making its 11th new all-time high this year yesterday.  I don’t know what will derail this train, and for now, there is nothing obvious to do so.  As such, I would keep with the trend overall, that means modestly higher stocks, yields grinding higher and the dollar edging higher as well.  I know that doesn’t seem to make much sense, but that’s what we’ve got.

Good luck and good weekend
Adf

Widow Maker

The widow maker
Looks like it is about to
Make some more widows

For those unacquainted with the term as it relates to the financial markets, the widow maker trade has been going short JGB’s and buying JPY under the assumption that at some point, the BOJ would normalize monetary policy.  Lately, this trade has been reinvigorated in a major way on the back of the belief that Ueda-san is going to raise the base rate from its current level of -0.10%.  Granted, 10-year JGB yields have risen about 35bps since last summer, which given their starting level of 0.35%, is quite a bit.  Simultaneously, the yen weakened dramatically, falling more than 8% over the same timeframe.  An unstated, but critical, underlying part of the idea was that the Japanese economy was chugging along nicely and would continue to do so.  This would pressure wages higher and force the BOJ to join the rest of the world in raising interest rates.

But a funny thing happened to those plans last night when the Japanese government released its latest GDP data showing that Q4 GDP fell -0.1% Q/Q, far below the expected +0.3% gain.  This, when combined with Q3’s revised decline of -0.8% Q/Q (also worse than before) is the very definition of a recession.  Hence, the problem for all those traders who are short JGB’s and long the yen.  If Japan is in recession, it seems highly unlikely that Ueda-san is going to be tightening monetary policy in the near-term.  Rather, I would expect more fiscal and monetary stimulus which ought to result in lower yields and a still weaker yen.  And this is why the trade is nicknamed the widow maker.  It has fooled traders for some 30 years so far, and many have lost fortunes on its back.

One other quirk of this outcome is that Japan, heretofore the world’s third largest economy, has now slipped into fourth place behind Germany.  Part of this outcome is due to the fact that the weak yen has altered the calculations such that a given yen amount is worth many fewer dollars.  Relatively speaking, the euro has not fallen nearly as much, hence the switch in the rankings.  Should the yen regain even a quarter of its losses over the past two years, the two economies are likely to switch back to their old places.

In Europe and in the UK
The story is growth’s gone away
Recession is nigh
And if you ask why
It’s policy blunders at play

It was not just the Japanese who have fallen into a technical recession, the UK has also managed the trick as Q4 GDP data released this morning showed Q/Q growth of -0.3%, which when following Q3’s -0.1% leaves us with two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, the same definition of a recession.  In fairness, the Eurozone managed to skirt recession, but is there for all intents and purposes.  Yesterday, they released their data which showed that Q4 GDP growth was a resounding 0.0% following Q3’s -0.1%, so not a recession, by definition, but certainly a lousy performance.

I highlight these outcomes to contrast them with the data from the US, which has shown massive GDP prints over Q3 and Q4 of 1.2% and 0.8% respectively.  Now, we have discussed that a key part of this growth is the extraordinary amount of deficit spending that is currently ongoing in the US, far more than anywhere in Europe.  But from a monetary policy perspective, it is much easier for the Fed to maintain its current policy stance than it is for either the BOE or the ECB.  It is for this reason that I believe we will see continued changes in market pricing for monetary policy easing going forward.  I expect that Fed funds futures will continue to reduce the number of cuts as well as push out the timing of the first cut while in both the Eurozone and the UK, we start to see pricing that indicates a cut before the US.

As this process plays out, the impact on financial markets will be significant.  Regarding the FX market, this will underpin further strength in the dollar overall.  Although it is certainly possible, if not likely, that the BOJ intervenes to prevent, or at least slow down, further weakness in the yen, there will be no such action by the other two banks.  Regarding bond markets, much will depend on the timing of the first cuts and the status of inflation.  If the pain of economic weakness rises enough to offset the pain of inflation, and cuts come before inflation is under control, look for much steeper yield curves and higher back-end yields.  However, if inflation really does decline as currently wished for projected by all these central banks, then look for those curves to bull steepen, with the front end of the curve rallying and the back remaining fairly static.  After all, 4% or less for 10-year yields does not seem in appropriate in a 2%-3% inflation world.

Summing it all up, there are many potential paths forward, and as has been the case since 2022, inflation remains the number one driver of everything.

Ok, let’s tour markets quickly.  The dip was bought in the US yesterday with decent rebounds in all the major indices.  That was followed by further solid gains in Japan (Nikkei +1.2%) and continuing to make new highs for the run, with most of Asia following suit.  In Europe, equities are doing pretty well, with gains on the order of +0.75% except in the UK which is flat on the day after the weaker GDP data.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:30) they are very slightly firmer, 0.2% across the board.

Bond markets are continuing to rebound from Tuesday’s dramatic declines with yields slipping back further this morning.  Treasury yields are lower by 4bps, and now approaching 4.20% from the high side with many traders expecting that level to be technical support.  European sovereigns are all seeing yields decline either 2bps or 3bps this morning and overnight we saw JGB yields slip 2bps.  Of more note were the moves in Australia (-13bps) and New Zealand (-14bps) after Australian employment data came in a bit soft (Unemployment Rate up to 4.1%) so thoughts of RBA tightening have faded a bit.

Oil prices are continuing yesterday’s slide, -0.7%, after inventory data printed much higher than expected on the back of record US oil production.  Meanwhile, metals prices are mixed with gold edging higher on the softer rates story but copper and aluminum giving opposite signals as the former is higher and the latter lower by about 0.6% each.

Finally, the dollar is a touch softer this morning as US yields drift lower.  Thus far, it has not returned below key perceived levels with USDJPY still above 150 and the DXY still above 104, but I suspect that if risk appetite continues to reassert itself, the dollar may slide further.  The greenback’s movement have been extremely closely tied to 10-year yields of late.

On the data front, we see a bunch of things this morning led by Retail Sales (exp -0.1%, +0.2% ex-autos), Initial Claims (220K), Continuing Claims (1880K), Empire State Manufacturing (-15.0), and Philly Fed (-8.0) all at 8:30.  Later on we see IP (0.3%) and Capacity Utilization (78.8%).  In addition, we hear from Governor Waller at 1:15 this afternoon, so it will be very interesting to get his take on how the recent data is going to impact the FOMC.  There have been no substantive changes in the futures pricing for Fed funds with still less than a 50% probability of a cut in May.

Risk markets were clearly shaken by the CPI data on Tuesday.  More hot data today will further impact those assets negatively in my view.  In fact, this will continue as long as the market is going to trade on interest rate expectations.  At some point, if economic activity manages to continue strongly, it is likely to turn into a positive catalyst for risk assets, but we are not there yet.

Good luck
Adf

Stanching Their Bleeding

For all of those pundits that claimed
inflation had died and been maimed
The data did show
What now we all know
Inflation is still quite inflamed

The upshot is all those who said
That real rates would soon force the Fed
To quickly cut rates
Are in dire straits
And stanching their bleeding instead

Wow!  Not much else you can say after yesterday’s market activities following the hotter than expected CPI data released in the morning.  As I wrote on Monday, a 0.1% difference in a monthly print is not really substantive in the broad scheme of things, but when the narrative is so strong and so many are convinced that the Fed is itching to cut rates because they don’t want to overtighten as inflation continues to fall, that 0.1% in the wrong direction means a lot.  Hence, yesterday’s price action (which I did presage in the last line of my note yesterday morning before the release.)

Of course, you are all aware that stocks got crushed, with the major indices falling -1.35% to -1.80% while the Russell 2000 small cap index fell -4.0%!  But it wasn’t just stocks, bonds joined the fun with the 10-year yield soaring 15bps to 4.30%, its highest yield since early December.  Gold got crushed, falling $30/oz and back below $2000/oz for the first time in two months, while the dollar exploded higher, rising about 1% against most currencies and almost 1.8% against the yen.

A quick analysis of the CPI data shows that the shelter component was the big surprise on the high side, although airfares also were higher than expected.  As well, wages remain much stickier than the Fed would like to see as they continue to support price increases in the services component of the data.  Forgetting the headline for a moment, a look at Median CPI, as calculated by the Cleveland Fed, shows that last month’s rise was 0.5% and the Y/Y number is +4.85%.  That feels to me like a much better estimate of what is happening than the newest darling of the bullish set, Truflation, which claims that inflation is “really” rising at only 1.39% as of yesterday.  One final thing, hopefully, all of those who claimed that the ‘real’ trend of inflation was sub 2% because the 3-month average had fallen there (please look at Monday’s note, What If?) will finally shut up for a while.

The new Mr. Yen
Said “we are closely watching”
So you don’t have to
Do not cross this line!

As mentioned above, the yen was the worst performer yesterday after the data which, not surprisingly, triggered a response from the Japanese government.  Now that USDJPY is back above 150.00, there are many who believe the MOF/BOJ will be intervening soon.  There is a terrific website called Harkster.com which aggregates all sorts of commentary and research from around the web as well as adding their own commentary.  I highly recommend it as a source for information.  At any rate, they have a very nice description of the historical actions that lead to intervention by the Japanese which I show here:

1.     Language such as “monitoring developments in currency markets”.
2.     “Sudden/abrupt/rapid” movements in currency markets are “undesirable”. In addition, markets are “not reflecting fundamentals”.
3.     “Excessive” is introduced next to describe the price movements alongside “clearly” in addition to referring to FX moves as “speculative”.
4.     Readying for action is normally reflected with the phrase “we are ready to take decisive action” which would suggest some action is imminent.
5.     Price checking is the step prior to actual intervention whereby the BoJ will call round selected Japanese banks and ask for a level of USDJPY. Even though they do not deal the act of them asking normally makes the banks, who have been contacted, sell USDJPY in anticipation of intervention and they will also spread the news around the market to encourage more selling.
6.     Same as 5 but this time the BoJ actually do sell USDJPY. This may happen in waves.
7.     Finally, coordinated intervention with other major central banks involved. This would generally happen early NY hours to include the US. This obviously has the most effect on the markets.

Arguably, we are somewhere between numbers 1 and 2 right now, but they can escalate this process quickly.  However, in the end, what matters for currencies over time are relative fiscal and monetary policy settings.  History has shown that to strengthen a currency, a country must run a tight monetary and loose fiscal policy.  To weaken a currency, the opposite is true.  Given the US 7% budget deficits and highest interest rates in the G10 + QT, it is pretty clear that the dollar should be strong.  Now, if the BOJ were to raise rates aggressively, it would have a chance to alter the trajectory of the yen, but while Ueda-san has implied that they may raise rates back to zero after the spring wage negotiations, assuming they agree large increases, unless there is a strong belief that they are going to continue to raise rates to attack inflation in Japan (which isn’t really a big problem) then absent the Fed starting to ease, there is no good reason to think the yen will strengthen very much at all.  Now, if the Fed does start cutting aggressively, that is a different story, but based on yesterday’s CPI, that feels like it is a long way in the future.

And those are the most noteworthy things to absorb.  Now, a look at the rest of the overnight session shows that Japanese stocks were softer, but the rest of Asia (absent China which is still on holiday) was mixed, with gains and losses around.  Europe, this morning, though is firmer, up about 0.5% except the UK, which is higher by 0.9% after CPI there fell more than expected, encouraging talk that the BOE will be cutting sooner.  Now remember, yesterday the UK lagged after their employment data was stronger than expected, especially wage data, so it is not clear which one to believe.  As to US futures, they are firmer at this hour (8:00), up about 0.5%.

After yesterday’s massive yield rallies, it is no surprise to see them slipping a bit today, with Treasury yields lower by 1bp and most European sovereign yields down by 3bps (UK Gilts are -6bps on that inflation data).  Overnight, the Asian session saw government bonds there slide with yields higher across the board although JGB yields were the laggard, rising just 3bps.

In the commodity markets, oil (flat today) is the only market that didn’t sell off yesterday and it has maintained those gains.  This is despite a much bigger inventory build than anticipated as it seems continued concerns over a wider Middle East war are extant, as is a new worry, as Ukraine has been able to bring the attack to Russia more effectively, sinking another Russian ship in the Black Sea last night.  Recall, they have been attacking Russian oil infrastructure and if they are successful in that effort, it will definitely give oil prices a boost.  But the rest of the commodity markets got crushed yesterday with gold, copper and aluminum all falling sharply.  This morning, though, those three markets are little changed, simply licking their wounds and not extending any losses.

Finally, the dollar is also little changed this morning, but that is after a massive rally across the board yesterday against both G10 and EMG currencies.  Against most major counterparts, it has traded back to levels last seen in mid-November, although the pound has been holding up better than most, with smaller net moves.  It is ironic that the dollar strengthens on a high inflation print as fundamentally, high inflation is supposed to weaken a currency.  Of course, this move has nothing to do with inflation per se, and everything to do with interest rate expectations.

On that subject, it is worth noting that the latest Fed funds futures rate cut probabilities are now; March 8.5%; May 37.9%; and there are now just 4 cuts priced into the year, down from 7 about a month ago.

There is no hard economic data released although the EIA oil inventories do come out later this morning.  We also hear from two Fed speakers, Goolsbee and Barr, and I imagine we could get a little ‘we told you so’ in their comments today.

If recent history is any guide, I suspect that equity markets will rebound a bit further early, but potentially drift lower as the day wears on.  The bulls were clearly shaken as their narrative took a big hit.  But this was just one data point of many.  I don’t believe the end is nigh, but in the longer term, it is not hard to believe that the Fed will remain the tightest policymaker of all the central banks and that will help the dollar while hurting risk assets.

Good luck
Adf

Finally Dead

It’s been, now, two weeks since the Fed
Said rate cuts were not straight ahead
Their confidence lacked
Support to abstract
Inflation was finally dead
 
Which brings us now to CPI
Where analysts identify
Used cars and soft gas
As just ‘nuff to pass
The test and wave ‘flation bye-bye

 

Finally, the CPI report will be released this morning so we will be able to collectively exhale!  The current consensus forecasts are for a 0.2% M/M rise in the headline, leading to a 2.9% Y/Y outcome and a 0.3% M/M rise in the ex-food & energy reading leading to a 3.7% Y/Y increase.  Those annual numbers would be down from 3.4% and 3.9% respectively.

A key part of the thesis for the ongoing decline is that Used Car prices will continue to fall as well as gasoline prices, which fell about 30 cents/gallon on the NYMEX exchange.  However, rent increases remain stubbornly high and any declines in foodstuffs seem to have ended.  There was a ‘brilliant’ article by a UC Berkeley economist, Ulrike Malmendier, that determined most people’s view of inflation was skewed by the prices of things they bought most frequently, rather than the ‘proper’ economists’ view of the totality of prices.  Who would have thunk it?  Honestly, it is hard to believe that some of these people have degrees at all.

At any rate, the market is highly fixated on the number and there is no doubt that many are looking for a soft outcome and, perhaps, sufficient proof for the Fed to gain enough confidence to cut rates in March.  As it stands, right now the Fed funds futures market is pricing a 15.5% probability of a March cut and a 57.5% probability of a May cut.  But the pining for this cut is palpable.  I will reiterate my view that based on the current trajectory of economic data, there is no reason for the Fed to cut at all absent a major downturn.  Clearly, given the government’s ongoing fiscal largesse, economic activity continues to move along.  While price rises have been slowing over time, I would contend there is no risk of a major deflationary event.  

The flip side of this argument is that the Federal government cannot afford to continue with interest rates this high.  Much has been made of the fact that interest payments on the Federal debt are now in excess of $1 trillion per annum, more than either defense spending or Medicare, and trending inexorably higher.  While they remain <5% of GDP, the fact that the government is running a budget deficit of >7% of GDP and slated to do so for the foreseeable future, there will come a time when this process will be unsustainable.  However, as Japan has proven over the past twenty years, things previously thought impossible are not necessarily so if the population tolerates them.  Right now, the major financial problem for the government is not the deficit, but inflation.  So that is where the attention is focused.  Eventually, something will have to give, but it is not clear that will occur within the next several political cycles, and ultimately, that’s the only time things like this will be addressed.  So, look for more of the same for now.

Turning back to markets, ahead of the CPI report, most markets around the world have remained quiet, with one notable exception, Japanese equities which have continued their impressive rally.  After a mixed and lackluster session yesterday in the US, the Nikkei rose nearly 3.0% overnight as the ongoing yen weakness and a growing suspicion that the BOJ is not going to act anytime soon continues to support things there. Chinese markets remain closed all week for the New Year holiday but the rest of the APAC markets had solid sessions.  European bourses, however, are under some pressure this morning with all of them lower by between -0.3% and -0.6%.  The data from the UK showed that the employment situation was better than expected, with lower Unemployment and firmer wage growth.  This will not encourage the BOE to consider cutting rates anytime soon.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:45) they are somewhat lower with the NASDAQ (-0.75%) leading the way down.

Meanwhile, in the bond market, yields have edged lower everywhere except the UK (+2bps and see employment data for explanation) as Treasuries (-2bps) show the way and most of Europe has followed directly in its footsteps with similar yield declines.  Interestingly, JGB yields were unchanged overnight despite the equity rally and yen weakness.

Oil prices (+0.75%) are bouncing this morning as any hopes of a ceasefire in the Middle East have faded for now but we are also seeing broad-based strength across the metals markets with gold (+0.4%), copper (+0.75%) and aluminum (+0.3%) all finding support this morning.  Perhaps this is on the back of dollar weakness in anticipation of a cool CPI print.

Speaking of the dollar, it is broadly softer, albeit not dramatically so.  GBP (+0.4%) is the leading G10 currency although CHF (-0.4%) has fallen on the back of a much lower than expected CPI reading there, just 1.3% Y/Y, with market participants now looking for rate cuts sooner rather than later.  In the EMG bloc, things are mixed although there are more gainers than laggards with ZAR (+0.5%) the leader of the pack on those strong metals prices.

Looking at this week’s data beyond today shows the following:

ThursdayInitial Claims220K
 Continuing Claims1880K
 Retail Sales-0.1%
 -ex autos0.2%
 Empire State Manufacturing-15
 Philly Fed-8
 IP0.3%
 Capacity Utilization78.8%
 Business Inventories0.4%
FridayPPI0.1% (0.6% Y/Y)
 Ex Food & energy0.1% (1.6% Y/Y)
 Housing Starts1.46M
 Building Permits1.509M
 Michigan Sentiment80.0

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As well, today we already saw the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index show a little less optimism printing at 89.9, down 2 points from last month.  Of course, things would not be complete without a bit more Fedspeak, with 6 more on the calendar including Governor Waller, perhaps the 3rd most important voice there.

Overall, while I don’t think the rate of inflation has much further to fall, and in fact, I expect it to rise again as the spring and summer progress, today’s number feels like it could be soft.  Here’s the thing, the market is anticipating that soft number so it is not clear to me how much further they can drive risk assets higher on this news.  They need something new.  However, if it is hot, look for a sharp down day in risk assets and higher yields and a higher dollar.

Good luck

Adf

What If?

What if inflation’s not dead
And set to go higher instead?
Can Fed funds still fall?
Well, that’s a tough call
If not, look for trouble ahead

 

As we await Tuesday’s latest CPI data, I thought it might be a good time to review how things currently stand on a macro basis.  As I am just an FX guy, I am not nearly smart enough to see through the headlines and determine what is wrong with the narrative story of Goldilocks.  However, I can look at the actual numbers and perhaps we can draw some conclusions from that data.

Let’s start with CPI, as that is the next shoe to drop.  Looking at the last twelve months of monthly data, we see the following results on both an original and adjusted basis:

 CPI m/mannualizedCPI m/m (adj)annualized
Dec-230.33.60.22.4
Nov-230.23.00.22.4
Oct-230.12.40.12.0
Sep-230.43.00.42.7
Aug-230.53.60.53.36
Jul-230.23.40.23.2
Jun-230.2 0.2 
May-230.1 0.1 
Apr-230.4 0.4 
Mar-230.1 0.1 
Feb-230.4 0.4 
Jan-230.5 0.5 
Data tradingeconomics.com, calculations @fx_poet

Since the January 2024 data hasn’t been released, there would ordinarily be no revision yet.  However, as I wrote last week, the BLS does an annual revision which lowered the December 2023 result by a tick.  

As you can see that one tick had a big impact on the annualization trend for the past 6 months, and especially the past 3 months (highlighted), reducing it substantially.  Now, given the imperfections of the measuring process, 0.1% is probably not significant in the broad scheme of things.  But oh boy, for the narrative, it is everything.  Prior to that revision, it was pretty easy for those who believe inflation has bottomed to highlight that turn higher in the annualization rate.  This was especially true given how much the ‘inflation is dead’ crowd was relying on just that point.  But now that turn looks like a dead-cat bounce and is not nearly so impressive.  Tuesday’s outcome will be quite interesting as anything that is soft will almost certainly encourage the doves to be calling for a March cut more aggressively, and just as certainly, we will see risk assets rally sharply as the dollar declines.  A hot print, though, 0.3 or more, will have the opposite impact.

What if the ‘conomy’s state
Was built by the deficit’s weight?
And actual growth
Ain’t fast, but more sloth
Will Janet, more spending create?

 

When looking at GDP data and Federal government expenditures, it becomes pretty easy to determine why GDP continues to percolate along so well.  Given that GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government + Net eXports (Y = C + I + G + NX), a quick look at the G component shows just how much support the government has been adding to the economy despite what has been recorded as strong growth.  Or perhaps, more accurately, this is why growth has been so strong.  The below chart shows the trend of government expenditures relative to total GDP growth.  I removed the Covid years because they are extremely volatile and confusing. However, looking at the trend since the GFC in 2008/2009, there has been a step change higher in the amount of government activity measured in the economy. 

Source: data FRED St Louis Fed, calculations @fx_poet

Given the current budget deficit is running > 7% of GDP and is projected to remain at least this high going forward, it is quite clear that there is a lot of nonorganic effort to raise the GDP measures.  Look at the sharp upward turn at the right side of the chart.  It appears that the administration will do everything they can to continue to show that the economy is strong.  

Of course, this is where the rubber meets the road.  If the administration continues to pump more government spending into the economy, can inflation really decline any further?  Remember, government spending is almost entirely consumption based, with limited investment at this time.  Even the CHIPS Act only created incentives for private companies to invest, it is not government investment per se.  The point is, pumping up consumption demand without adding productive capacity is very likely to drive prices higher.  And if anything, given this administration’s war on energy markets, they are discouraging investment in critical infrastructure.  It is hard to see how this plays out for a Goldilocks outcome.  Far more likely, in my view, is that they continue to pump as hard as possible, and prices start moving higher again.  Timing is everything in life, and perhaps they can work it out so price hikes are delayed until after the election, but I am skeptical given the vast incompetence this administration has shown in virtually every sphere in which it operates.

What if employment’s a mess
And actually in some distress?
Is JOLTS data real?
And what is the deal
With households, it’s hard to assess

 

The last big macro area is, of course, the employment situation.  We all know that the NFP report was much stronger than expected for January, rising 353K, but also seeing upward revisions of the previous months for the first time in quite a while.  In fact, one of the bearish stories had been that the revisions mattered more than the headline data, and if revisions were for the worse, that was indicative of a slowing economy.  

Remember, too, that the US employment situation is measured in two ways, via the establishment survey which is a survey of companies’ (both large and small) actual hiring activity and leads to the NFP number, and the household survey, which is a telephone survey of ~60,000 households and asks the question if someone is employed and if not, whether they are looking for work.  The Unemployment Rate is calculated from the household survey, so both are clearly critical in assessing the situation on the ground.  

The funny thing is that the numbers come across pretty differently when you dig down.  While in the long-term, both data series have shown a strong correlation (96% since January 2000), the Household survey is far more volatile and in the past year has been telling a somewhat different story than the establishment survey.  Look at this chart below mapping each since the beginning of 2023:

Source: data FRED St Louis Fed, calculations @fx_poet

Doing the math shows that the establishment survey claims that 3.409 million jobs were created while the Household survey comes in at just over half that amount, 1.852 million jobs.  Now, in a nation of 330 million people, especially given the expansion of the gig economy and the dramatic changes in employment overall, maybe that is not such a big deal.  As well, simply looking at the two lines shows that the Household survey is far more volatile than the Establishment survey.  Does this mean we should ignore the household survey, given it seems to have more noise and less signal?  The problem with this is the household survey drives the Unemployment Rate, and nobody is willing to ignore that.  And these differences beg the question, is the employment situation as rosy as it seems?  With the Unemployment rate remaining so low for so long, it certainly appears that there is ample demand for workers.  Of course, that also implies that the cost of labor seems unlikely to decline very much and could well increase further and faster.  If that is the case, the impact will be seen in the inflation data as well.

Trying to sum things up here, looking at the three critical macro variables, inflation, growth and employment, there is a strong case to be made that the combination of ongoing government support and continued demand for labor into an aging workforce can lead to solid nominal GDP growth with inflation remaining far stickier than many currently anticipate.  If that is the situation, all the hopes and dreams of the interest rate doves may be delayed, if not destroyed, as it will be increasingly difficult for the Fed to ease policy into an inflationary environment.  Arguably, this is why they are seeking greater confidence that inflation is really dead.  

Now, maybe Goldilocks is real, and inflation will continue to decline on its own because…well just because.  But I find it hard to look at the data and conclude that lower inflation is our future, at least for any length of time.

Ok, this has gotten much longer than I intended but fortunately, absolutely nothing of note happened overnight in markets.  Literally.  There has been de minimis movement in stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies, and there is a distinct lack of data to be released today.  Tomorrow’s CPI is THE number of the week, so perhaps that will get the juices flowing again and drive some movement.  Until then, a quiet day is usually a good one on which to establish hedges.

Good luck

Adf

So Puissant

Ueda explained
When NIRP disappears, ZIRP is
His view of the world

“Even if we end minus rates, the accommodative financial conditions will likely continue.”  This was the key comment from Kazuo Ueda’s testimony in parliament last night, which followed a similar comment from BOJ Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida on Thursday.  It should be no surprise that this is the case as the recent data from Tokyo, notably the inflation data, has been softening quickly and reducing the need for tighter policy.  After all, for two decades the BOJ has been trying to overcome a generational view that deflation is a given and instill an inflationary mindset in the populace there.  If inflation readings are falling, they will definitely not be in a hurry to raise interest rates.

It appears, from these comments, that while the BOJ may lift the key deposit rate from its current -0.10% level, it would be a mistake to look for very much movement.  My money is on either 0.00% or +0.10% as the peak.  It should also be no surprise that the yen has suffered further on these comments with USDJPY having traded as high as 149.55 overnight, although it has since slipped back to unchanged at 149.40.  There remains a great deal of belief that the BOJ is highly focused on 150.00 as a line in the sand to prevent further weakness.  Personally, I think their line in the sand is higher, at least at 152.00 and perhaps even higher than that.  They are very consciously making dovish comments while listening to every Fed speaker reiterate higher for longer and no rate cuts in the US anytime soon.  They know the yen will fall further and are already prepared for that outcome; I assure you.

The talk of the market today
Is whether revisions display
That CPI’s recent
Decline is so puissant
Or if tis a ‘flation doomsday

It should not be that surprising that in a market bereft of serious data, traders and analysts are turning over every stone to find something on which to hang their hat.  Today’s story is the annual CPI revisions that are due from the Bureau of Labor Statistics at 8:30 this morning.  The reason this is getting so much play is that last year, the revision was dramatic, adjusting the annualized rate up to 4.3% from its pre-revision level of 3.1%, and casting doubt on just how much progress the Fed had actually made in their inflation battle.  But last year was a dramatic outlier with respect to revisions as historically, the average adjustment is something like 3 basis points, so the different between 3.10% and 3.13%.  In other words, nothing.

However, the concerns come from the fact that ever since Covid changed so much in the economy, measuring the data has become far more complex leading to potentially larger revisions.  I have no way of knowing what will happen here, and I suspect there is an equal chance of the revisions showing CPI has actually been lower than reported, but the point is, this obscure data adjustment has become the topic du jour on an otherwise quiet day.

What we can do is game out how markets may respond to a surprisingly large adjustment in either direction.  If, like last year, the revisions show inflation is running hotter than previously reported, I would look for bonds to sell off further, especially the 2-year, as it would push the probability of a rate cut further into the future.  This would likely weigh on stocks and support the dollar overall.  Oil has been in its own world, rallying on the increased middle east tensions, but metals would suffer, I think.  And if the revision is substantially lower, just turn around all those movements.  Any large revision will be a binary event.

But really, those were the major discussion points overnight.  Turning to the markets, after another set of records in the US (although the S&P 500 couldn’t quite make 5000), Japanese equities rallied further on the interest rate story from above, setting new 34-year highs and approaching the 1989 bubble peak.  Chinese shares are closed for a while now, but the Hang Seng, in a half-day session, managed to slide another -0.8%.  However, the rest of Asia was in the green.  In Europe, there is very little net movement this morning as we continue to hear from ECB speakers that rates will not be cut soon, although it is not clear anybody believes them given the overall economic weakness.  Lastly in the US, futures are a touch higher at this hour (7:45), but only about 0.2%.

In the bond market, yields continue to edge higher with Treasuries up 2bps, and most European sovereigns higher by just 1bp.  Interestingly, despite the Ueda comments overnight, JGB yields have crept 2bps higher along with everything else.  It is hard to know if bond investors are more concerned with sticky inflation or massive issuance, but something has them uncomfortable this morning.

Oil, which has rallied all week is unchanged this morning as the market digests the fact that there will be no cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, and the Houthis continue to fire missiles into the Red Sea.  As to the latter, given that ship traffic has fallen to near zero, that seems like a waste of ammunition, but so be it.  Metals markets, meanwhile, are a touch softer this morning with copper the underperformer (-0.5%) although precious metals have edged lower as well.

Finally, the dollar continues to perform well overall, as we have already discussed the yen, but are also seeing it edge higher against most of its counterparts in the G10.  The exception is NZD (+0.6%) which seems to believe that the RBNZ, after having paused in their rate hiking cycle, may raise rates yet again.  On the EMG side, the most noteworthy mover is ZAR (-0.35%) suffering from metals weakness although we are seeing a bit of strength from the LATAM bloc with both MXN and BRL edging higher this morning.

And that’s really it today.  Not only is there no additional data, but no Fed speakers are scheduled either.  Next week will see a number of holidays around the world as Carnival begins alongside the Chinese New Year.  Really, Tuesday’s CPI is the next key data point for us all.  Until then, I expect that traders will want to close the S&P over 5000 but do not see an explosive move higher coming.  As to the dollar, there is no reason for it to cede its recent gains.

Good luck and good weekend
Adf

Turns to Sh*t

The FOMC’s out in force
Explaining the still likely course
Of rates is to stay
Where they are today
Unless there’s some hidden dark horse
 
Investors, though, don’t give a whit
As Spooz seem quite likely to hit
Five thousand quite soon
Then onto the moon
Take care lest this view turns to sh*t

 

The WSJ led with an interesting article today with the below graphic as the teaser.  This is called a hair chart, for obvious reasons, with those light blue lines describing Fed funds futures curves and comparing them to the subsequent actual Fed funds rate over time.  The article’s point, which is important to understand, is that the futures market tends not to get things right very often.  In other words, just because the market is pricing in 5 or 6 rate cuts today does not mean that is what will occur over time.  In fact, looking at the chart, it almost seems that 5 or 6 cuts is the least likely outcome.  One need only look at the past several years to see that while they were pricing cuts, the Fed was still hiking.

Of course, this fits with my thesis that the Fed funds futures market is actually reflecting a bimodal outcome of either zero cuts or 10.  But regardless of my view, the equity market is all-in on the idea that the Fed is going to be cutting rates soon as evidenced by the fact that the S&P 500 is now trading just a hair below 5000 after yesterday’s 0.8% gain.  

In the meantime, yesterday we heard from four more Fed speakers and to a wo(man) they all said effectively the same thing; progress has been made on the inflation front but they still don’t have confidence that 2% inflation on a sustainable basis has been achieved.  In fact, several mentioned that the recent hot GDP and NFP data indicated more caution is warranted.  By the way, if we look at the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast, it currently sits at 3.4%, hardly a level of concern, while their Wage Growth Tracker remains at 5.0%.  Again, that is not data that indicates inflation is collapsing.  It remains very difficult for me to expect inflation to fall given the recent totality of the data.  In other words, nothing has changed my view that inflation will remain stickier than currently priced and very likely start to creep higher again, and that will ultimately have a negative impact on risk assets.  But not today!

The other news overnight was that Chinese CPI rose less than expected in January, just 0.3%, which took the annual change to -0.8%.  As China heads into their two-week Lunar New Year holiday, welcoming the Year of the Dragon, the question for investors around the world is, will Xi do anything to halt the decline?  Thus far, his efforts have been weak and insufficient as evidenced by the equity markets in Hong Kong and on the mainland both having fallen sharply over the past year with little net movement this year despite several efforts at support and stimulus.  Now, Xi has nearly two weeks to come up with a new plan to get things going when markets return on February 20th, but for the past several years he has been unwilling to fire a big fiscal bazooka.  Will it be different this time?  Remember, they still have a catastrophic mess in the property market there which will impinge on anything they do.  I expect there will be some more half-hearted measures, but nothing sufficient to turn things around.  Ultimately, while they don’t want to see the renminbi fall sharply, I suspect it may have a bit more weakness in it before things are done, especially if the Fed really does stay higher for longer.

Ok, let’s look at markets elsewhere overnight.  The Nikkei (+2.0%) rallied sharply after comments by a BOJ member indicating that even when rates get back above zero, they will not move very much higher, and it will take time.  This saw the yen weaken further while stocks benefitted.  Meanwhile, the only loser in Asia overnight was India, where investors were disappointed that the RBI left rates on hold rather than cutting them (see a pattern here?).  Otherwise, everything followed the US rally yesterday.  The same is broadly true in Europe with decent gains, about 0.5%, almost everywhere except the UK, which is flat on the day after comments by a BOE official that cuts may not come as soon as hoped.  As to the US, at this hour (7:30) futures are basically unchanged.

In the bond market, after a generally quiet session yesterday, yields are starting to creep higher again with Treasuries +2bps and European sovereign yields rising a similar amount across the board.  Once again, the global bond markets revolve around Treasury yields with the only exception being JGB’s which saw the yield decline 1bp after those BOJ comments.

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.9%) is higher once again with Brent trading back above $80/bbl, as Secretary of State Blinken returned to the US with no real improvement in the Israeli-Hamas war and no prospects for a cease-fire.  Meanwhile, the US was able to kill the Iranian commander who allegedly led the attack on a US base that killed three soldiers, certainly not the type of thing to cool down tensions in the region.  Between the rise in cost of shipping oil from the Mideast to the rest of the world because of the Red Sea situation, and the lack of hope for an end to the fighting, it seems oil may have some legs here.  As to the metals markets, there is a split with both gold and copper under some pressure but aluminum seeing a bid this morning.  Quite frankly, I understand the former two rather than the gains in aluminum, but in the end, none of these metals has moved very much over the past months and remain trendless for now.

Finally, the dollar is starting to assert itself this morning as though the yen (-0.75%) is leading the way lower, pretty much every G10 and EMG currency is weaker vs. the greenback at this time.  Again, I would contend this is all about the ongoing Fed message of caution and confidence regarding inflation’s disposition, and the prospects of higher for longer.  FWIW, the current probability of a March cut is 18.5%.  barring a collapse in the CPI data next week, I expect that to head toward zero over time.

As to the data situation, we only see the weekly Initial (exp 220K) and Continuing (1878K) Claims data first thing and then it is Fedspeak for the rest of the day.  I expect that traders are going to push the S&P 500 over 5000 early this morning, if for no other reason than to say it was done, but what happens after is far less certain.  Earnings data has been generally ok, but some pretty bad misses have had quite negative impacts on individual names.  As to the dollar, the more I hear Fed speakers urge caution in the idea for rate cuts soon, the better its prospects.

Good luck

Adf

Singing the Blues

Here’s what’s underlying most views
Inflation is yesterday’s news
But what if it’s not
And starts to turn hot?
Those bulls will be singing the blues
 
So, care must be taken, I think
As in the bulls’ armor, a chink
Is wages keep rising
While homes are surprising
Be careful, the Kool-Aid, you drink

 

Market activity has generally been benign as investors and traders await the next big news.  Arguably, that is next Tuesday’s US CPI data given the dearth of new information otherwise due to be released this week.  The one thing we have in spades this week is central bank speakers, with three from the Fed yesterday and four more today, including the first comments I have seen from the newest Governor, Adriana Kugler.  As well we have been regaled by ECB, BOE and BOC speakers and they will continue all week as well.

Thus far, the message has been pretty consistent with the general theme that inflation has fallen nicely and is expected to continue to do so.  However, in a great sign of some humility, they are unwilling to accept that because price levels have fallen for the past 3 months that their job is done.  Obviously, the recent NFP and ISM data have shown no indication that the economy is even teetering on the brink of a slowdown, let alone desperate for rate cuts for support.  And for this, I applaud them.

But in this case, the central bank community seems to be in a small minority of economic observers who are not all-in on the idea that rate cuts are necessary right now.  Because, damn, virtually every other analyst seems to be on that train.  

There is a very good analyst group that calls themselves Doomberg, which mostly write about energy policy and its impacts on everything else, but in this morning’s article, I want to highlight a more general comment they made which I think is really important:

“How can you tell the difference between an analyst and an advocate? It is all in the handling of data that runs counter to assertion. To an analyst, being wrong is disappointing, but it is primarily an opportunity to learn—an expected element in a feedback loop of continuous improvement. When knowledge is your only objective, there is no such thing as a bad fact, only one which you do not yet understand. Not so for the advocate. The advocate has tied their hopes (and often their livelihoods) to a specific outcome and feels compelled, whether consciously or not, to rationalize away or attack inconvenient realities. It is advocacy when every perturbation in the weather is tagged as evidence of climate change, each squiggle of unfavorable price action is declared market manipulation, and no act or utterance from a favored politician is disqualifying.”

First, I cannot recommend their writings highly enough as they are consistently thoughtful, well-researched and important.  But second, I think this point is exactly in tune with the Goldilocks welcoming committee as they will ignore every piece of data that runs counter to their narrative and double down by saying the Fed is overtightening because inflation is collapsing, and deflation is going to be the economic problem soon.

While I am often quite critical of the Fed and their comments, and still think they speak far too much, right now, I am very happy to see them maintain a reluctance to cut rates just because the market is pricing in those cuts.  Certainly, to my eye, looking at the totality of the data (as Chairman Powell likes to say) there is little indication that prices are collapsing.  In fact, the super-core data, which was all the rage last year, has turned higher.  I understand why Wall Street analysts are better described as Wall Street advocates, but for the independent analysts out there, and over the past several years those numbers have exploded higher, it is remarkable to me that more of them are not suspect on the idea that rates need to be cut and cut soon.  In fact, at this point, one month into the year, I continue to like my 2024 forecasts of perhaps one cut in the first half of the year, but a reversal as inflation reignites.

Yes, the futures market is now only pricing five cuts into 2024, but nothing has changed my view that the pricing is bimodal, either 0 or 10 cuts will be the outcome, with the former if the economy continues along its recent pace and the latter if the recession finally arrives.  Given that interest rates, led by Treasury yields, are the clear driver of global market movements, and given that inflation is going to play a critical role in their movement going forward, I have altered my view as to the most important piece of data.  Whereas I used to believe it was NFP, it is now entirely CPI/PCE.  As I wrote yesterday, if next week’s print is at 0.4% M/M, watch out for a significant repricing.

But now, let’s turn to today.  President Xi continues to have problems with his stock market and is seemingly getting a bit more desperate aggressive in his efforts to prevent a complete implosion.  Last night, the head of the CSRC (China’s SEC analog) was replaced as blame needs to be placed on others for Xi’s policy errors.  It ought not be surprising that Chinese shares, after a weak start, rebounded on the news and closed higher by about 1%.  However, the Hang Seng could not manage any gains and the Nikkei edged lower as well.  All in all, it was not a great session overnight.  In Europe this morning, the markets are lower by between -0.25% and -0.5% as once again we saw weak German data (IP -1.6%) continuing to point to a recession on the continent.  Finally, US futures are basically flat at this hour (7:30).

In the bond market, yields, which all slid a bit yesterday on what seemed to be a profit-taking move after that massive runup following the NFP and ISM data, are a bit higher this morning, with Treasury yields up by 3bps and most of Europe seeing similar movements, between 2bps and 4bps.  As I wrote above, this story remains all about inflation’s future, and as data comes in to add to the conversation, I suspect that will be the key mover going forward.

Oil prices (+1.0%) are continuing their modest recent rebound with WTI touching $74/bbl this morning and Brent above $79/bbl.  Comments by the Biden administration that they would continue to attack Iranian proxy groups seems to have traders worried about an escalation.  But a more concerning story is that Ukraine has been targeting Russian refineries in an effort to degrade Putin’s cash flow.  They have already hit several and reduced capacity by 4%-5%.  If that continues successfully, then oil prices are going to go much higher.  This doesn’t seem to be in the bigger narrative right now, so beware.  As to the metals markets, they are all slightly softer this morning, but movement has been tiny.

Finally, the dollar is under a modest amount of pressure this morning, which given the rising yields and softer commodities, seems out of character.  Granted, the movements are small, with most currencies just 0.1% – 0.2% firmer vs. the dollar.  And this could also be profit-taking given the dollar’s recent rally.  After all, the euro remains below 1.08 and USDJPY above 148.00 so this is hardly a collapse.

Turning to the data today, the Trade Balance (exp -$62.2B) is this morning’s release and then after oil inventories, at 3:00 we get Consumer Credit ($16.0B).  As mentioned above, we have many more Fed speakers as well, and I sense that will be of far more interest to market participants.  I don’t anticipate anybody straying from the current theme of inflation has been falling nicely but they are not yet convinced.  If someone strays, that could move markets, but again, I see little to drive things today, or this week.

Good luck

Adf