Small Beer

The market has made it quite clear
That over the course of next year
The interest rate Jay
Is willing to pay
On Fed funds will soon be small beer

The key to this view is the thought
Inflation will soon fall to naught
But if that is wrong
It will not be long
Ere stocks will be sold and not bought

As the market braces for today’s CPI data, investors and traders continue to home in on the view that the soft-landing scenario is the most likely.  While US equity markets sold off yesterday afternoon, futures this morning are higher across the board by about 0.5% and European bourses are also all higher.  In other words, fear is not in today’s lexicon as concerns over continuing gains in inflation quickly dissipate and the narrative focuses on said soft-landing.

A quick look at today’s data expectations shows the following according to Bloomberg:

Initial Claims230K
Continuing Claims1707K
CPI0.2% (3.3% Y/Y)
-ex food & energy0.2% (4.7% Y/Y)

I’m sure you all remember that last month’s CPI reading was 3.0%, which was widely touted as a sign the Fed has been successful in their efforts to slow price increases.  Of course, the reason the headline number fell so far was the base effect as in 2022, June’s monthly reading was +1.2% which drove the Y/Y number then to the cyclical high of 9.1%.  With that data point falling out of the mix, the comparison changed dramatically.  Here’s the thing, July 2022’s monthly print was 0.0%, so those same base effects are going to push the headline number higher. 

Now, if you annualize 0.2% it comes to a bit more than 2.4% inflation, so if the monthly number can maintain this level, the Fed will truly have achieved their goal.  Alas, oil (+15.8%) and gasoline (+11.2%) both rose sharply in the month of July and so that headline number seems likely to be higher.  The Cleveland Fed’s CPI Nowcast (similar to the Atlanta Fed’s GDP Nowcast) is pointing to a monthly CPI increase of 0.41%.  My suspicion is that we are going to see a hotter CPI number today and that is likely to be met with a little bit of concern, especially by risk assets that are counting on that soft-landing.

As long as the narrative continues to look for that soft-landing success, it opens up the risk of a significant repricing.  While Philly Fed president Harker was the first to talk about rate cuts next year, the futures market has been all-in on that view for quite a while.  A firm number today will bolster Powell’s ‘higher for longer’ narrative at the expense of those rosy views.  Be prepared for some market volatility today, especially in the bond market.

Speaking of the bond market, yesterday’s 10-year auction went pretty well as the clearing yield was (barely) below 4.00% at 3.999%.  The bid/cover ratio was a healthy 2.56, meaning there were bids for slightly more than $97 billion for the auction of $38 billion in new paper.  Today brings the final leg of the quarterly refunding with $23 billion of 30-year bonds to be auctioned.  At this hour (7:00) the 30yr yield is 4.17% with the 10yr yield at 4.00%.  A high CPI print could wind up costing the US government a bit more if yields move higher on the news, just another reason this CPI print will be so closely watched.  Meanwhile, European sovereigns are all softer this morning with yields edging higher by roughly 2.5 basis points across the board, and we saw higher yields across Asia as well, with JGBs rising 2bps, although still below the 0.6% level.  So far, Ueda-san has not had too much difficulty managing the yield there.

Turning back to the commodity markets, oil is little changed this morning, consolidating its recent gains, but certainly not showing any signs of reversing course.  Despite China’s lackluster economic performance, the supply situation continues to underpin oil prices.  Remarkably, despite all the focus on the need to reduce the use of fossil fuels, and the weaker than forecast Chinese economy, demand for oil continues to increase with the IEA raising its forecast for the next several years.  At the same time, oil companies are feeling only modest pressure to drill more, and instead are enjoying the fruits of their current production by repurchasing shares and paying large dividends to their shareholders.  In other words, it seems that supply is unlikely to ramp up to meet this increased demand and that can only lead to even higher oil prices over time.  $100/bbl seems quite realistic within the next 12 months, and that doesn’t assume any additional price shocks like we saw in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  But while oil is on hold today, the metals markets are feeling a bit better with both precious and base metals rising nicely on the session.

Finally, the dollar is softer pretty much across the board this morning with AUD (+0.6%) the leading G10 gainer although virtually the entire bloc is higher by between 0.3% and 0.5%.  The exception to this is JPY, which is unchanged on the day.  The yen continues to chart its own course lately as uncertainty about the ultimate outcome in the JGB market and any further monetary policy changes has traders and investors treading fearfully.  It remains the favored funding currency given its still lowest rates in the world, but the prospect of that changing has many traders on constant edge.

As to the emerging markets, they too are seeing strength virtually across the board with HUF (+1.3%) and ZAR (+1.2%) the leaders as both are benefitting from their high nominal interest rate carry.  After that there is a long list of currencies that are firmer by between 0.25% and 0.5% and only one laggard, THB (-0.5%) which continues to suffer from political uncertainties over the ability to establish a government there after the recent election.

And that is really the story today.  We hear from three more Fed speakers; Daly, Bostic, and Harker, so it will be interesting to see if either of Daly or Bostic hint at rate cuts next year.  All three are scheduled to speak after the CPI release, which if firm is likely to quash any hopes for that.  My take is that a hot CPI number will help to reverse some of the dollar’s losses, but a soft number could easily see the dollar slide further.

Good luck

Adf

Not Preordained

The first cracks have started to show
In Jay’s, up til now, status quo
When Harker explained,
Though not preordained,
That rate cuts, next year, they’d bestow

While he is the first of the Fed
To claim that rate cuts are ahead
Do not be surprised
When views are revised
By others now this road’s been tread

While things looked dire yesterday morning with respect to risk assets, along around lunchtime there was a reversal of attitudes and while equity markets did finish in the red, they were all well off their lows by the close. So, the question is, what could have caused that reversal?  Interestingly, an argument can be made that Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker’s comments may well have been the catalyst.  

After explaining, “I think there is a path to an economic soft landing,” Harker went on to the money quote, “Sometime, probably next year, we’ll start cutting rates.”  While the first comment was a nice sentiment, the second comment was the first time we have heard any Fed speaker consider that rate cuts would be appropriate in 2024.  Remember, the entire mantra has been, ‘higher for longer’ with no indication that the FOMC was even close to considering rate cuts.  Importantly, Mr Harker is a current voting member, so his views carry a touch more weight than the non-voters.

Of course, the Fed funds futures market has been pricing in that exact scenario for months, with the current expectation that by the end of 2024, Fed funds will be back to 4.0%.  The conundrum here, though, is that if the economy comes in for a soft landing, meaning we do not have a recession while inflation falls back to their target, why would they adjust rates at all?  It would seem under that scenario that interest rates could be termed ‘appropriate’, neither too high nor too low.  I get why equity investors want lower rates, but then seemingly, rate cuts could well bring on another bout of inflation as an already growing economy overheats with extra monetary stimulus.

Yesterday’s other Fed speaker, Richmond’s Thomas Barkin (a non-voter this year) had a less dovish message.  He was unwilling to ‘predeclare’ where rates are going, explaining they have time before the next FOMC meeting to monitor the data.  He also explained that there are competing outlooks for the economy, “one where inflation will glide down to 2%, another where it remains persistent.”  But that message is far more in line with what we have been hearing.  It was the Harker comments that got things rolling.

And so, as we walk in this morning, there is a lot of green on the screen in the equity markets as risk is once again in favor.  Not surprisingly, this has pushed commodity prices higher, especially oil, which while higher by 1.3% this morning, and back over $83/bbl, is more than 5% above the lows seen yesterday morning.  That is a big reversal!  Metals markets, too, are firmer this morning with gold, copper and aluminum all benefitting from this change in sentiment.

In the equity space, Asian markets were more mixed with the Nikkei (-0.5%) which had been holding its own giving back a bit, but the Hang Seng managed to reverse a small portion of yesterday’s losses.  The real story, though, is in Europe, where all the markets are higher, mostly by 1% or more, notably Italy’s FTSE MIB (+1.75%) which has benefitted from both the overall risk sentiment as well as a change in plans by the Italian government regarding the bank windfall profit tax mooted yesterday.  It seems that they got a little nervous over the market’s reaction, which wiped out more than €10 billion in market cap from the banking sector, and so reversed course a bit.  As to US futures, they are modestly firmer (+0.3%) at this hour (7:45).

In the bond market, after sharp declines in yields yesterday, we are seeing a bit of a reversal with 10yr Treasury yields up 1bp this morning.  While early yesterday that yield had fallen below 4.0%, it was a short-lived move, and we are back above that key level today.  The easy part of the quarterly refunding was well received yesterday with the 3yr note clearing at 4.398% and a 2.90 bid/cover ratio.  In other words, there were plenty of buyers for that $42 billion tranche.  Today could be a bit trickier as the Treasury seeks to sell $38 billion of 10yr notes.  We shall see where bonds trade as the auctions progress.  And tomorrow comes the 30yr, with $23 billion set to be auctioned, so there is still plenty of new supply coming.  Meanwhile, European sovereign bonds are all seeing yields higher as well this morning, mostly on the order of 1bp to 2.5 bps, after yesterday’s sharp yield declines.

Finally, the dollar is under a bit of pressure this morning, as would be expected given the change in risk attitude.  NOK (+0.5%) leads the way in the G10 on the back of oil’s performance, but in truth, the rest of this bloc has not moved very far at all, although I would argue that gainers mean more than laggards.  In the EMG space, the situation is similar with quite a few more currencies gaining ground, albeit not too much, while only a few are under pressure.  ZAR (-0.5%) is the laggard although there is no obvious catalyst for the movement, especially given the commodity rebound.

There is no data of note today and no Fed speakers are on the docket either.  With this in mind, and as we all await tomorrow’s CPI data, I suspect that risk will remain in favor today.  That means that commodities should continue to perform well along with equities, while the dollar remains under pressure.

Good luck

Adf

Failed to Inspire

Consider poor President Xi
Whose efforts in his ‘conomy
Have failed to inspire
The quickening fire
Of growth for his people to see

It seems that the latest reports
Show signs of collapsing exports
Implying that growth
In China is sloth
And helping inspire yuan shorts

Chinese exports fell 14.5% Y/Y in July.  Imports also underperformed, falling -12.4%.  Perhaps of greater concern to President Xi is that they fell 23.1% to the US and 20.3% to the EU.  Now, they did rise aggressively to one place, Russia, where the increase was 52% Y/Y.  Alas for the Chinese, their business with Russia was always a fraction of that with the West, so, net, things are not looking too good on the mainland.  Ultimately, the problem for Xi is that despite years of effort to change the nature of the Chinese economy from a mercantilist model focused on export growth to a domestic consumption led model, they have not yet achieved that adjustment.  This has resulted in some very difficult decisions for President Xi which have yet to be made.

Consider that the Chinese growth miracle was built on three pillars, cheap labor, massive infrastructure spending and residential property investment.  For 18 years following the entry of China into the WTO this model was killer with average GDP growth over 10%.  It was remarkable in its ability to lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, a true humanitarian good.  But transition is always difficult, and China has now grown to the point where the old model is no longer effective and a new one needs to be implemented for the country’s future.

The first problem is the price of labor has risen in China to the point where it is no longer the cheapest place to manufacture goods as both India and Vietnam offer better value on this score.  Add to that the current tensions between China and the West and the efforts of western nations to reshore or friendshore manufacturing, and it seems unlikely that China is going to see a big boost in manufacturing for export anytime soon.

The second and third legs are intertwined in the following manner.  Historically, infrastructure spending has actually been financed by local governments, not by the national government except in some specific situations.  Those local governments would borrow money in the local bond markets and would use land sales as a means of repaying that debt over time.  So, as long as the property market was rising, these entities had access to additional investment funds.  When Beijing wanted to increase economic activity, they would simply instruct the local governments to pick up the pace of activity.

But now that the Chinese property market has been sinking for the past two years, which came to light with the problems at China Evergrande, but continue to this day, the Chinese people are not keen to continue to buy property as an investment vehicle, and in fact, many are looking to sell.  This has dramatically reduced the funds available for investment by local government entities and is weighing on economic activity.  This has hit both infrastructure and property investment and can be seen in the declining numbers for both Fixed Asset and Property investment that are released each month.

Thus, President Xi has very few levers to rekindle growth, especially if the west is heading into a recession.  Adding to his woes is the unemployment rate of the 16-24 set, which is currently > 21%.  In the end, China has only a limited ability to generate activity domestically at this point, and if things are slow elsewhere, they will remain slow there.

There are likely to be several direct impacts of this situation.  First, slowing growth in China is going to weigh on commodity prices as China has, for the past 20 years, been the largest consumer of commodities around.  As well, this will clearly be a deflationary impulse and weigh on price pressures, at least for certain parts of the economy going forward.  While I expect manufactured products will not rise much in price, it will probably not have much of an impact on services prices in the west, so don’t look for a collapse in inflation just yet.  And finally, a very common tactic for governments facing domestic difficulties is to try to distract their population with foreign issues.  I fear this elevates the chance for bigger problems in Asia, either with Taiwan or perhaps the South China Sea.  Xi needs to demonstrate he is still in charge so be wary.

As to the market response to this data, it was pretty negative all around.  Yesterday’s US equity rally had no real follow through with just the Nikkei managing a small gain overnight.  Not surprisingly, Chinese markets were lower along with the Hang Seng (-1.8%).  European bourses are all in the red this morning led by Italy’s FTSE MIB (-2.5%) after the Italian government imposed a 40% windfall profit tax on Italian banks.  Banks are in the firing line in Germany as well as the interest paid on reserves by the Bundesbank has been cut to 0.0%.  Do not be surprised to see this type of behavior in the US going forward, especially as the budget deficit swells.  US futures are also under pressure, down around -0.75% across the board at this hour (8:00).

In classic risk-off fashion, bond yields are falling aggressively this morning as the weak Chinese data has the recession talk back on top again.  10-year Treasury yields are lower by 10bps and now trading at 3.99%.  yield declines throughout Europe are much larger, on the order of 15bps and even JGB yields fell 3bps overnight. Suddenly there is real fear in the markets.

In keeping with the risk-off theme, commodity prices are under pressure with oil (-2.5%) leading the way and just now edging below $80/bbl.  Metals markets are also soft with copper (-2.7%) really feeling the heat although gold and aluminum are both under pressure as well.

Finally, the dollar is king of the hill this morning, rallying against all its G10 and EMG counterparts.  NOK (-1.5%) is the G10 laggard on the back of oil, but all the commodity currencies are lower by at least 1% and even the yen is softer by -0.4%.  As to the EMG bloc, again all the currencies are under pressure with the commodity bloc softest here as well.  This is a unified risk-off so buy dollars story today.

On the data front, NFIB Small Business Optimism was released at 91.9, slightly better than expected and now we await the Trade Balance (exp -$65.0B) at 8:30.  We have two speakers this morning, Philadelphia’s Harker and Richmond’s Barkin so continue to look for subtle changes in message.  Yesterday we heard from Bowman and Bostic, both indicating that more hikes might be needed to quell inflation.  I don’t believe we have seen a change there yet.

While the dollar has rallied a lot today, if equities start to retreat more aggressively, do not be surprised if this move continues.  It seems pretty clear that there is a growing concern over risk assets and, at the very least, a correction there.  That should help the dollar for now.

Good luck

Adf

Weakness is Fleeting

Two narratives are now competing
Recession, the first, is retreating
No-landing is rising
As those analyzing
The data claim weakness is fleeting

But what of the curse of inflation
Which for two years has gripped the nation
Is it really past
Or are we too fast
To follow that interpretation?

Friday’s employment data was, for a second consecutive month, a bit lower than the median forecast of economists.  However, it was still reasonable at 187K new jobs.  One of the positive aspects was the decline in the Unemployment Rate to 3.5% although from an inflation perspective, Average Hourly Earnings (AHE) rose more than forecast.  In a way, there was something for everyone in the report with the recessionistas highlighting the decline in average weekly hours and the fact that last month’s data was revised down for the 6th consecutive month, typically a very negative signal.  However, the no-landing crowd points to the AHE data as well as the Unemployment Rate and claim all is well.

Of course, ultimately, the opinion that matters the most is that of Chairman Powell and his acolytes at the Fed.  Are they glass half full or glass half empty folks?  I have been highlighting the importance of the NFP data as I believe it remains the fig leaf necessary for the Fed to continue to raise interest rates if they want to in their ongoing efforts to rein inflation back to their target level.  My sense is that Friday’s data will not dissuade them from hiking rates in September if they decide it is still appropriate, but it could also be argued as a reason for another pause.  Certainly, there is nothing about the data that would indicate a rate cut is on the table anytime soon.  And remember, we will see the August report shortly after Labor Day, which comes before the next FOMC meeting, so still plenty of information yet to come.

Which brings us to this week’s numbers on Thursday and Friday when CPI and PPI are set to be released respectively.  While we all understand that the Fed’s models use core PCE as their key inflation input, we also know that CPI, especially core -ex housing, has been a recent focus for Powell and that is the number that gets the press.  You may recall that last month, the headline CPI number printed at 3.0%, it’s lowest since early 2021, and was widely touted as proof positive that the Fed was close to achieving their objective.  Alas, energy prices have done nothing but rise in the ensuing month and given the ongoing reductions in production by OPEC+, it seems unlikely that we are done with this move.  In fact, ironically for the no-landing crowd, if there is no landing and supply continues to shrink, energy prices, both oil and gasoline, will likely continue to rise as well, putting significant upward pressure on headline CPI.  If CPI is rising it will be extremely difficult for Powell to consider anything but more rate hikes.

Currently, the market is pricing a very low probability of a September rate hike by the Fed, just 16%, so there is ample room for repricing if the data comes in hot.  Surprisingly, the market is pricing in a higher probability of an ECB hike, 38% in September, despite the fact that Madame Lagarde essentially told us at the last meeting they were done.  My suspicion is that there is room for a more negative outcome in the interest rate space going forward.  One other tidbit this morning is the Cleveland Fed has an CPI Nowcast, similar to the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow but for inflation, and that number is currently 0.41% for July, well above the market median forecast of 0.2%.  The point is there is room for a negative inflation surprise and the knock-on effects of such a result would likely be risk negative.  Just sayin’.

Meanwhile, Friday’s equity market reversal in the US has mostly been followed around the world with red the dominant color on screens in the major markets.  In Asia, while the Nikkei managed to eke out a small gain, China and South Korea both saw renewed selling.  As to Europe, all markets are lower on the order of -0.25% to -0.5% at this hour (7:30).  However, US futures are currently edging higher on what seems to be a reflexive bounce rather than a fundamental opinion.

Bond markets, though, are reversing much of Friday’s rally with 10-yr Treasury yields higher by 7bps this morning and most European sovereign yields up a similar amount.  Friday saw a sharp rally on the headline NFP number which served to force the hand of many short sellers in the Treasury market.  Recall, heading into the release, there was a growing consensus, especially after a particularly strong ADP Employment number, that the no-landing scenario was the most likely and that would mean higher yields for longer.  In addition, the market was informed of the extra $1.9 trillion in Treasury issuance that was coming the rest of the year, with the bulk of that coming out the curve, rather than in the T-bills that have been the focus to date.  It feels like the short-selling crowd is getting back on board and the weight on prices of excessive issuance and the Fed’s ongoing QT program means higher yields should be expected.  

As to oil prices, while they are lower this morning by -0.7%, they remain well above $80//bbl and appear to be consolidating ahead of the next attempt to break above key technical resistance at $85/bbl.  Absent a very severe recession, which has not yet shown up, it is hard to make the case for a large decline in this sector of the market.  Metals markets are far more benign this morning with tiny gains and losses as traders continue to try to figure out if there is a recession coming.

Lastly, the dollar’s demise, which is touted on a weekly basis by pundits everywhere, will have to wait at least one more day as the greenback is stronger vs. essentially every one of its major counterparts.  There is still a strong relationship between US Treasury yields and the dollar, and with higher yields, it is no surprise the dollar is higher.  Consider, too, the fact that the market is pricing such a small probability of a Fed funds hike next month.  If (when?) that pricing changes, I expect the dollar to benefit greatly.

On the data front, there is a bit more than CPI and PPI, but not much:

TodayConsumer Credit$13.55B
TuesdayNFIB Small Biz Optimism90.5
 Trade Balance-$65.0B
ThursdayInitial Claims230K
 Continuing Claims1710K
 CPI0.2% (3.3% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.2% (4.8% Y/Y)
FridayPPI0.2% (0.7% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.2% (2.3% Y/Y)
 Michigan Sentiment71.5

Source: Bloomberg

In addition to the data, we have three Fed speakers, Bostic, Bowman and Harker, each speaking twice this week.  Ultimately, my take is that Friday’s NFP data did nothing to change the current Fed calculus and higher for longer remains the operative thought process.  As to the dollar, if we continue to see Treasury yields rise, which I think is the most likely scenario, then I suspect the dollar will find buyers.  For those of you awaiting a sharp dollar pullback to establish hedges, you may be waiting quite a while.

Good luck

Adf

Demimonde

There once was a government bond
About which investors were fond
Regardless of yield
Their safety appealed
But lately, they’ve turned demimonde

So, as we await Payroll data
Demand has just started to crate-a
As yield keeps on rising
More folks are downsizing
Positions today and not late-a

It’s Payrolls Day and market participants are all anxiously awaiting the news at 8:30. Recall, last month, for the first time in more than a year, the NFP number printed slightly lower than the median forecast and that was seen as proof positive that the soft landing was on its way.  Subsequently, headline CPI fell to its lowest in two years as a confirmation of that process, and market participants decided, as one, that risk was the thing to own.  Equities rallied, bond yields fell and there was joy around the world markets. 

But lately, that story is having a rougher go of things as 10-year Treasury yields have jumped 43bps from their levels following the CPI release even though the PCE data was similarly soft.  What gives?  Arguably, part of this is because energy prices have rebounded sharply since last month, so it is increasingly clear that next week’s CPI data is going to higher than last month’s number.  As well, the growing confidence in the soft-landing scenario, which is touted across mainstream media constantly, implies that rate cuts may not be necessary.  After all, if Fed funds are at 5.5% and GDP is growing at 2.5% and Unemployment remains below 4.0%, why would the Fed change its policy rate?  The answer is, they wouldn’t.  At the same time, in the event the economy is clearly growing with positive future prospects, it is very likely that the yield curve will steepen back to a ‘normal’ shape with longer dated yields higher than short-dated yields.  If the Fed is not going to cut, that means the back end of the curve must see yields rise.  The current 2yr-10yr inversion is down to -74bps, so another 100bp rise in 10-year yields would seem realistic.

Of course, the question is, how would risk assets behave in that scenario?  And the answer there is likely to be far less positive.  After all, if risk free returns for 10 years were at 5+%, equities would need to offer a very good return opportunity to attract investors.  While there will be some companies that offer that, I suspect there are many more that would be shunned and need to reprice substantially lower to become attractive.  In other words, investors will want much lower entry prices to get involved and that could see a pretty big sell-off in the equity markets.  Just one possible scenario, but one with a decent probability of occurring, I think.

But that is all future prognostication.  In the meantime, let’s look at what the current consensus forecasts are for today:

Nonfarm Payrolls200K
Private Payrolls180K
Manufacturing Payrolls5K
Unemployment Rate3.6%
Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (4.2% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours34.4
Participation Rate62.6%

Source: Bloomberg

Wednesday’s ADP number was much higher than expected at 324K although the prior blowout number, 497K in June, was revised lower by 42K.  Still, 455K was much larger than the BLS report so there are many questions as to whether we will see a similar outcome today, a softer NFP number despite a very strong ADP number.  Looking at other indicators, the Initial Claims data continues to improve, hovering around 225K.  The JOLTS data was slightly softer than expected, but still right around 9.6 million and well above levels prior to the pandemic.  And finally, if you look at the employment subsets of the ISM data, they were soft in manufacturing, but solid in services, and services is a much larger part of the economy.

My take is the market is going to behave very clearly based on the actual outcome.  A strong number, anything over 225K, is likely to see the bond market sell off further and I wouldn’t be surprised to see 10-year yields, which have edged up another basis point this morning to 4.19%, trade back above the levels seen last October at 4.25% or more.  That will not be a positive for the stock markets as it will reintroduce the idea the Fed is going to continue to raise rates, something the market has completely priced out at this point.  Similarly, a soft number will open the door to a sharp equity rally and bond rally, with yields likely to even test the 4.0% level if the NFP number is soft enough.  I think we need a 100K or less number for a reaction like that.

Ahead of the data, there seems to be a growing concern over the outcome.  While Asian markets rebounded a bit, European bourses have started to fall across the board from earlier levels and are now all down by between -0.2% and -0.5%.  US futures, too, are now back to unchanged having spent the bulk of the evening higher on the back of a strong earnings report from Amazon.  

Bond markets are under pressure as energy prices around the world are rising, as are food prices, and so inflation prospects seem to be worsening.  This is despite the very earnest efforts of central banks around the world to convince us all that inflation has peaked, and they are near the end of their hiking cycles.  After the BOE raised rates by 25bps yesterday, the market has reduced the expected UK terminal rate down to 5.75%, two more hikes despite CPI running at 7.9% with Core at 6.9%.  In the Eurozone, the ECB has released a new report claiming that inflation has peaked as well, and the market has priced out any further rate hikes.  This all smacks of whistling past the graveyard in my view.

For instance, oil (+0.35%) is higher again, up more than 14% in the past month, and shows no signs of slowing down.  Not only did Saudi Arabia extend their one million bbl/day production cut for another month, but Russia now claims it will cut production by 300K bbl/day in September as well.  I haven’t discussed food prices in a while as they had eased off from the immediate post invasion highs, but the FAO Food price index rebounded last month and despite a sharp decline from its highest levels last year, is still at levels that have caused riots in the streets of African nations in the past.  Metals prices are also under pressure today, but that seems more to do with the strong dollar than anything else.  

Turning to the dollar, it is once again seeing demand as only NOK (+0.2%) has managed to gain on the greenback in the G10 space, although the other currencies’ losses are not large.  The same cannot be said for the EMG space where the APAC bloc is under real pressure led by KRW (-0.8%) and THB (-0.4%) on the dual concern of a slower growing China and broad risk-off sentiment.  One thing that seems likely is the dollar will benefit from a strong NFP print and suffer from a weak one.

And that’s really it for the day.  No Fed speakers are on the docket, but do not be surprised to hear some interviews if the number is very different from the forecasts.  In the end, nothing has changed my view that inflation will remain stickier than forecast and the Fed will hold tight thus supporting the dollar.  Remember, the combination of tight monetary and loose fiscal policy is the recipe for a strong currency.  And the US is running that in spades!

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Like Goldilocks?

For assets so safe and secure
It seems bonds have lost their allure
Yields worldwide are rising
And it’s not surprising
Since ‘flation, we all must endure

The question is, what about stocks?
Are they set to soon hit the rocks?
Or will they remain
Resistant to pain
If growth behaves like goldilocks?

Certainly, yesterday was a pretty bad day for risk assets as equity markets in the US sold off aggressively along with commodities.  The thing is it was a pretty bad day for haven assets as well with Treasury yields rising sharply.  And right now, just before 7:00am in NY, those trends remain intact.  In fact, the only thing that seemed to perform well yesterday was the dollar.

So, what gives?  Many will point to the downgrading of the US credit rating by Fitch as the proximate cause of things, and it may well have been an excuse for some selling, but despite the logic I detailed yesterday, the impact on markets should be di minimis.  After all, Treasuries are used for two things largely, either as investments in their own right, or as collateral for other financial transactions.  Regarding the first point, nobody is actually concerned that the US will not repay their debt, so if the yield is attractive, investors will still buy them.  As to the second point, this could have been an issue but since the S&P downgrade in 2011, collateral agreements have been rewritten to accept not only AAA securities, but also US government securities, with no mention of their rating.  So, there is no change in the collateral situation.

If it was not the downgrade, then what has driven the recent upheaval in markets?  Arguably, this has been building for quite some time and was looking for a catalyst to get things started.  I think there are two ways to consider the situation.  For the bears out there, watching equities rally daily despite what appeared to be softening margins along with tightening monetary conditions didn’t make sense.  But the rally has been so relentless that the bears have largely capitulated on their views.  It seems the key lesson is that the timing of monetary policy transmission is much slower than it had been in the past, or at least that’s what it feels like, and so despite the Fed’s aggressiveness, it hasn’t had nearly the impact anticipated.  

To this point, remember, while the Federal government didn’t take advantage of ZIRP to term out its debt, homeowners and corporations did just that.  This has resulted in a lot of borrowers with a long runway before needing to refinance their debt and left them somewhat impervious to the Fed’s recent moves.  We have all heard that > 50% of mortgages outstanding are at rates < 4.0%.  This has resulted in an unwillingness to move and reduced existing home inventories and sales.  But all those people have not been impacted by the rate hikes, at least not on their largest single interest payment.  And the same has been true for many corporations who termed out their debt in 2020-2021 and even the first half of 2022.  While much of that debt will eventually be refinanced, it may be another 5-7 years before we start to see companies feel any stress there.  Consider, too, how this has helped lower rated companies, who, if forced to refinance today would see yields in the 8%-12% range but were able to borrow at 5% or less.  Of course, that debt was likely 5-year tenor, so that comeuppance is likely to arrive in 2025 or 2026.  And maybe that is when we should be looking for the first real problems.

The Fed’s Loan officer survey showed that conditions are continuing to tighten in the bank market, which means that smaller companies are going to be stressed, but the large cap companies that issue debt directly are sitting pretty.

Therefore, if it is not the downgrade, what other reasons could there be?  The first thing to remember is that there doesn’t have to be a specific reason for markets to sell off.  Markets that are overbought (or oversold) can reverse without any particular driver.  Historically, August has been a more volatile and weaker month for equities, often attributed to vacation schedules, with investors and traders both taking their summer trips and leaving skeleton staffs of junior people on the desk.  This will result in reduced liquidity and any outside selling impetus can have an overly large impact.  Remember, though, a rational look at equity markets indicates that on a historic basis they remain quite richly valued with the Shiller Cyclically adjusted P/E ratio at 31.1, well above its long-term median of 15.93.  However, what is typically true is that when an overvalued market starts to correct, it can continue doing so for quite some time until it reaches a more rational valuation.  If the bears have all given up, and the bulls are all on vacation, who is left to buy things?

All this is to say that, while the recent equity market weakness may not make sense specifically, there is nothing to say that it cannot continue for a while yet.  Turning to bonds, though, that is a different story.  Yields around the world are rising and, in many cases, rising sharply.  While the BOE just raised rates 25bps this morning, as largely expected, they are simply catching up to the rest of the G10.  However, 10-year Treasury yields are +6.7bps as I type (7:20) and now trading at 4.14%, their highest level since last October.  My sense is that this move is all about two things, concerns that inflation has seen a local bottom and the dramatic increase in supply just announced by the Treasury.  As discussed yesterday, yields above 4% have led to things breaking, so the question is what is set to break now?  Perhaps, the stock market selling off will be this breakage, or perhaps there will be some other crisis that flares up.  Maybe another large bank going to the wall, or a large corporate bankruptcy in a key sector.

We have discussed rising oil prices and you are all aware of rising gasoline prices every time you go to fill the tank.  Headline CPI, when it is released next week, will be well above last month’s 3.0%.  Too, yesterday’s ADP Employment number was much stronger than expected for a second consecutive month.  If the no landing scenario is correct, then inflation is likely to remain far more stubborn than currently expected and Chairman Powell will not be thinking about thinking about cutting rates any time soon.  In fact, at this point, if the Fed starts to think about cutting rates, that likely means that the economy has reversed course and is clearly headed into a recession.  Be careful what you wish for.

Summing up, I would be wary of reverting to the buy the dip mentality that has prevailed for more than a decade.  The underlying economic and financial situation is changing pretty quickly and that implies previous strategies may not perform that well.  Do not forget last year’s market performance.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that the BOJ was back in the market again last night, buying an unlimited amount of JGBs as they try to smooth the rise in JGB yields, which are now up to 0.65%.  This did help the yen a bit, which has rallied slightly on the day, but overall, the dollar remains much stronger.  My take is that we are seeing investors who are uncertain about the medium and long term, buying dollars to buy T-bills, earn a nice piece of interest and reconsider their next move.  One thing to note is that the yield curve’s inversion is lessening quite quickly.  Last Monday, the inversion was -104bps.  This morning it is -75bps.  That is a remarkably fast move in a short time.  It also implies that the demand for 10-year Treasuries is a little soft right now.  As I have written, this inversion could resolve with higher long rates, not lower short rates, and that is not something for which the market is prepared.  I believe that would be a clear equity negative.

There is a lot of data this morning starting with Initial (exp 225K) and Continuing (1708K) Claims, Nonfarm Productivity (2.3%), Unit Labor Costs (2.5%), Factory Orders (2.3%) and then ISM Services (53.0) at 10:00.  But this is all a lead-up to tomorrow’s NFP data.  Fed speakers have been fewer than usual, but we do hear from Richmond’s Thomas Barkin this morning.  I see no reason to believe that there will be any new dovishness upcoming.

To my mind, yields are going to continue to rise, equities are going to remain under pressure and the dollar, overall, is going to remain stronger rather than weaker.  We will need to see big changes in the data to change that view.

Good luck

Adf

Never-Ending

A landing that’s soft’s now the bet
By many who poo-poo the debt
But deficit spending
Which seems never-ending
Means prices ain’t coming down yet

So, nominal growth may still rise
Inflation, though, will not downsize
And yields on the bond
Are like to respond
By soaring right up to the skies

Fitch downgraded US government debt one notch to AA+ from its previous AAA.  Now, only Moody’s rates the US a AAA credit.  As per their announcement, their rationale was threefold: “The rating downgrade of the United States reflects the 1) expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years, 2) a high and growing general government debt burden, and 3) the erosion of governance relative to ‘AA’ and ‘AAA’ rated peers over the last two decades that has manifested in repeated debt limit standoffs and last-minute resolutions.”   

Let’s forget the political implications and the commentary from the government as it is completely expected.  And I am not here to defend or attack the outcome, but rather hope to try to make sense of what they were thinking and how markets are likely to behave.

Regarding the first issue, expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years, that seems a pretty fair point.  After all, fiscal deterioration has been consistently getting worse since the turn of the century, the last time we had a budget surplus.  In fact, as per the below Bloomberg chart, absent the Covid drama, the current budget deficit, at -8.5% of GDP, is larger than any time other than the GFC.  And this is occurring when, not only is there no recession, but GDP seems to be accelerating.  In fact, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast has jumped up to 3.86%.  It seems fair to ask if part of that ‘growth’ is a direct result of deficit spending.

As to point number two, a high and growing government debt burden, that also seems like a fair point.  Since the debt ceiling was removed, government debt has grown by ~$1.2 trillion in exactly 2 months’ time (see Bloomberg chart below).  At the same time, the Treasury just announced they would be issuing $1.9 trillion in new debt during the rest of 2023.  Those are pretty big numbers and based on the legislation that was passed last year, the IRA and CHIPS act, as well as the fact that recent tax revenues have been declining, it is reasonable to expect the government debt burden to continue to grow.  

Finally, this poet is in no position to judge the relative erosion of governance compared to other nations, but on an absolute basis, it is not hard to argue that governance in the US has diminished, at least fiscal governance, given the political split between the House of Representatives and the Senate/White House.

Of course, this all begs the question, does it matter for markets?  Well, we have seen this movie before in 2011 when S&P downgraded the US government credit rating after the last standoff in Congress regarding the debt ceiling.  While it was a big deal politically, it actually had limited impact on the markets.  In fact, it may fairly be said that it marked the bottom in the equity market and ignited a massive multi-year rally.  Can we expect the same thing this time?  I would contend the situation now is quite different than back then, with a much higher debt/GDP ratio as well as a much higher level of interest rates.  The point is that the government’s fiscal stance is more tenuous now as interest payments on existing debt either start to crowd out other spending or drive deficits even higher, as per Fitch’s point.

Back then, 10-year yields were also much lower, ~2.5%, and the debt/GDP ratio was ~90% as compared to today’s ~120%.  In other words, there was a little more flexibility for the government.  In fact, following the move, bond yields fell another 100bps over the ensuing year, bottoming at 1.39%, the pre-Covid low.  An optimistic reading of that outcome is that investors looked around the world and decided that despite the flaws in the US, it was still the safest place to be.  Of course, that low interest rate coincided with the Eurozone debt crisis, so perhaps investors were simply fleeing the euro (the dollar did rally) given those problems.

So far, the reaction has been a downtick in equity markets and little movement in the bond market.  But it is not clear to me that either of those moves are directly related to this news.  Rather, it is entirely possible that we are starting to see the effects of what Fitch is describing, rather than the effects of Fitch’s move.

For instance, there is a growing perception that a soft landing is going to be the result of the Fed’s policy moves.  While inflation has obviously fallen from its highs of last year, the two things that have been driving that, lower commodity prices and base effects in the calculation, are reversing going forward.  For instance, oil prices are higher by nearly 17% in the past month while the monthly comparison for CPI in July is just 0.0%, so any inflation at all is going to result in a rise in the Y/Y figure.  

Instead, I would contend that the massive fiscal stimulus from the IRA and CHIPS Act are going to continue to drive demand, as well as debt issuance, and continue to pressure inflation higher.   While nominal growth may remain firm, inflation will too, so real growth will decline.  Arguably, the government needs this outcome in order to devalue their massive debt pile.  However, whether this will be a positive for risk assets is a much tougher question.  Certainly, bond yields are likely to rise in this scenario, and if that is the case, I suspect equity markets may start to revalue as well.  Government spending is not organic economic growth. Instead, it is far less efficient and debt driven, thus underpinning the Fitch viewpoint.  I fear that this time, the ratings downgrade may result in a different result than last time, with risk assets suffering as we go forward.

And that was certainly the case last night as equity markets throughout Asia were all in the red, as are European equities this morning.  Notable declines were seen in Japan (-2.3%), Hong Kong (-2.5%) and Spain (-1.2%), but it is universal.  As to US futures, they are all in the red as well this morning.

As to the bond market, 10-year Treasury yields are back above 4.0%, although they are little changed this morning.  Remember, the last several times the 10-year yield has gone above 4%, there have been problems somewhere in the market, with the UK bond meltdown and Silicon Valley Bank’s implosion the most widely remembered.  The curve is steepening (really getting less inverted) because long rates are rising, not because the Fed is cutting.  If the yield curve heads back to normal with 10-year yields at 5.5%, consider how that will impact equities.  It won’t be pretty.

Away from oil prices, base metals are under pressure this morning as well, potentially because China has yet to offer real support to its economy, or potentially because yields continue to rise thus hurting the investment case.

Finally, the dollar is broadly stronger this morning, certainly against the EMG bloc with KRW (-1.1%) and PHP (-0.75%) the laggards, but weakness widespread.  Both of those currencies are reacting to fading data and concerns over China’s actions going forward.  Meanwhile, in the G10, NOK (+0.45%) and JPY (+0.4%) are the outliers on the high side, with the former following oil while the yen’s move looks to be a trading bounce given the lack of news or rate activity.    However, the rest of the bloc is under pressure led by NZD (-0.6%) and AUD (-0.5%) with both sliding alongside the metals markets.

On the data front, ADP Employment (exp 190K) is coming shortly *Flash, ADP +324K* with most analysts anxiously awaiting not only the headline print, but any revision to last month’s extraordinary 497K rise.  As to Fed speakers, there are none on the calendar today.  All in all, the market will be keenly focused on the ADP especially after mildly softer than expected JOLTS Jobs data yesterday as well as a soft ISM Employment print.  There are certainly still hints of an impending recession, but the situation remains very uncertain.  Remember this, though, prior to the GFC, the consensus view was that a soft landing was going to be achieved.  The same was true in 2001 and as far back as 1980.  The only time the Fed successfully engineered that soft landing was in 1994 and I am not of the mind that they are going to be successful this time.  It’s just not clear what is going to break first.

Good luck

Adf

Walk the Walk

The Chinese are starting to feel
Recession could really be real
With PMI falling
Most pundits are calling
For policy help with more zeal

But so far, despite lots of talk
The Chinese will not walk the walk
One wonders how long
That they’ll sing this song
And when they’ll stop acting the hawk

Right now, the face of ‘all talk, no action’ is Chinese President Xi Jinping.  China’s economy has been slowing, or perhaps a better description is that the post-covid performance has been much less dynamic than had been widely anticipated.  Amongst the more concerning lowlights is the incredibly high youth unemployment rate there, with >21% of the population aged 18-24 unable to find work.  That is not the sign of economic dynamism.  You may recall the enthusiasm that greeted the news that the Covid lockdowns had ended suddenly in January and there was a widespread call for a rally in commodity prices in anticipation of the great reopening.  It never really happened.  Since then, things have been lackluster at best and the Chinese government has grown increasingly concerned.  However, they have not yet grown concerned enough to act in any significant way with fiscal policy support extremely narrow and inconsistent.

Last night simply reinforced these themes as the Caixin PMI Manufacturing data was released at 49.2, a full point below expectations and, of course, below the key 50 level indicating growth.  This was the lowest print since December, but a quick look at the numbers since then shows a very limited growth impulse in China.  The average reading in 2023 has been 50.1, hardly a sign of a rebound.  Now, the Chinese government did come out and say they are going to increase credit to private companies, focusing on small firms and the central government called on cities and provinces to do more to support the property markets.  But talk is cheap and until we see real money getting spent, it is hard to get excited about the Chinese economy.  Ultimately, while the PBOC is very concerned that the renminbi could fall sharply if they loosened their grip on the currency, I expect that a weaker CNY is going to be a theme for the rest of this year, and probably most of next year, as it offers the one release valve that they have available.  7.50 is still in the cards.

Away from the China story, the market’s focus on central banks intensified as the RBA left rates on hold at 4.10% despite market expectations of a 25bp rate hike.  The first casualty of this surprise was the AUD (-1.3%) which is the worst performing currency across the board today.  Apparently, their concern is that growth is faltering, and given the lack of growth in their largest export market, China, they believe that inflation pressures are ebbing and they have achieved their objectives.  Like all central banks these days, they claim to be data dependent and right now the data are telling them not to worry.  I guess that means when if inflation starts to reaccelerate, they will be back at the hiking game.  But for now, like central bankers all over the world, they are eager to claim victory over inflation.  

We heard this from the ECB last week, and it is quite possible that the BOE hints at that on Thursday as well, although inflation is much stickier in the UK than elsewhere.  My point is that the one central bank that is not satisfied is the Fed, where there is still a very wide consensus that the job is not done.  As long as US economic activity remains the best around, and that seems highly likely for another few months at least, it is hard to see any other central bank maintaining a more hawkish stance than the Fed.  Again, the underlying thesis of dollar strength is the Fed will be the most hawkish of all, and nothing we have seen today would contradict that theory.

How have markets responded to this news?  Well, yesterday saw a very late rally to take the US indices higher on the day, but only just, and while the Nikkei (+0.9%) had a good session, continuing its recent run, Chinese stocks, not surprisingly, were weighed down by the baggage of the PMI data.  Europe is also feeling the brunt of weak PMI data as the Manufacturing prints there were all in the low 40’s, except for Germany which managed to remain unchanged at 38.8!  Virtually all the markets on the continent are down by around 1% this morning in response to the data.  In fact, it is data like this that helped inform Madame Lagarde’s belief that the ECB is done, and who can blame her.  While inflation may be a problem, and the ECB’s only mandate, given she is a politician first and central banker second, the optics of tightening policy into a rapidly declining economy would be very difficult to explain.  Again, this bodes well for the dollar overall.  As to the US futures market, they are a bit softer this morning, not dramatically so, but it seems that there is some response to a generally softer tone in the earnings numbers released to date.

Interestingly, despite equity weakness, bond yields are higher in the US and across Europe by a few basis points.  For some reason, the bond market does not seem to agree with stocks, nor it seems, with most central bankers.  Inflation concerns remain top of the list for bond investors, and other than Down Under, where AGBs fell 8.6bps after the RBA left rates on hold, there seems to be a growing worry that the central banks are ending their fight too soon.  As to the US, once again the 10-year yield is approaching 4.0%, clearly a level of great import to the market.  I would also note that JGB yields edged ever so slightly lower overnight and remain below 0.60%.  However, it is still early days with respect to the policy changes there, so the eventual outcomes are still unclear.

Oil prices are very little changed today, consolidating their recent gains.  This must be a concern for the central banks as evidence of slowing economic activity is not leading to slowing demand for oil.  That is a key tenet of their policy structure.  The belief is weaker growth and recession will reduce demand for energy first, and then other things thus reducing inflationary pressures.  But if growth weakens and oil stays firm or rallies, they have a big problem.  Now, the metals complex is all softer this morning, behaving as would be expected in a weakening growth scenario, so it is oil that is the current outlier.

As to the dollar, it is king of the hill this morning.  While Aussie is the weak link, all the commodity currencies are under pressure, down between -0.6% and -0.9%.  But the yen (-0.5%) is also failing to find support on a risk-off day, which comes as a bit of a surprise to all those who continue to believe the BOJ is going to alter policy further.  Here, too, I see further weakness vs. the dollar as time progresses.  Just wait until the Fed hikes again and sounds hawkish as CPI data rebounds.

In the emerging markets, ZAR (-1.4%) has now edged ahead of the Aussie for title of worst of the day, as a response to the Chinese data, its own weak PMI reading and declining metals prices.  But virtually the entire bloc is weaker today with all three geographic areas feeling the pain.  

Yesterday’s US data was definitely soft with Chicago PMI at 42.8 and Dallas Fed at -20.0.  As well, the Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey indicated that credit conditions for commercial and industrial loans had tightened further with reduced demand to boot.  In fact, the tightening is reaching levels last seen during the covid recession and the GFC.  This is not indicative of a soft landing, rather of a much harder one.  This morning we see Construction Spending (exp 0.6%), JOLTS Job Openings (9600K) and ISM Manufacturing (46.9) all at 10:00am.

And yet, despite the data and SLOOS, we heard from Goolsbee and Kashkari that they continue to believe a recession will be avoided.  This morning, Goolsbee is back on the tape, but we already know his view.  However, I do not believe he is in the majority at this point, though he is a voter, so come September, if they hike, perhaps we will have a dissent.

If the data is terrible, perhaps we will see the dollar cede some of this morning’s gains, but absent that outcome, let alone surprising strength, it feels like the dollar has further to rally.

Good luck

Adf

Just Kidding

Remember Friday
When one percent was declared
The top?  Just kidding

Much has been written about the BOJ’s surprising change in policy at their meeting last Friday, when they ostensibly widened the cap on their Yield Curve Control to 1.00% while explaining that flexibility in operations was the watchword.  They did not touch their overnight rate, which remains at -0.10% and there is no apparent belief that they are going to adjust that anytime soon. 

Neither market pricing in the OIS market nor any commentary from any BOJ official has hinted at such a move.  So, the question is, did they really change their policy?

This matters a great deal for those amongst us who care about USDJPY and its potential future direction.  The prevailing narrative has been that once the BOJ altered policy and allowed Japanese interest rates to rise to a more normal setting, investment would flow into JGBs, and the yen would strengthen rapidly.  Remember, a big part of this process is that since the yen is the last remaining currency with negative interest rates in the front end of the curve, it remains the financing currency of choice amongst the speculative and hedge fund set.  Adding to this discussion was the fact that back in December of last year, when Kuroda-san truly surprised the market by raising the YCC cap from 0.25% to 0.50%, it took less than one day for the 10-year JGB yield to test the new cap.  Expectations recently had been that a similar move was likely to be seen this time around as well.

Alas, it is Monday, so some thirty-six market hours into the new policy and already the BOJ has stepped into the market to prevent a further rise in the 10-year yield once it touched 0.60%.  Last night they stepped in with a ¥300 billion program of additional QE.  One cannot be surprised that USDJPY (+0.9%) is higher on this news as it undermines the entire thesis about imminent JPY strength once they changed policy.  And if they didn’t really change policy, as evidenced by the fact that they have already stepped into the market, then THE key pillar of the stronger yen thesis has just been removed.  The other problem for the yen bulls is that the US data last week, especially the GDP and IP data, indicate that the Fed will be under no duress if they continue to tighten policy beyond current levels.  Despite all the arguments about the Fed making another policy error, and there are sound arguments there, in Jay Powell’s eyes, until NFP starts to fall sharply, or Unemployment starts to rise sharply, or both, there are no impediments to a continuation of the current tightening policy.

It is with this in mind that I foresee continued strength in USDJPY, and while it seems likely that a very rapid move higher will see further intervention by the BOJ/MOF like we saw last autumn, another test of 150 is in the cards.  A quick look at the chart below (from tradingeconomics.com) shows that the trend higher in the dollar remains intact with the decline in the first part of July already mostly undone.  For those of you who were looking for a reversion to the 120 or 130 level, I fear that is just not in the cards for a long time to come.

Last Thursday the ECB said
That policy, looking ahead
Need not be so tight
And so, they just might
Stop raising rates, pausing instead

Though their only mandate is prices
They’ve come to a bit of a crisis
Seems growth’s really weak
And so, they will seek
A policy, sans sacrifices

The good news in Europe is that Q2 GDP was positive, which followed a negative Q4 and a flat Q1.  Hooray! The bad news about the data, which showed a 0.3% rise, is that fully half that number comes from Ireland! Now, Ireland’s weight in the Eurozone economy is tiny, about 4%, so the fact that growth there represented half the entire EZ’s growth is remarkable.  However, if you consider that this growth is more illusion than economic activity, it is easier to understand.  The growth is a result of the large profitability of US tech companies that generate their profits, from an accounting perspective, in Ireland to take advantage of the extremely low Irish corporate tax rate of 12.5%.  So, US tech companies had a good quarter driving Irish GDP higher, and by extension Eurozone GDP higher.  But they didn’t really produce that much stuff.

At the same time, Core CPI in the Eurozone printed at 5.5% this morning in July’s preliminary reading, hardly indicative of a collapse and calling into question Lagarde’s seeming dovishness last week.  In the end, the dichotomy between the US economy, where the latest data continues to show a robust outcome, and Europe, where the only thing rising is prices with economic activity lackluster at best, remains the key reason why the dollar’s demise is still a theory and not reality.  

To summarize the information that we have received from around the world in the past several days, Japan is unwilling to allow interest rates to rise very far, European growth is staggering, US growth is accelerating, the ECB is inclined to stop hiking rates and the Fed continues with ‘higher for longer’.  All of this points to the dollar maintaining its value and likely rising further.  I have yet to see anything persuasive in the dollar bear case to address all these issues. 

Now, those are the big picture views, but let’s take a quick tour of the overnight session.  Equities rallied in Asia following the US performance on Friday, but Europe has been a bit more circumspect with a couple of markets showing gains, notably France and Italy, but the rest doing nothing at all.  At the same time, US futures are little changed at this hour (7:30).

Arguably, though, it is the bond market where things are really interesting as yields continue to rebound.  US Treasuries are higher by 1.5bps and pushing back to that all important 4.00% level this morning.  There is a growing belief that if 10-year yields push above 4.10%, that may signal a new framework, a breakout in technical terms, and we could see much higher yields from there.  The Fed is likely to welcome such an event as it will help tighten financial conditions, something that they have been unable to achieve thus far.  However, I do not believe the equity markets would take kindly to that type of movement, so beware.  As to European sovereigns, they are mostly higher by about 1bp-2bps this morning and of course, JGBs saw yields finish higher by 6bps, just below 0.60%.

Oil prices (+1.0%) continue to rise on an organic basis.  By this I mean there have been no announcements, no disruptions and no news of any sort that might indicate a change in the current situation.  In other words, there is just a lot of buying going on.  WTI is well above $81/bbl and we have seen a gain of more than 16% in the past month.  Headline inflation will not be sinking on this news.  We are also seeing a little strength in the metals space this morning with gold, copper and aluminum all firmer as the week begins.  The base metals are responding to continued indications that China is going to support their economy, although direct fiscal payments don’t yet seem likely.  Just wait a few months.

Finally, the dollar is net, little changed, although we have a wide array of gainers and losers today.  In the G10, AUD (+0.9%) and NZD (+0.75%) are the leaders, rallying alongside the commodity rally, while JPY (-0.8% now), is the laggard based on the discussion above.  As to the rest of the bloc, there are more gainers than losers, but the movement has been far less impactful.  In the EMG space, MYR (+1.1%) has been the leading gainer on significant (for Malaysia) equity market inflows of ~$40mm -$50mm last night.  After that, though, the gainers have mostly been EEMEA currencies, and they have not moved that much.  On the downside, ZAR (-0.7%) is the laggard on limited news, implying more of a trading action rather than a fundamental shift.  But on this side of the ledger as well, things haven’t moved that far and net, the space is little changed.

It is an important week for data in the US culminating in the payroll report on Friday.

TodayChicago PMI43.4
 Dallas Fed Mfg-22.5
TuesdayJOLTS Job Openings9600K
 ISM Manufacturing46.9
WednesdayADP Employment183K
ThursdayInitial Claims227K
 Continuing Claims1723K
 Unit Labor Costs2.5%
 Nonfarm Productivity2.2%
 Factory Orders2.1%
 ISM Services53.0
FridayNonfarm Payrolls200K
 Private Payrolls175K
 Manufacturing Payrolls5K
 Unemployment Rate3.6%
 Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (4.2% Y/Y)
 Average Weekly Hours34.4
 Participation Rate62.6%
Source: Bloomberg

In addition to this, we get the first post-FOMC Fedspeak with just two speakers, Goolsbee and Barkin, on the calendar this week although the pace picks up next week.  As long as the data remains strong, I see no reason for the Fed to change its tune nor any reason for the dollar to back off its recent net strength.

Good luck

Adf

A Suggestion

Nought point five percent
Is not a rigid limit
It’s a suggestion

At least that is the word we got last night from Kazuo Ueda, BOJ Governor when he announced some surprising policy changes.  No longer would 10-yr JGBs be targeted to yield 0.0% +/- 0.50%, which in practice had meant a 0.50% cap.  Going forward, the BOJ would buy an unlimited amount of JGBs at 1.0%, if necessary, as its new framework.  Perhaps the most humorous part of the concept was the suggestion that they always saw the 0.50% cap “as references, not as rigid limits, in its market operations.”  That’s right, after 7 years of a seemingly explicit cap on JGB yields, with the BOJ willing to buy unlimited amounts in order to prevent yields from climbing, now they mention it was merely a suggestion, a guideline rather than a hard limit.  It is commentary of this nature that tends to undermine investor trust in central bankers.

Given the surprising nature of the policy changes, although they left their O/N financing rate at -0.10%, it should be no surprise that the market had some large, short-term responses.  JGB yields jumped 10bps on the news, trading to a new 9-year high at 0.575% before slipping back a few bps to close the week.  The Nikkei, meanwhile, fell nearly 2.5% in the immediate aftermath of the decision, but rallied back all afternoon there to close lower by just -0.4%.  It turns out the financial sector benefitted greatly as higher rates really helps them.  As to the yen, it saw substantial short-term volatility, as ahead of the meeting it weakened nearly 1.75%, trading above 141.00, but very quickly reversed course and rallied > 2% as the dollar briefly fell to 138.00.  In the end, though, the yen is just a hair stronger on the day now, back near 139.50 where things started.

The lesson, I think, is that policy shifts tend to have very immediate consequences, but the longer term impacts, especially in the currency market where we have a lot of moving pieces between the Fed, ECB and BOJ, will take longer to play out.

In Europe, inflation remains
The issue that’s caused the most pains
But growth there is stalling
So, Christine is calling
For slowing the rate hike campaigns

“We have an open mind as to what decisions will be in September and subsequent meetings…We might hike, and we might hold. And what is decided in September is not definitive, it may vary from one meeting to another,” Lagarde said.It was with these words that Madame Lagarde informed us the rate hiking cycle in the Eurozone may have ended.  Despite the fact that core CPI remains above 5.0% while their deposit rate is now at 3.75%, seemingly not high enough to effectively combat the inflation situation, it is becoming ever clearer that the European growth story is starting to slide.  This is in direct contrast to the US growth story, which based on yesterday’s extremely robust data, shows no signs of fading.

But as I have written numerous times in the past, once the Fed is perceived to have stopped raising interest rates, it was clear the ECB would be right behind them.  The entire basis of my stronger dollar thesis has been that other central banks will find it very difficult to tighten policy aggressively to fight inflation if the Fed has stopped doing so.  

In the end, no country really wants a strong currency as the mercantilist tendencies of every country, seeking to increase exports at the expense of their domestic inflation situation, remains quite strong.  Faster growth with higher inflation is a much preferred economic outcome for essentially every government than slower growth with low inflation.  Inflation can always be blamed on someone else (greedy companies, Ukraine War, OPEC+, supply chain disruptions) while faster growth can be ‘owned’ by the government.

So, between the ECB and BOJ, we did see further policy tightening in line with the Fed’s actions on Wednesday.  Arguably, the difference is that the US economic data continues to be quite strong, at least on the surface.  Yesterday’s first look at Q2 GDP printed at 2.4%, much higher than expected and showing no signs of the ‘most widely anticipated recession in history.’  The strength was seen in Government spending (IRA and CHIPS Act), Private Domestic Investment (which is directly related to that as companies build out new plant infrastructure) and Services, i.e. travel and restaurants.  Once again, I will say that as long as the US economy continues to show growth of this nature, and especially as long as the Unemployment Rate doesn’t rise sharply, the Fed will have free rein to continue to raise rates going forward if inflation does not settle back to their 2% target.

One thing to consider regarding the central bank comments and guidance is that virtually every one of them has ended the strict forward guidance we had seen in the past.  Rather, data dependence is the new watchword as none of them want to be caught out doing the wrong thing.  Alas, the result is that, by definition, if they are looking at trailing data, they will always be doing the wrong thing.  I expect that one of the key features of the past 40 years, ever reducing volatility in markets, is going to be a victim of the current framework.  It is with this in mind that I suggest hedging financial exposures, whether FX, rates, or commodities, will be far more important to company balance sheets and bottom lines than they have been in the past.

Ok, let’s see how investors are behaving today as we head into the weekend.  We’ve already discussed the Japanese market, but Chinese shares, both onshore and in HK, had a very strong day as there was more talk of official policy support for the property market there.  Ultimately, it is very clear they are going to need to spend a lot more money to prevent an even larger calamity.  European shares, though, are generally little changed this morning with investors preparing to take the month of August off, as usual there.  Finally, US futures are higher this morning after what turned out to be a surprising fall in all three major indices yesterday.  The overall positive data plus indication that the Fed may be done seemed to be the right conditions for further gains.  But markets are perverse, that much we know.  We shall see if US markets can hold onto these premarket gains.  I would say that a lower close on the day would be quite a negative for the technicians.

In the bond market, yesterday saw US 10-year yields jump 15bps, its largest rise this year, although it is giving back about 4bps of that this morning.  European sovereigns, though, are little changed this morning and have not been subject to the same volatility as the Treasury market given the far less exciting economic picture there.  If the ECB is truly finished, my take is yields there could slide a little over time.

In the commodity markets, oil (-0.35%) is a touch lower this morning, but the uptrend continues.  This certainly seems to be more about reduced supply than increased demand, although with the US data, the demand picture looks better.  Interestingly, both gold (+0.6%) and copper (+1.0%) are higher this morning despite the dollar holding its own.  Yesterday saw a sharp decline in both and I think there is a realization that was overdone.

Speaking of the dollar, it is modestly softer today after a strong gain yesterday.  In the G10, GBP (+0.6%) is the leader followed by NOK (+0.5%) although AUD (-0.6%) and NZD (-0.3%) are taking the opposite tack.  The pound seems to be benefitting from anticipation of next weeks’ BOE meeting where 25bps is a given, but the probability of a 50bp hike seems to be creeping up.  Meanwhile, NOK is just following oil’s broad trend with WTI just below $80/bbl now.  Meanwhile, Aussie seems to be suffering some malaise from the BOJ actions, at least that’s what people are saying although I’m not sure I understand the connection.  Perhaps it is the idea that higher JPY yields will result in unwinding the large AUDJPY carry trades that are outstanding.  

However, the emerging markets have seen a much wider dispersion of performance with much of the APAC bloc under pressure last night on the back of the strong dollar performance yesterday, while we are seeing strength in LATAM and EEMEA currencies this morning, which really looks an awful lot like simple trading activity with positions getting reduced after yesterday’s dollar performance.

In addition to the GDP data yesterday, we saw a lower-than-expected Initial Claims print at 221K while Durable Goods orders blew out on the high side at 4.7%!  Again, lots to like about the US data right now.  Today we see Personal Income (exp 0.5%) and Spending (0.4%) along with the Core PCE Deflator (0.2% M/M, 4.2% Y/Y) and finally Michigan Sentiment (72.6).  based on yesterday’s results, I would expect the Income and Spending data to be strong along although PCE is probably finding a bottom here.

In the end, even if the Fed has stopped hiking, although with the economy still showing strength that is not a guaranty, I find it hard to believe that the ECB will go any further, and the tendency around the world will be to slow or stop tightening as well.  I still like the dollar in the medium term.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf