No Mean Feat

Nvidia managed to beat
The whispers, which was no mean feat
But PMI data
Revealed that the beta
For growth going forward’s dead meat

The upshot is pundits believe
The market will get a reprieve
Tomorrow, Chair Jay
Could possibly say
That higher for longer’s naïve

Markets have been choppy, if nothing else, for the past 24 hours as we have seen substantial moves in Treasury (and other sovereign) yields, a major rally in gold, and the dollar fall sharply and then regain almost all of its losses.  Oh yeah, equity markets continue to rally as the Nvidia story was even better than hoped by the biggest bulls out there.  Briefly, the chipmaker exceeded earnings forecasts by a large margin and guided Q3 numbers even higher as the CEO explained that things were just getting started in the AI boom.  While he is certainly correct that there will be a lot of investment in the space going forward, it remains an open question as to whether AI will actually change the course of human history.  After all, cold fusion was recently “shown” to work amidst a great deal of hype, and that hasn’t worked out quite like the bulls expected.  

More importantly, there is a long time between now and when AI is going to result in all these great leaps forward, and we need to address the here and now.  And that is where things look a little less wonderful than they did before the week began. 

Typically, the PMI data doesn’t get as much play in the US as it does in Europe and Asia since the US has their own survey, ISM, which is reported at the beginning of each month.  But after a series of weak numbers from Europe yesterday, the US PMI data was much weaker than expected with all three indicators, Manufacturing (47.0), Services (51.0) and Composite (50.4) coming in at least a point lower than estimates and indicating that while perhaps not in a recession, the US growth picture is quite subdued.  

Again, the survey data has been pointing, for some time, to economic weakness that has not yet appeared in many of the hard numbers like NFP or Retail Sales, but the market, at least the bond market, is quickly becoming of the opinion that recession is around the corner.  One need only look at 10yr yields to see the trend.  Yesterday saw 10-yr Treasury yields slide 13bps after touching a new cycle high on Tuesday.  This morning they are largely unchanged, but the day is still young.  But the picture in Europe and the UK is much more substantial, with yields, which had been rising alongside Treasuries have fallen far more sharply.  Since Tuesday’s close, German bund yields are down 19bps, Italian BTP yields have fallen 23bps and UK gilt yields are lower by 13 bps.  The market continues to reduce the terminal rate for the ECB, now below 3.80% and for the BOE, now 5.80%, as economic weakness is clearly the key concern.

Tomorrow, we will hear from Chairman Powell, but also from Madame Lagarde and then Saturday, BOE deputy governor Broadbent will make a speech.  In other words, at this point, markets are quite keen to hear if there is any change in the G3 central bank mindset.  Based on the large retracement in yields, markets are clearly expecting a dovish outcome.  While that is certainly possible, I think there is ample room for the Chairman to maintain the current view of higher for longer absent weakness in real data.

Speaking of real data, yesterday’s NFP revisions were a bit less than the whispers, with 306K jobs removed from the record.  I expect that data was also part of the bond market rally as changes there mean more than the PMI data, at least they have so far.  In the end, the dichotomy between the bond market which is beginning to believe the recession story, and the stock market, which sees no landing at all, is widening.  Commodity markets have been leaning recession, and the dollar has been strong, which would arguably be more in tune with growth than weakness.  In other words, there is no consistency here so we will need to continue to focus on the information as it comes out.

As mentioned, stocks are on fire this morning after the Nvidia earnings with yesterday’s anticipatory US rally matched by Asian gains, especially in HK which jumped >2%, and Europe is all green, but not nearly as aggressively with gains on the order of 0.3% across the board.  As to US futures, on the back of Nvidia, NASDAQ futures are higher by 1.3%, which is dragging the SPX up as well, however the Dow is little changed this morning.  It seems the Dow’s members lack that high tech sense about them.

Turning to commodities, oil (+0.3%) is bouncing off its recent lows although remains under pressure overall on the economic weakness story.  Gold (+0.2%) which exploded higher yesterday by more than 1%, remains in demand, perhaps on the back of the BRICS meeting and some discussion there, while base metals are softer, also on the recession theme.

As to the dollar, it is stronger across the board vs. its G10 counterparts on the day, but if you look at the move over the past two sessions, it is a more mixed picture.  Yesterday morning’s USD strength was reversed in the wake of the PMI and NFP revision data and the dollar fell sharply on the day against virtually all its G10 and EMG counterparts.  This morning, it is back on the way up, against both groupings, leaving an overall mixed picture.

Perhaps this would be a good time to touch on the BRICS meeting.  For those who believe in the end of the dollar, this had to be quite a disappointment given there was virtually no discussion of a new currency.  However, they did invite 5 countries to join, Saudi Arabia, Argentina, Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, so expansion is real. (I wonder if they are going to change the name!). However, if you are Brazil, India, South Africa, Argentina or Egypt, all democracies with elected leadership, it seems a question that needs to be asked is do they really want to get into bed with a murderous thug like Putin, who coincidentally, had a key rival murdered yesterday.  That is not a very good look.  At any rate, anything that is going on in the BRICS group remains a distant question, at least from a current risk management perspective.  

Meanwhile, the dollar’s fluctuations are going to remain beholden to the perception of the US economy and the Fed.  Yesterday’s weakness was a clear response to declining yields on the weak data.  In the same vein, look for any strong data to help boost the dollar back up.

Speaking of data, today brings a good amount with Initial (exp 240K) and Continuing (1705K) Claims, Chicago Fed National Activity Index (-0.22) and Durable Goods (-4.0%, 0.2% ex transport).  Yesterday’s other data was New Home Sales, which was slightly higher than expected, but after a downward revision to the previous month, so no real net change.

Right now, stocks are the driver, tech stocks in particular, but watch the bond market.  If today’s data hints at weakness, I suspect that yields will fall further as will the dollar.  Of course, that means stocks will probably rally on the lower yield story.  

Good luck

Adf

Alternate Ways

In Joburg a gath’ring of nations
Is trying to firm up foundations
For alternate ways
That each of them pays
The other with no complications

Meanwhile, we are starting to hear
A story that we should all fear
The calls have come forth
Inflation that’s north
Of two percent’s where Jay should steer

The BRICS nations are meeting in Johannesburg starting today with, ostensibly, a mission to exit the dollar financial system.  While Russia has already done so involuntarily, the biggest proponent of the move is China, although the other nations are certainly willing to listen.  In addition to this goal, they will hear from many other developing nations as to whether these other nations merit inclusion in the BRICS club.

Ultimately, the problem that this disparate group of nations has is that none of them really trust any of the others.  Certainly, the historical conflict between China and India is well-known and long-lasting.  It was not that long ago that their soldiers were shooting at each other in the Himalayas.  At the same time, both Brazil and South Africa are extremely remote from the other nations and have completely different economic and political systems.  In other words, the common ground of wanting to do something about the US and its dollar, while certainly a goal, is unlikely to be enough for any of them to risk potential negative consequences of a failed concept.  

Much will be made of this meeting in the press, but we have already heard from South Africa’s FinMin, Enoch Godongwana, that it is premature for South Africa to stop using the USD and SWIFT system.  Ultimately, my strong belief is this is much ado about nothing, at least for the foreseeable future.  Perhaps in 25 years, after the 4th Turning is complete, the global currency system will be different, but not anytime soon.

Which brings us to the other story which has me far more concerned about the dollar and the US economy, the substantial increase in calls by mainstream economists to raise the Fed’s inflation target.  Understand that I have never been a fan of the target to begin with, recognizing its arbitrary nature.  However, the world in which we live has been predicated on the idea that the Fed is focused on that target and its policies are designed to maintain a relatively low rate of inflation.  Raising that target, with 3% the new favored call, is just as arbitrary as the initial level, but it changes the dynamic in the economy as well as markets.

It seems these calls are coming from the hyper-Keynesians who lean toward MMT and believe that the risk of any economic growth slowdown should be addressed ahead of all other concerns.  (It could be argued that the current administration is quite concerned that a recession next year, heading into the presidential election, would not favor President Biden’s reelection.). Now, nobody is happy when the economy slows down as it makes life difficult for us all, but one of the reasons the nation is in its current situation, with unsustainable levels of debt outstanding, is because the willingness of any politician to allow markets to actually clear (meaning asset prices fall sufficiently to hurt the 1% club) is essentially nil.  This has been the underlying driver of constant spending programs and ultimately, the cause of the ballooning budget deficits and Federal debt.  

The unspoken piece of this concept is that permanently higher inflation will reduce the real value of the outstanding debt that much more quickly, hence allowing for even more deficit spending going forward.  The fact that higher inflation is an effective tax on the bottom 99% of the income brackets, with the pain increasing more rapidly the further down that scale you look, is of no concern it seems.

Thus far, Chairman Powell has been adamant that there is no change to the goal on the table.  But I assure you that the longer it takes for inflation to retreat to its former levels, the more we will hear about this idea.  When I combine this concept with my belief that inflation is going to remain sticky in the 3%-4% range going forward for quite a while, it does not paint a promising picture.  The Fed already has credibility issues; moving the goalposts in the middle of their inflation fight would really destroy any remaining credibility they have, and that would be a real problem for monetary policy activities going forward.

But these problems are far too forward looking for today’s markets.  Instead, the future is…Nvidia!  At least, that seems to be the case right now.  As investors await their Q2 earnings release tomorrow afternoon, the working thesis seems to be that they will beat the currently inflated analyst expectations and drive the next leg of the equity bull market higher.  Now, remember, they currently trade at a 228 P/E ratio, which seems pretty high in the scheme of things, regardless of the promise of AI going forward.  (You can tell AI didn’t write this as I call into question its value here).  There has been much talk of a big ‘beat’ in earnings and that has been the catalyst for today’s equity rally.  Well, that and the fact that the Chinese seem to have instructed their ‘plunge protection team’ to get back to buying Chinese stocks as well as the yuan.  Regardless of the rationale, though, risk is definitely in favor today.

Asian equity markets were higher across the board, with the big ones all higher by just under 1%.  European bourses are similarly situated, all higher by about 1% while US futures, at this hour (7:30) are lagging a bit, only up by about 0.5%, although that was after a pretty solid performance yesterday.  Woe betide the equity markets if Nvidia misses its numbers!

At the same time, bond yields are generally lower this morning with 10yr Treasuries down 2bps from yesterday’s new closing high near 4.35%.  European sovereign bonds have also seen demand with yields sliding between 4bps (Germany) and 7bps (Italy) as a combination of mildly positive UK Public Sector Finance news and a very large Eurozone Current Account surplus seem to have bond investors quite excited.  Asia, however, did not share this excitement with JGB yields rising 2bps and getting to their highest level (0.663%) since the change of policy last month.  

On the commodity front, oil (-0.2%) has edged back below $80/bbl, representing a sharp decline yesterday afternoon after signs of increased supply started to show up in the market.  The metals markets, however, are in much better shape this morning with gold (+0.4%) back above $1900/oz and the base metals both firmer as well.  It seems that mildly lower yields and a weaker dollar are having quite a positive effect.

Speaking of the dollar, it is under broader pressure this morning vs. most of its G10 and EMG counterparts.  In the G10, NZD, AUD and SEK have all gained about 0.5% with NOK +0.4% as commodity prices find some support, and the China renewal story helps the overall global growth story this morning.    While the euro is little changed on the day, the rest of the bloc has edged higher as well.  Meanwhile, in the EMG bloc, ZAR (+1.1%) is the biggest gainer on the day, perhaps getting a little boost from positive BRICS vibes, but more likely from positive commodity vibes.  As to the rest of the bloc, APAC currencies have benefitted from the China story and THB (+0.65%) has benefitted from the resolution of the political crisis with a new PM finally being named.

On the data front, we see Existing Home Sales (exp 4.15M) and Richmond Fed Manufacturing (-10) and we hear from several Fed speakers.  However, with Powell on the calendar for Friday morning, I don’t think a great deal of attention will be paid to any other Fed speaker until he’s done.  There is a strong belief he is going to lay out the policy framework going forward, but I have a suspicion that he is happy with the current ‘guidance’ of higher for longer and may not say much at all.

Right now, risk is to the fore, and as such, the dollar is likely to remain under pressure until that changes.  It may be this way all week, or if Nvidia misses its numbers, don’t be surprised to see the dollar reverse course higher after that.

Good luck

Adf

Simply a Bummer

As tiresome as it may be
To talk about China and Xi
The doldrums of summer
Are simply a bummer
With nothing else worthy to see

However, come Friday we’ll turn
To Jackson Hole where we should learn
If Jay and the Fed,
When looking ahead,
Decide rate hikes soon can adjourn

The biggest news overnight was that the PBOC cut interest rates again, but this time somewhat less than expected.  You may recall that last week, they cut the 1-yr Lending Facility rate by 15bps in a surprising move.  In fact, this is what started the entire chain of events last week that resulted in China dominating the macroeconomic news.  Well, last night they cut the 1yr Loan Prime rate by a less than expected 10bps with the market looking for a 15bp cut.  And they left the 5yr Loan Prime rate, the rate at which most mortgages in China are priced, unchanged at 4.20% rather than implementing the 15bp cut that the market had anticipated.  The result is that so far, Chinese support for their economy remains tepid at best.

At the same time, there continues to be a grave concern in Beijing regarding the exchange rate as, once again, the daily fixing was far below the market rate, and once again, the renminbi fell anyway.  It has become abundantly clear that the PBOC is quite concerned over a ‘too weak’ renminbi, hence the maintenance of the 5yr interest rate.  As well, it was widely reported that Chinese state-owned banks were actively selling USDCNY in the market to prevent further weakness in their currency.  

Perhaps this is a good time to briefly discuss the concept of the end of the dollar again, a topic that continues to make headlines.  One of the key pillars of this thesis is that the PBOC has reduced the number of dollars on its balance sheet substantially over the past several years which is seen as an indication that they are preparing to support some new reserve asset.  However, as last night’s price action indicated, it is quite possible, if not likely, that the only change has been one of location, rather than amount.  As the PBOC reduced the dollars on its balance sheet, the big state-owned banks all increased the amount on their balance sheets.  So now, the PBOC can direct those banks to intervene on their behalf whenever they want to do something.  At the same time, the PBOC has the appearance of decoupling, something they are clearly trying to demonstrate.  

This week is the big BRICS meeting where the stories are that they are going to unveil a new BRICS currency, allegedly to be gold-backed, as these nations try to undermine US power as well as offer an alternative to non-aligned nations.  The thing to remember about this group of widely disparate nations is that it has never been a cohesive bloc, it was simply an acronym created by a Goldman Sachs analyst in 2001 to describe a group of fast-growing emerging markets.  However, other than China and Russia, which have become closer since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, they really have very little in common.  They are geographically widely diverse, have very different governing structures as well as very different financial and monetary policies.  In other words, there is nothing to suggest they can act as a cohesive group for any major decision.  While I am certain there will be some announcement of some sort at the end of the conference, an alternative to the dollar will not be coming anytime soon.

As to Jackson Hole, since Powell’s speech isn’t until Friday morning, we have plenty of time to touch on that topic later in the week.  In the meantime, risk is arguably in modest demand this morning.  While Chinese shares suffered significantly overnight on the disappointing rate news, European bourses are all nicely higher, generally between 0.75% and 1.00%.  Too, US futures are firmer this morning by about 0.5% after a late day rally Friday brought the major indices back near unchanged on the day from earlier lows in the session.

At the same time, bond yields continue to rally with 10-year Treasury yields back at 4.30%, up 4bps this morning, while European sovereign yields are all higher by between 4bps and 5bps.  It seems the bond market is not completely on board with the soft-landing narrative even though an increasing number of analysts are coming around to that view.  I think what we have learned thus far is that the US economy is not nearly as interest rate sensitive as it used to be.  The post-Covid period of QE and ZIRP saw a massive refinancing of debt, both mortgage and corporate, into longer-dated, low fixed rates.  With yields higher, there is much less need for refinancing, at least not yet, and so many of the problems that have been widely expected just have not happened yet.  At some point, when debt needs to be refinanced, if rates are still at current levels, it is likely to prove problematic for the companies and the economy writ large.  But that could still be some time from now.  In the meantime, I continue believe the yield curve inversion, which is now down to -67bps, could disappear completely by 10yr yields continuing to rise.  That is clearly not the consensus view.

Turning to commodities, they are generally looking good today led by oil (+1.2%) which has rebounded over the past several sessions and is back above $82/bbl.  The metals, too, are looking good with gold up at the margin, although hovering just below $1900/oz, while copper also has a bit of support today, up 0.3%.  For the industrial metals, China remains a key question mark.  If the Chinese economy continues to slow, then demand for these commodities is likely to be disappointing and prices seem likely to come under short-term pressure.  But remember, the long-term story remains one where many of these are essential for the mooted energy transition, and there simply is not enough of the stuff to satisfy the demand.  Longer term, prices still have room to rise.

Finally, the dollar is starting to slide as I type.  An earlier mixed picture has seen buyers of NOK (+0.75%) as oil continues to rebound, but also in essentially all of the G10 with only the yen (-0.3%) lagging.  In fairness, this is classic risk-on price action.  Turning to emerging market currencies, Asian currencies were mostly under pressure last night after the China rate news, but this morning EEMEA currencies are looking much better as they follow the euro (+0.3%) higher.  It appears that fear is taking a day off today.

On the data front, there is not much of real interest this week:

TuesdayExisting Home Sales4.15M
WednesdayFlash Manufacturing PMI49.0
 Flash Services PMI52.0
 New Home Sales704K
ThursdayInitial Claims240K
 Continuing Claims1700K
 Chicago Fed Nat’l Index-0.20
 Durable Goods-4.0%
 -ex transports0.2%
FridayMichigan Sentiment71.2
 Powell Speech 

Source: Bloomberg

Given the number of market participants on summer holiday, I suspect that there will be very little activity this week until we hear from Chairman Powell.  I would look for a little bit of choppiness, but no real directional moves until we know the Fed’s latest views.  And there is a real chance that he doesn’t tell us anything new, which means that we would then be waiting for NFP a week from Friday.  Net, until the Fed’s hawkishness breaks, I still like the dollar best.

Good luck

Adf

Truly Mind-Blowing

Officials see no
Urgency to rock the boat
YCC ‘s still law

As reported in numerous places overnight, the BOJ has let slip that they are not considering any changes to the current policy mix at their meeting next week.  You may recall that there has been an uptick in discussion about the ongoing review that began just last month and the idea that Ueda-san was preparing to tweak YCC or to end YCC or something else.  That has been a key driving force in the recent rise in JGB yields, which had climbed 10bps, to as high as 0.47%, during July.  Short JPY positions in the currency market were getting covered in waves and we saw the yen strengthen more than 5% in the first two weeks of July.

This was all part of the narrative of the dollar’s imminent decline and used in conjunction with the rising de-dollarization narrative as part of a new world order type of argument.  Nobody wanted to hold dollars, and this was the proof!  

Oops!  Maybe this narrative will need to be tweaked a bit as not only has the BOJ thrown a serious amount of cold water on the changing YCC story, with JGB yields slipping a further 2.5bps last night, but this morning we were also treated to a story about India’s Foreign Minister explaining the country will not support any common BRICS currency for trade.  There is no doubt that Russia and China would like to see the dollar lose its global hegemonic status, but wishes are just that.  Do not dismiss the dollar at any time in the near future, it is not going to lose its current status.  However, that doesn’t mean it will stop fluctuating in FX markets, those are two different things.

There once was a great big recession
Forecast by the ‘nomics profession
The Fed had raised rates
For thirteen straight dates
And so, growth seemed out of the question

But so far the data is showing
The ‘cononmy’s seems to be growing
With joblessness sinking
Quite many are thinking
No landing.  It’s truly mind-blowing

Aside from the yen news, the market continues to try to understand the current economic cycle, which is clearly not very similar to any cycle in recent memory.  Every day I read things from very accomplished analysts about the imminent decline in the US economy and how the Fed will be forced to eat crow soon enough.  As well, if I scroll a bit further down my Fintwit feed, I find different accomplished analysts who explain that the no landing scenario is the best estimate and that the economy is on solid footing with inflation declining smoothly and heading back to its “natural” spot of 2%.  

And in fairness, one can slice the data up in many different ways to draw both conclusions.  One of the most interesting features of this situation is how different asset classes are concluding very different things from the data.  Broadly speaking, the US equity market is all-in on the no-landing scenario, trading higher almost every day (yesterday’s NASDAQ performance excepted and due to some weaker than expected earnings numbers), while the commodity space is far more circumspect over continued growth with base metals, especially, under broad pressure for the past several months.  Given the importance of copper and aluminum in the industrial process for almost every manufactured item, the pricing certainly indicates anticipated weakness in demand.  We know this because there is no excess supply on the way.

As to the bond market, I fear that the signal-to-noise ratio from bond yields has greatly diminished during the period of QE.  I am not one to easily dismiss the recession signal from the inverted yield curve, and as we currently sit at -100bps for the 2yr-10yr curve and -160bps for the 3m-10yr, both extremely large inversions, it is easy to conclude that a recession is on its way.  

But consider, if you look at all the recessions that are used as the basis for the strength of this signal, only the Covid recession occurred after the Fed began its QE program in 2009.  Prior to the GFC, the Fed just never held very many long-term Treasury bonds and $0.00 of mortgage-backed securities on its balance sheet.  It is not hard to believe that the Fed has substantially distorted the yield curve for the past 14 years, driving long-term rates far lower than they otherwise would have been based on economic conditions.  What would 10-year Treasury yields look like if the Fed didn’t own the ~$7.25 trillion of long-dated paper that currently sits on the balance sheet?  I suggest 10-year yields would be A LOT higher.  100bps?  Maybe.  Maybe more, maybe less, but 10-year yields are not really telling us that investors believe the economy is going to slow down.  Rather, I might suggest they are telling us that many players are bidding for bonds because they must for regulatory reasons (banks and insurance companies) and that there isn’t as much supply available as the gross issuance would indicate.

But, keeping that in mind, the data that gets released regularly continues to confuse.  For instance, yesterday saw Initial Claims data fall further, back to 228K and below all forecasts.  The rising trend that we had seen a few months ago seems to be reversing.  At the same time, the Philly Fed data was weaker than expected at -13.5 and Existing Home Sales fell to 4.16M.  Finally, Leading Indicators printed at -0.7%, a tick worse than forecast and the 15th consecutive negative reading of this indicator.  So, which is it?  Employment strength means growth?  Or weakening manufacturing and housing points to weakness?  As I wrote earlier this week, we need a new term to describe the current economy, as recession in the traditional view doesn’t seem right, but growth remains lackluster at best with parts of the economy, notably manufacturing, seemingly in contraction.

Well, as we head into the weekend, that is a lot to consider, and perhaps inspiration will strike and we will all understand things on Monday.  Just don’t count on it!  Meanwhile, ending the week, equities are kind of unhappy, with the Nikkei not taking kindly to the BOJ talk and probably a few more losers than gainers in Asia.  That same sentiment prevails in Europe, with both gainers and losers but leaning toward negative while US futures are bouncing from yesterday’s declines.
Bond yields are drifting a bit lower this morning, but only on the order of 1bp-2bps in the US and Europe, although Gilt yields have risen 2bps on the back of much stronger than expected UK Retail Sales data released today.  We’ve already discussed JGB’s, and I expect those yields to grind lower from here along with the yen.

Oil, however, has continued its recent strong performance, up 1.2% this morning on supply concerns as there were larger than expected draws on inventories this week.  Meanwhile, gold (-0.2%) is edging lower as the dollar regains its footing.  Today, copper and aluminum are both a bit firmer, but their recent trend continues downward.

Finally, the dollar is definitely in fine fettle this morning, rallying against all its G10 counterparts except NOK (+0.4%) which is obviously benefitting from oil’s rally.  The yen (-1.15%) is the laggard, which given the BOJ news, is no surprise.  Meanwhile, in the EMG space, it is a sea of red with THB (-1.3%) the worst performer followed by KRW (-1.1%) and TWD (-0.5%).  The baht saw a setback with the ongoing political machinations as hopes for a new government have been delayed, if not dashed, while the won saw its exports fall sharply as Chinese economic activity slows.  Taiwan is feeling the same effects as South Korea in that regard.

And that’s really it for today.  There is no data nor any speakers on the calendar, so the dollar seems likely to simply follow today’s sentiment which, given its weakness over the past several sessions, is likely to see more short covering and potentially a bit more strength.

Good luck and good weekend
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