Surprise!

Ishiba explained
He was just kidding about
Tight money…surprise!

 

So, yesterday’s biggest mover was JPY (-2.1%), where the market responded to comments by new PM Ishiba that all his previous comments regarding policy normalization were not really serious (and you thought Kamala flip-flopped!)

Here are his comments in the wake of that massive 12% decline in the Nikkei back in early August:

“The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is on the right policy track to gradually align with a world with positive interest rates,” ruling party heavyweight Shigeru Ishiba told Reuters in an interview.

“The negative aspects of rate hikes, such as a stock market rout, have been the focus right now, but we must recognize their merits, as higher interest rates can lower costs of imports and make industry more competitive,” he said.

And here are his comments after meeting with BOJ Governor Ueda Wednesday morning in Tokyo:

“From the government’s standpoint, monetary policy must remain accommodative as a trend given current economic conditions.”

See if you can tell the difference.  The below chart includes the market response to his election last week as well as its response since uttering those last words early yesterday morning.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Remember the idea that the carry trade was dead and completely unwound?  Well, now the talk is its coming back with a vengeance between Powell sounding less dovish, Ishiba sounding more dovish and then yesterday’s ADP Employment Report printing at a higher-than-expected 143K.  Maybe all those rate cuts that had been priced are not going to show up in traders’ Christmas stockings after all.  Certainly, the Nikkei (+2.0%) was pleased with the weaker yen which has fallen further this morning (-0.2%) after further comments from BOJ member Noguchi calling for more time to evaluate the situation before considering tighter policy.  In fairness, though, Noguchi-san is a known dove and voted against the rate hikes back in July.  Summing it all up here, it is hard to make a case currently for the yen to strengthen too much from here.  Rather, a test of 150 seems the next likely outcome.

In England, the Old Lady’s Guv
Explained that he’s really a dove
He’ll be more aggressive
Though not quite obsessive
While showing investors some love

The other big mover this morning is the British pound (-1.1%) which is responding to an interview BOE Governor Bailey had in The Guardian where he explained he could become “a bit more aggressive” in their policy easing stance provided inflation data continues to trend lower.  Now, prior to the interview, the OIS market was already pricing in a 25bp cut at the next meeting in November, and 45bps of cuts by year end, and it is not much changed now.  But for whatever reason, the FX market decided this was the news on which to sell pounds.  

Remember, as I’ve repeatedly explained, the dollar’s demise is likely to be far slower than dollar bears believe because now that the Fed has begun cutting rates, and nothing is going to stop them going forward for a while, other central banks will feel empowered to cut as well.  The only way the dollar falls sharply is if the Fed is the most dovish central bank of the bunch, but Monday, Chairman Powell made clear that was not the case.  In fact, yesterday, Richmond Fed president Barkin was the latest to explain that things look good, but they are in no hurry to cut aggressively.  Other central banks are now in a position to ease policy more aggressively, something many had been seeking to do as economic activity was slowing in their respective countries, without the fear of a currency collapse. 

It was just a few days ago that I highlighted key technical levels the market was focused on, which if broken might herald a much weaker dollar.  Across the board, we are more than 2% from those levels (EUR 1.12, GBP 1.35, DXY 100.00) and traveling swiftly in the other direction.  A quick peek at the chart below shows that while the exact timing of these moves was not synchronized, the outcome is the same.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Moving beyond the FX market, where the dollar is stronger literally across the board, the economic story continues to muddle along.  Services PMI data was released this morning with most of Europe looking a bit better, although the Italians were lagging, but not enough to get people excited about European assets in general.  Equity markets on the continent are mixed with both the DAX (-0.6%) and CAC (-0.8%) under pressure while Spain’s IBEX (+0.1%) and the FTSE 100 (+0.25%) buck the trend on the back of Spain’s best in class PMI data and, of course, the UK rate cut frenzy.  As to last night’s Asian markets, while China remains closed, the Hang Seng (-1.5%) gave back some of yesterday’s gains and the rest of the region was unconvinced in either direction.  While US markets eked out the smallest of gains yesterday, futures this morning are pointing lower by -0.4% or so at this hour (6:45).

In the bond market, Treasury yields are higher by 3bps this morning, as the market absorbs the idea that the Fed may not be cutting in 50bp increments each meeting and traders responded to a much better than expected ADP Employment Report yesterday (143K, exp 120K) so are prepping for a good NFP number tomorrow. Meanwhile, European sovereign yields are all higher by between 5bps and 7bps as they catch up to yesterday’s Treasury move, much of which occurred after European markets were closed.  One thing to keep in mind here is that bond markets, at least 10-year and longer maturities, are far more concerned with the inflation outlook than the central bank discussion.  Right now, as the world awaits Israel’s response to the Iranian missile attack, concerns are rife that oil prices could move much higher and take inflation readings along for the ride.  If you add that to the idea that 3% is the new 2% for central bank inflation targets, something which is also gaining credence in the market, the case for higher bond yields is strong.

Speaking of oil markets, once again this morning the black sticky stuff is higher (+2.0%) amid those Middle East conflagration fears.  As I highlighted yesterday, if Israel were to attack Iran’s oil fields and knock a large portion offline, I would expect oil to get back to $100 in a hurry.  And if the damage was sufficient to keep it offline for many months, we could stay there.  However, the combination of the stronger dollar and higher oil prices has taken a toll on the metals markets with all the major metals weaker this morning (Au -0.5%, Ag -1.1%, Cu -1.5%).  This strikes me as a short-term phenomenon as the fundamental supply/demand issues remain in favor of higher prices and anything that drives inflation higher will help price as well.  But not today.

As to the dollar, I have already discussed its broad-based strength with gains against literally all its G10 and EMG counterparts.  It will take some pretty bad US data to change this story today.

Speaking of the data, as it’s Thursday, we get the weekly Initial (exp 220K) and Continuing (1837K) Claims data as well as ISM Services (51.7) and Factory Orders (0.0%).  Yesterday, in a surprise, EIA oil inventories rose, a welcome outcome, but not enough to offset the Middle East fears.  The only Fed speaker on the calendar today is Atlanta Fed president Bostic, one of the more hawkish members, so my guess is he is likely to continue to preach moderation in rate cuts.  Speaking of the Atlanta Fed, their GDPNow reading fell to 2.5% for Q3 after the weaker than expected construction spending the other day, but it remains above the Fed’s estimated long-term trend growth rate.

Putting it all together, I can see no good reason for the dollar to reverse this morning’s gains absent a Claims number above 250K.  The hyper dovishness that had been a critical part of the dollar decline story has been beaten back.  Of course, tomorrow brings the NFP report, so anything can still happen.  

Good luck

Adf

Impuissance

The world now awaits the response
Of Israel, which at the nonce
Has traders concerned
Restraint will be spurned
While mullahs pray for impuissance

Thus, oil continues to rise
And it oughtn’t be a surprise
The talk that inflation
Achieved its cessation
Has slowed while concerns crystalize

The most important market story this morning, I would contend, is the potential response by Israel after Iran’s missile attacks yesterday.  While only a handful of the approximately 180 missiles breached the Israeli aerial defenses, some damage was inflicted.  Israel has promised a response at their leisure and history has shown they have been effective in inflicting greater damage than they receive.

The major market concern is that Israel will attack Iran’s oil production capability, something which would certainly drive oil prices, which have spiked more than 8% in the past two sessions, higher still.  Currently, Iran is producing about 3.27 mm barrels/day, a solid 3% of global production and consumption.  Given the highly inelastic nature of the oil price, any attack there would have a substantial impact, at least in the short term.  Remember, though, that the Saudis have something along the lines of 3mm barrels/day of production shut in as OPEC+ has tried to support the price.  I expect that they would be able to bring that online quite quickly, so any price move would be short-lived.  The downside, though, is that it would use up the available spare capacity so any other event, say another hurricane which shuts in Gulf of Mexico production, would have an outsized impact.  Net, a response of that nature may only have a short-term impact on the price but would lead to more fragility overall.

As well, I am confident that the Biden administration is really working to convince Israel to leave the oil assets alone as during the campaign, a spike in oil, and by extension gasoline, prices will not be a welcome turn of events.  However, from Israel’s point of view, the destruction of Iran’s oil production capacity would result in a much weaker Iran, one that would have far more difficulty promoting their attacks on Israel.  At this point, we can only wait and see.

Away from that news, yesterday saw the PMI and ISM data releases which simply confirmed that global manufacturing activity remains in a slump.  The US report, printing at a weaker than expected 47.2, the 22ndmonth in the last 23 that the reading has been below the boom/bust line of 50.0, continues to drive concerns about economic weakness in the US.  Of course, manufacturing represents less than 25% of the economy directly, although many service jobs are dependent on the manufacturing sector.

Arguably, the perception of economic weakness that remains prevalent in the US stems from this situation, where manufacturing remains weak, and the ancillary activity typically driven by it remains weak as well.  These are the traditional blue-collar jobs, and it is those people who seem to be feeling the current economic malaise most severely.  In fact, this is as good an explanation as I can find for why despite some decent top line economic data, there are still so many people in the US who are highly stressed and living paycheck to paycheck.  While this is a macroeconomic discussion, it is also a key political discussion as it will highly likely be an important driver of voters come November.

As to the other topic that has traders engaged, central bank policy, the plethora of Fed speakers yesterday did nothing to alter any views on their next steps.  Currently, the Fed funds futures market is pricing a 35% probability of a 50bp cut in November, but still pricing an 85% probability that there will be 75bps of cuts by year end.  Now, this is less cutting than had been priced just a week ago, but that move was driven by Powell on Monday.  Given the amount of data that we will be receiving between now and the November meeting, including two NFP reports as well as a CPI and PCE report this month, and the first look at Q3 GDP, many views can change.

And that’s kind of it this morning.  Last night’s VP debate had no market impact, nor would I have expected it to do so.  Worries about the Middle East and questions about central bank policy are the current market drivers.

With that in mind, let’s see how things played out overnight after yesterday’s weak showing in US markets.  In Japan, the Nikkei (-2.2%) gave back Tuesday’s gains as the market tries to determine exactly how new PM Ishiba is viewing the economy and central bank.  In a statement, he indicated the government would work with the BOJ to achieve joint goals, and his initial hawkish perception has been walked back.  In fact, it is odd that Japanese stocks fell given JGB yields (-2bps) also declined alongside the yen (-0.7%) on those comments.  As to the rest of Asia, the Hang Seng (+6.2%) rocketed higher on the Chinese stimulus story (mainland markets are still closed for their holiday), but the other Asian markets that were open, including Korea, Malaysia and Indonesia, all saw selling pressure with declines on the order of -1.0%.

In Europe, continental bourses are all lower led by the DAX (-0.6%) and IBEX (-0.6%) although the FTSE 100 (+0.2%) has managed a small gain.  The UK move has been driven by energy stocks rallying on the Middle East story while the lack of energy stocks on the continent seems to be the key to losses as investors turn cautious.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:30), they are lower by between -0.2% and -0.4%.

Bond yields are lower this morning with Treasuries down -2bps while European sovereign yields have all fallen between -5bps and -6bps.  The weak PMI data there has increased the discussion about more aggressive policy ease from the central bank and the likelihood that inflation stays quiescent.

We have already discussed oil but a look at the metals markets shows that after a 1% rally yesterday, gold (-0.3%) is consolidating near its all-time highs, while both silver (+0.3%) and copper (+0.8%) continue to move higher.  For the latter two, everything I read is about how both metals are critical for building out the energy transition infrastructure and both metals are in structural shortage with stockpiles being utilized as mining output lags demand and getting new mines up and running is a decade long affair.  My take is both have further to rise.

Finally, the dollar is net little changed this morning after a very solid two-day rally.  Remember it was just Monday that I was discussing key technical levels in the DXY (100.00), EUR (1.1200) and GBP (1.3500).  Well, we have moved well away from all those levels as the dollar weakness story takes a break.  When Chairman Powell explained he was in no hurry to cut rates rapidly, that part of the narrative needed to change quickly…and it did.  So, this morning, aside from the yen’s weakness mentioned above, the other large mover is NOK (+0.7%) which is simply responding to the oil rally.  In fact, the commodity currencies are doing exactly what they are supposed to be doing with CLP (+0.5%) tracking copper and MXN (+0.4%) tracking both silver and oil.  ZAR (unchanged) is actually the surprise here although it has been rallying steadily since April on a combination of the strong metals markets and continued belief in a better economic situation based on the new government’s business friendly policies.

On the data front, this morning brings only ADP Employment (exp 120K) and the EIA oil inventories where further inventory drawdowns are anticipated.  We also hear from four more Fed speakers although given Powell’s lack of concern regarding the speed of cuts, it will be hard for these speakers to change the market perception in my view.  This leaves us with the big picture.  Right now, employment remains the most important data for the Fed and their policy views.  As such, this morning’s ADP is likely to have more importance than it ordinarily would, despite the limited correlation between this data and the NFP to be released on Friday.

It seems that there are some subtle changes in central bank views with market perceptions of FX moves impacted.  The Fed is now seen as not quite as dovish, while the BOJ and ECB are seen as a touch more dovish, hence the dollar’s gains against both the yen and euro.  However, I think the central bankers realize they are still feeling their way in the dark and will be slow to respond to outlier data, so this vibe seems likely to hold in the near term.

Good luck
Adf

Not in a Hurry

The committee is not in a hurry
Said Jay, but the bulls needn’t worry
‘Cause Jay knows what’s what
And he can still cut
Quite quickly and watch the bears scurry
 
Meanwhile, at all ports in the east
The longshoremen’s working has ceased
With them now on strike
We could see a hike
In costs soon with ‘flation increased

 

“Overall, the economy is in solid shape; we intend to use our tools to keep it there. This is not a committee that feels like it’s in a hurry to cut rates quickly.  Ultimately, we will be guided by the incoming data. And if the economy slows more than we expect, then we can cut faster. If it slows less than we expect, we can cut slower.”

These were the key comments by Chairman Powell yesterday at the National Association for Business Economics annual meeting in Nashville.  They were the very essence of the two-handed economist who explains both sides of an issue without drawing a conclusion.  However, it appears what the market heard was ‘the Fed’s only going to cut 25bps at a clip going forward’.  This was made evident by the fact that when he began speaking, we saw equity markets dip right away as per the chart below of the S&P 500, although as he continued, and made clear that they expected to continue to cut rates and support the economy, traders (and algorithms) decided things were fine.  

Source: Bloomberg.com

We also heard from two other Fed members, Atlanta Fed president Bostic and Chicago Fed president Goolsbee, who both explained 50bps could well be the appropriate next move if things don’t follow their current script perfectly.  Naturally, equity markets heard that news and were soothed, hence the result that all three major indices closed slightly higher on the day.

The other major story this morning is that the International Longshoreman’s Association, the union for dockworkers along the entire East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, have gone on strike as of midnight.  They are demanding a 77% increase in wages over the next 6 years as well as promises about the speed with which further automation will occur in order to save jobs.  While the Taft-Hartley act could be invoked by the president to force both sides back to the bargaining table and require the workers to get back on the job for the next 80 days, President Biden has chosen not to do so in an effort to polish his political bona fides with unions.

The ultimate impact of the strike will depend entirely on its length.  This was not a surprise and many retailers and other importers pre-ordered inventory to tide them over as the holiday shopping season gets going.  However, estimates range up to an economic cost of $5 billion per day for each day of the strike, and the longer it goes on, the bigger the problem because rescheduling once things are settled will be that much more complex.  Regardless of the timing, though, one can be pretty certain that this will pressure prices higher as either shortages of certain items develop, or the wage gains result in higher shipping costs which will almost certainly be passed through the value chain.  

Remember, while headline PCE fell to 2.2% last month, core remained at 2.7%.  In the CPI readings, headline is still 2.5% with core at 3.2%, and perhaps more disconcertingly, median CPI at 4.2%.  Powell’s decision to cut rates 50bps last month with GDP still growing at 3%, the Unemployment Rate at a still historically low level of 4.2% and inflation, whether measured as PCE or CPI well above 2.0% was quite aggressive.  If this strike lasts a while, more than one week, expect to see price pressures begin to build again and that is going to put the Fed in a very difficult position.

One last thing to consider is the fact that virtually every major central bank around the world is in easing mode now that the Fed has begun to cut despite the fact that growth remains in decent shape in most places (Germany excepted).  This morning’s Eurozone CPI data (1.8%, 2.7% core) was even softer than expected virtually guaranteeing more aggressive action by the ECB and of course the PBOC was hyperaggressive last week in their easing actions.  Yesterday, Banxico indicated they may begin to cut more aggressively after having started their easing stance with 25bp cuts, as inflation in Mexico continues to decelerate to their target level of 3% +/- 1%.  The point is that policy worldwide is easing, or even in the few places where it is not, e.g. Japan and Australia, they are not tightening at any great pace.  The upshot is there is greater scope for a rebound in inflation while the dollar and other currencies continue to devalue vs. real items like commodities and real estate.  That is another way of saying that prices in those two asset classes should continue to climb.  As to the fiat currency world, relative values will depend on the pace with which individual nations ease, but they will all sink over time.

So, how have markets responded to the latest news?  After the modest US gains yesterday, and remember China is closed all week, Japan (+1.9%) regained about half of Monday’s declines after Ishiba-san was officially named PM and he appointed and Abenomics veteran, Katsunobu Kato, as his FinMin, helping encourage the idea that the BOJ may not be quite as aggressive as previously thought.  The rest of Asia saw more gainers than laggards with Taiwan (+0.75%) the next best performer and a mix otherwise.  In Europe, the picture is mixed with some gainers (FTSE 100 +0.4%, DAX +0.3%) and some laggards (IBEX -0.6%, CAC -0.2%) after Manufacturing PMI data across the continent continued to show lackluster results with Germany falling even further to a reading of 40.6 although Spain’s reading jumped to 53.0.  I must admit the stock market outcomes seem backward although I can understand the German view that the ECB will be more aggressive, thus supporting stocks, but why that is not helping Spain is a mystery.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:20) only the DJIA (-0.35%) is showing any discernible movement.

In the bond market, after yields backed up 5bps yesterday over concerns that the Fed’s more aggressive stance would lead to inflation and the port strike would not help that situation, they are sliding this morning.  Treasury yields, after touching 3.80% during yesterday’s session are down to 3.74% this morning and European sovereign yields have fallen even more sharply, between -7bps (Germany) and -12bps (France) as traders and investors become convinced that the ECB is going to become more aggressive in their easing.  JGB yields also slid 1bp last night after Kato-san’s appointment.

It should be no surprise that metals prices are rebounding this morning given the decline in yields as well as the growing concerns over inflation.  So, gold (+0.5%) is leading the way higher but the entire group is higher on the session.  However, oil (-0.8%) remains under pressure as news of Israel’s ground incursion into Lebanon to root out Hezbollah seem to be ignored while news that Libya is getting set to restart production after a political settlement was reached there adds to the supply picture.  

Finally, the real surprise is the dollar, which based on yields and metals would have been expected to continue sliding, but instead has rebounded sharply.  In fact, yesterday, the DXY rallied virtually all day and that has continued this morning with the index now above 101.00.  You may recall I highlighted that it was testing the 100 level which is seen as a key support.  I guess there is no break coming today.  This morning, the dollar’s move is universal, rising versus both the euro (-0.5%) and pound (-0.5%) as well as the rest of the G10 save the yen which is unchanged on the day.  In fact, 0.5% is the magnitude of that move virtually all the other currencies in the bloc.  As to the EMG bloc, these currencies have also suffered by -0.5% or so regardless of the region with the CE4 the worst performers, averaging -0.7%, while Asian currencies were down more on the order of -0.3% and LATAM -0.5%.

On the data front, ISM Manufacturing (exp 47.5) and JOLTS Job Openings (7.655M) are the main features and we hear from four more Fed speakers (Bostic, Cook, Barkin and Collins) before the day is done.

It is hard for me to look at the current situation without growing concern that the Fed is in the process of making a catastrophic error by easing policy into the base of an inflation cycle that just got more impetus from a key labor situation.  In the end, it is not clear to me how the dollar will behave against other currencies in the short run, but I see only upside for commodity prices.  If things do get ugly, the dollar will be seen as the best of a bad lot, and as commodity demand grows, so will demand for the greenback in order to buy those commodities, but this is not a positive story.

Good luck

Adf

More Money to Mint

As an eagle soars
So too did the yen after
Ishiba-san won

 

Political change in Japan is far less bombastic and exciting than here in the US as evidenced by the election of Shigeru Ishiba as the new leader of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) last night.  Given the LDP’s large majority in the Diet (Japan’s parliament), as the new leader, Ishiba-san is now all but certain to be the new Prime Minister. This will likely be confirmed by a vote as early as next Tuesday, but sometime very soon regardless.

Ishiba’s background, a party veteran and former defense minister, seems to have been the right focus at the right time as strains with China have recently increased and the electorate (LDP members, not the general population) are clearly hearing about security concerns more than other issues.  The implication is that economic issues were not the driving force here, but in that vein, Ishiba’s views appear to be to allow the BOJ and Governor Ueda to continue their normalization process, finally ending the decade plus of Abenomics that worked to raise inflation.  

Now, as it happens, last night Tokyo inflation was released with the headline falling to 2.2% and the core falling to 2.0%, as expected.  It also appears that one of his key opponents, Sanae Takaichi, had been an advocate of pressuring the BOJ to slow its policy normalization, so with the results, market participants reacted swiftly, and the yen rallied sharply on the news as per the below chart while the Nikkei after an initial sharp decline, rebounded and closed higher by 2.3%.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Going forward, it seems unlikely that the yen is going to be a focus of the new Ishiba administration.  Rather, he is clearly focused on defense strategy so Ueda-san will be able to continue his normalization efforts at his own pace.  As evidence, JGB yields stopped their recent slide and backed up 2bps overnight.  I suspect that we will see a very gradual move higher here with key drivers to be purely economic issues rather than political ones, at least for a while.

This morning, the PCE print
Will help give another key hint
To whether the Fed
When looking ahead
Will soon start, more money, to mint

The other story for the day is the PCE report to be released at 8:30. Current expectations are for a 0.1% M/M, 2.3% Y/Y rise in the headline number and a 0.2% M/M, 2.7% Y/Y rise in the ex-food & energy reading.  If these are the realized outcomes, the trend lower in inflation will remain on track and all the Fed speakers will feel vindicated that the 50bp cut last week was appropriate.  But I think it is worthwhile to take a quick look at a chart of how this number (core PCE) has evolved over time to help us better understand where things are in relation to the pre-pandemic economy. 

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Now, while there is no doubt that we are well below the highest levels seen two years ago, it is not difficult to look at this chart and see a potential basing formation, well above the pre-pandemic levels.  In fact, today’s expectations on the core reading are for a bounce higher of 0.1% which would only reinforce the idea that we have seen the bottom in this reading.  Of course, any one month’s data is not definitive as everything is subject to revisions, and simply looking at the chart, it is easy to see both ebbs and flows in the data well before the pandemic.  But I continue to be concerned that the Fed’s very clear ‘mission accomplished’ attitude on inflation is a big mistake that will come back to haunt us all sooner than you think.

Ahead of the data, a look at the overnight session shows that the ongoing rally in risk assets that started with the Fed and has been goosed by China’s efforts this week, remains the dominant theme.  In fact, Chinese shares had another gargantuan session last night (CSI 300 +4.5%, Hang Seng +3.6%) as hedge funds who had been quite short the Chinese stock market prior to the announcements this week continue to scramble to cover those shorts as well as get long for the rest of the expected ride.  But away from China and Japan, the rest of Asia was far less excited with declines seen in India, Korea and Australia leading most indices lower there.  As to European bourses, they are firmer this morning led by the DAX (+0.8%) but green everywhere after preliminary inflation data for September from France and Spain saw declines well below expectations to 1.5% and investors increased the probability of an October ECB rate cut substantially.  While some ECB members remain concerned over the stickiness of services prices, which continue to hover above 4%, if the headline numbers are falling below 2%, I think it will be very difficult for Madame Lagarde to push back against another cut next month.  Meanwhile, ahead of the data, US futures are unchanged.

In the bond market, Treasury yields have edged lower by 1bp while European sovereign yields have moved a similar amount except for French OATs which have slipped 3bps.  The story about French debt yielding more than Spain, one of the original PIGS has gotten a lot of press and it seems deeper thinkers disagree with the idea and are buying ‘undervalued’ French OATs.  

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.15%) has finally stopped falling, at least for the moment, although the recent trend is anything but encouraging for oil bulls.  Crude is lower by -4.5% in the past week and -9.0% in the past month, clearly helping the headline inflation readings.  As to the metals markets, after another strong day yesterday, they are consolidating with very modest declines (Au -0.2%, Ag -0.1%, Cu -0.4%) although the trend in all three remains firmly higher.

Finally, the dollar, after several sessions under a lot of pressure, is also bouncing slightly, at least against most of its counterparts.  We have already discussed the yen’s gains, but vs. the rest of the G10, it is firmer by roughly 0.15% or so while vs. its EMG counterparts some are seeing losses  (CE4 -0.3% to -0.4%) while there are others with modest gains (ZAR +0.3%, MXN +0.4%).  For now, the trend remains for a lower dollar, and if we see a soft PCE reading this morning, I expect that to reassert itself as thus far, today’s price action appears more like a trading response to the recent weakness.

In addition to the PCE data, we also see Personal Income (exp 0.4%), Personal Spending (0.3%), the Goods Trade Balance (-$99.4B) and Michigan Sentiment (69.3).  Mercifully, on the Fed front, only Governor Bowman speaks, she of the dissent at the last meeting, although yesterday’s plethora of Fed speakers taught us nothing new at all.  

I don’t have a strong opinion as to how this data will play out, but I would caution that if PCE is firmer than expected, look for a hiccup in the recent euphoria over stocks and bonds, while the dollar consolidates its support.  However, if we see a softer print than forecast, watch out for a much bigger rally in stocks and a much weaker dollar.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Miles Off Base

This poet was miles off base

As Powell, more growth, wants to chase
So, hawks have been shot
With nary a thought
While doves snap all stocks up apace.

It seems clear that Jay and the Fed
Decided inflation is dead
Through Q1 at least
Bulls will have a feast
Though after, take care where you tread

It turns out that not only were my tail risk ideas wrong, I was on the wrong side of the distribution!  Powell has decided that the soft-landing narrative is the best estimator of the future and wants to make sure the Fed is not responsible for a recession.  Concerns over inflation, while weakly voiced, have clearly dissipated within the Eccles Building.  I hope they are right.  I fear they are not.

In fairness, once again, yesterday I heard a very convincing argument that inflation was not only going to decline back to the Fed’s target of 2.0%, but it would have a 1 handle or lower by the middle of 2024 based on the weakening credit impulse that we have seen over the past 18 months.  And maybe it will.  But, while there is no question that money supply has been shrinking slowly of late, which has been a key part of that weakening credit impulse story, as can be seen from the chart below based on FRED data from the St Louis Fed, compared to the pace of M2 growth for decades, there are still an extra $3 trillion or so floating around the economy.  Iit seems to me prices will have a hard time falling with that much extra cash around.

Of course, there is one other place that money may find a home, and that is in financial assets.  So, perhaps the outcome will be a repeat of the post-GFC economy, with lackluster growth, and lots of money chasing financial assets while investors lever up to increase returns.  My guess is that almost every finance official in the world would take that situation in a heartbeat, slow growth, low inflation and rising asset prices.  The problem is that series of events cannot last forever.  As is usually the case with any negative outcome, the worst problems come from the leverage, not the idea.  When things are moving in one’s favor, leverage is fantastic.  But when they reverse, not so much.

A little data is in order here.  According to Statista, current global GDP is ~$103 trillion in current USD, current global stock market capitalization is ~$108 trillion, and the total amount of current global debt is ~$307 trillion according to the WEF.  In a broad view, the current debt/equity ratio is about 3:1 and the current debt/sales ratio is the same.  While this is not a perfect analogy, usually a debt/equity ratio of 3.0 is considered pretty high and a company that runs that level of debt would be considered quite risky.  Now, ask yourself this, if economic activity only generates $108 trillion, how will that >$300 trillion of debt ever be repaid?  The most likely answer is, it never will be repaid, at least not on a real basis.

If you wonder why central bankers favor lower interest rates, this is the primary reason.  However, at some point, there is going to be more discrimination between to whom lenders are willing to lend and who will be left out because they are either too risky, or the interest rate demanded will be too high to tolerate.  When considering these facts, it becomes much easier to understand the central bank desire to get back to the post-GFC world, doesn’t it?  And so, I would contend that Chairman Powell has just forfeited his efforts to be St Jerome, inflation slayer. 

The implication of this policy shift, and I would definitely call this a policy shift, is that the near future seems likely to see higher equity prices, higher commodity prices, higher inflation, first higher, then lower bond prices and a weaker dollar.  The one thing that can prevent the inflation outcome would be a significant uptick in productivity.  While last quarter we did see a terrific number there, +5.2%, the long-term average productivity growth, since 1948 is 2.1%.  Since the GFC, that number has fallen to 1.5%.  We will need to see a lot more productivity growth to keep goldilocks alive.  I hope AI is everything the hype claims!

Today, Madame Christine Lagarde

And friends are all partying hard
Now that Jay’s explained
Inflation’s restrained
And rate cuts are in the vanguard

This means that the ECB can
Lay out a new rate cutting plan
The doves are in flight
Which ought to ignite
A rally from Stuttgart to Cannes

Let’s turn to the ECB and BOE, as they are this morning’s big news, although, are they really big news anymore?  Both these central banks have been wrestling with the same thing as the Fed, inflation running far higher than target, although they have had the additional problem of a much weaker economic growth backdrop.  As long as the Fed was tightening policy, they knew that they could do so as well without having an excessively negative impact on their respective economies.  But given that pretty much all of Europe is already in recession, and the UK is on the verge, their preference would be to cut rates as soon as possible.  

But yesterday changed everything.  Powell’s bet on goldilocks has already been felt across European markets, with rallies in both equity and bond markets in every country.  The door is clearly wide open for Lagarde and Bailey to both be far more dovish than was anticipated before the FOMC meeting.  And you can be sure that both will be so.  While there will be no rate cuts in either London or Frankfurt today, they will be coming soon, likely early next year.  

At this point, the real question is which central bank will be cutting rates faster and further, not if they will be cutting them at all.  My money is on the ECB as there is a much larger contingent of doves there and the fact that Germany and northern European nations are already in recession means that the hawks there will be more inclined to go along for the ride.  Regardless, given the Fed has now reset the central bank tone to; policy ease is ok, look for it to happen everywhere.

Right now, this is all that matters.  Yesterday’s PPI data was soft, just adding fuel to the fire.  Inflation data that was released this morning in Sweden and Spain saw softer numbers and while Retail Sales (exp -0.1%, ex autos -0.1%) are due this morning along with initial Claims (220K), none of this is going to have a market impact unless it helps stoke the fire.  Any contra news will be ignored.

Before closing, there are two things I would note that are outliers here.  First, Japanese equity markets bucked the rally trend, with the Nikkei sliding -0.7% and the TOPIX even more (-1.4%) as they could not overcome the > 2% decline in USDJPY yesterday and the further 1% move overnight.  That very strong yen is clearly going to weigh on Japanese corporate profitability.  The other thing is that there is one country that is not all-in on the end of inflation, Norway.  This morning, in the wake of the Fed’s reversing course, the Norges Bank raisedrates by 25bps in a total surprise to the markets.  This has pushed the krone higher by a further 2.3% this morning and nearly 4% since the FOMC meeting.  

As we head toward the Christmas holidays and the beginning of a new year, it seems like the early going will be quite positive for risk assets and quite negative for the dollar.  Keep that in mind as you consider your hedging activities for 2024.

Good luck

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