Checkmate

The talks twixt the States and Iran
Collapsed like a climate straw man
Now there’s a blockade
In Hormuz, arrayed
As Trump pivots to a new plan

The first move in oil was higher
But I would beware as a buyer
If Trump rules the Strait
That could be checkmate
And force a much longer cease fire

As of 8:00pm last night, after the peace talks fell apart in Islamabad and President Trump announced the US would be blockading the Strait of Hormuz so no ships carrying oil, especially Iranian oil, would be able to pass the blockade, the price of oil spiked immediately as the futures markets opened.  You can see the last week’s roller coaster in the below chart from tradingeconomics.com

The question that needs to be answered at this point is, is there a substantive difference between the US blocking traffic in the Strait and Iran doing so?  I would contend there is a huge difference, especially if you are China.  But also, if you are Iran.  After all, you just lost your trump card (pun intended) and not only that, if Iranian oil is not able to be sold, then Iran runs out of money pretty quickly.  Remember, oil revenues represent approximately 90% of Iranian total revenues.  How long can the IRGC last with no money to pay their soldiers?

In the meantime, the Saudis are pumping 7 mm bpd across the East-West pipeline now, and the UAE is pumping 1.5 mm bpd to Fujairah, taking a decent sized bite out of the missing barrels.  I read this morning that upwards of 7mm bpd are now exiting the gulf via pipeline reducing the overall reduction in oil flow.  Granted, it is still a huge disruption but shrinking.  On top of that, if this continues, the Strait loses its strategic importance, which cements Iran’s loss of power.  In the short-run, oil prices can go in either direction in my view, but this has the opportunity to completely emasculate Iran’s ability to have an impact on the global oil markets in the future.  

And I would not be surprised if President Xi is burning up the lines to Washington because he just lost a key source of cheap oil, and oil he paid for in CNY.  (see WSJ chart below.)

There are many twists and turns here, and I’m sure there will be more.  But as of Sunday night, from what I have read, Iran is in a much worse position than they were on Friday.  Of course, things could all go pear-shaped from here, and this could turn out to be a complete failure.  Our goal here is to try to track how markets will evolve.

The remarkable thing, still, to me is that equity markets remain so blithe about the entire situation.  I make this claim based on the VIX Index, which remains relatively docile despite everything that is happening in Iran and the likely eventual knock-on effects.  But look at the chart of the VIX below which shows that markets are nowhere near as stressed as they have been in the past and are actually much nearer their long-term average. (The two spikes are the JPY intervention in August 2024, which lasted for just a few hours, and then the Liberation Day tariffs in April 2025 which quickly reversed as well.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It is worth noting that even the oil VIX, is off its highs and, while somewhat elevated, not running away.

Source: finace.yahoo.com

The thing about the VIX indices to remember, though, is that options decay and holding them is a losing proposition if the underlying market is not moving.  So, to maintain a high VIX, we need to see significant intraday as well as day-to-day price movement.

As Iran remains the major storyline for markets, let’s take a look at how things are behaving this morning.  Oil (+8.2%) has maintained its initial gains but not moved since last night.  NatGas (+1.7% in US, +9.0% in Europe) has also been impacted as there is no movement of LNG tankers through the Strait either.  Interestingly, both gold (-0.6%) and silver (-1.7%) while lower are well off the lows seen in the early overnight session as per the below chart of silver.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

I reiterate that the market perception of the current situation has not nearly matched the hysteria evident in much of the commentary.  I’m not sure whether to attribute that to market insight or market ignorance at this point, although I lean toward the former.  The problem with commentary these days is that hysterical takes generate clicks, and that is the goal of many commentators.

Turning to equity markets, Asian markets were generally, though not universally, lower.  Tokyo (-0.7%), HK (-0.9%), Korea (-0.9%) and India (-0.9%) all suffered on the breakdown in talks and the new blockade news.  New Zealand (-1.2%) was the worst performer, largely because their energy situation is deteriorating more quickly than anyone else’s.  But China (+0.2%), Taiwan (+0.1%) and Indonesia (+0.6%) all managed some gains despite the news.  Again, markets appear to be pricing a fairly benign outcome here.  Either the news is going to get better soon, or there is going to be a massive rerating of equity markets.  Something’s gotta give.

In Europe, things are a bit worse overall with Spain (-1.4%) leading the way lower although Germany (-1.0%), France (-0.9%) and Italy (-0.8%) are all under real pressure as well.  There has been a lot more press lately about how Spain’s PM Sanchez is cozying up to China as he seems to be pulling Spain away from the EU in several areas.  Of course, he is an avowed socialist, so perhaps this should not be that surprising.  However, this is further proof that NATO is surely going to die soon.

One market that has outperformed, though is Hungary (+2.8%) which is rallying sharply on the weekend’s election results that sent President Victor Orban into retirement.  Certainly, most others in Europe are thrilled as Orban had been a thorn in the side of the EU with respect to their Russia stance, but the economy there has been underperforming so new leadership is widely lauded, for now.  The forint (+1.9%) also benefitted from the election outcome.  

As to US futures, as I type at 7:00, the major indices are lower by -0.3% or so, well off the initial levels seen last night that were as much as -1.4% below Friday’s closing levels.  Again, markets remain sanguine over the weekend changes to the story.

In the bond market, Treasury yields have edged higher by 1bp and in Europe, we are seeing rises of between 1bp and 3bps across the board.  Here, too, it is hard to find panic in the streets.  JGB yields (+2bps) have made a new high for the move and continue to edge higher as concerns over the path of inflation rise given the oil price rise.  Last night, BOJ Governor Ueda gave a speech (actually his deputy did because he is in Washington for the IMF/World Bank meetings) and tried to quash the view that the BOJ was definitely going to hike rates at the end of this month, an outcome that had been priced at a 65% probability prior to his speech as you can see from the Bloomberg chart below.

Finally, in the FX market, other than HUF as described above, and NOK (+0.6%) responding to the oil move the dollar is firmer across the board.  However, the movement is not too large, generally on the order of 0.2% or so across the G10 and perhaps a bit more in the EMG bloc.  The worst performer today is ZAR (-0.8%) which is suffering the dual problems of a lower gold and higher oil price.  The other noteworthy thing is JPY (-0.3%) is creeping back toward the 160 level, which remains the default setting for the market belief as an intervention level.

On the data front, Friday’s CPI was hot, but not quite as hot as forecast, although you can be sure that next month will remain hot.  This week brings the following mostly secondary stuff.

TodayExisting Home Sales4.06M
TuesdayNFIB Business Optimism98.6
 PPI1.2% (4.6% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.6% (4.2% Y/Y)
WednesdayEmpire State Manufacturing-2.0
 Fed’s Beige Book 
ThursdayInitial Claims215K
 Continuing Claims1840K
 Philly Fed9.0
 IP0.1%
 Capacity Utilization76.3%

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As well, we hear from eight different Fed speakers over 10 venues.  An interesting aspect of the commentariat lately is that individual FOMC members are going to be far more important as there is a growing diversity of opinion.  So, the monolithic Fed Chair running things and encouraging a vote in a particular way may evolve into an actual election, where the voters vote their hearts, not the Chairman’s views just to get along.  If this is the case, and I think it would be far better than what we currently have, we will need to listen more closely to the individual speakers and start a scorecard to see who seems hawkish or dovish at any given time.  The problem is, I fear it will encourage all of them to speak more frequently, which is a worse outcome, although any given voice will likely be given far less weight.  We shall see if that is the case.

As to the broad scheme of things. My head tells me that the market is underpricing the risks out there, but my eyes explain that this is the current consensus.  I hope they are right and I am wrong about things.

Good luck

Adf

Appalled

As Covid continues to spread
In Europe, it’s come to a head
Relief has been stalled
‘Cause most are appalled
That Hungary, old norms, has shred

It seems like only yesterday when the market was talking about the shape of future monetary support by the ECB and how that would fit with the EU’s fiscal package and help the continent recover from the Covid induced recession.  While current lockdowns throughout Europe are painful, with a vaccine on the horizon and the historic agreement on joint liability, the future of Europe seemed bright and adding to risk profiles was seen as appropriate.  And perhaps that is because it was only yesterday when that was the market’s theme.  At least yesterday morning’s theme.  But as Dinah Washington first sang to us in 1959, “What a difference a day makes!”  This morning, the optimists have lost the spring in their step as risk appetite has waned.  It seems that the news that Hungary and Poland are digging in their heels with respect to the EU rescue package has suddenly been recognized as a problem.

For those of you who thought that the only place where there was political discord was in the US, that has never been the case.  The EU has also seen the type of political division seen here; it just takes a different form in Europe.  Rather than red and blue states, Europe has red and blue countries, with Hungary and Poland being the reddest of them all, at least in US terminology.  The governments of both these nations have objected to much of the EU agenda since 2015 and the flood of refugees entering the continent from the Middle East and Northern Africa in the wake of several civil wars ongoing then (and still).  It seems the folks in Brussels wanted to dictate how many refugees each nation in the EU needed to absorb, and given both these country’s geographic location, amongst the first countries any refugee from the Levant would enter, they were instructed to take a disproportionate number.  At least, disproportionate in their eyes.  And that didn’t sit well with the citizenship in both countries, who then elected nationalist/populist leadership.  Since that time, both nations have sought to roll back numerous EU edicts regarding various issues like the judiciary and immigration.  This has caused serious griping in Brussels as well as in Budapest and Warsaw.

Fast forward to the current situation, where the EU is seeking to pass their €1.8 trillion Covid relief package (their version of our CARES package from March).  The problem is that EU law states support must be unanimous, and these two nations are fighting back against a provision in the text about recipients of aid following the “rule of law”.  That innocuous sounding statement is code for the EU leadership’s insistence that laws restricting immigration, or an independent judiciary are verboten.  The upshot is the relief package is written so that any nation that does not follow the “rule of law” will not be entitled to any funding.  Naturally, Hungary and Poland want the money, but they, as yet, have been unwilling to give ground on the issue, hence the stalemate.  Now, like most political stand-offs, this one had seemed likely to be resolved before it got too heated.  However, as of this morning, it seems market participants are beginning to question if a package will get approved.  And there is another issue in the background as well, Brexit.  By that, I mean with the UK just about gone from the EU, if two other nations were to opt out of the bloc, what would that do to the EU as a whole, as well as to confidence in the political leadership across the continent.  This is not to say that either Hungary or Poland is on the way out.  It is merely a recognition that the post Brexit EU will not be all sunshine and rainbows.

And apparently, that has been enough for investors to decide that profit-taking is a prudent move.  Which leads us to this morning’s risk-off session.  Despite more forceful comments from Madame Lagarde, and news that there is now a third vaccine that has proven effective, it seems that fear is creeping back into the picture.  We saw it late in the US session yesterday, with all three major indices closing about 1% lower and on session lows.  It was followed in Asia by the Nikkei (-0.35%) falling for a third consecutive session and the Hang Seng (-0.7%).  Shanghai (+0.5%), however, broke the mold as the Chinese government’s ability to issue euro-denominated debt at negative yields in the 5-year added to recent enthusiasm that China’s growth story remains unimpinged by Covid.

Turning to Europe, which is, after all, the epicenter of today’s angst, it is no surprise that all markets are in the red, with the DAX, CAC and FTSE 100 all lower by roughly 1.0%.  As to the US futures complex, larger losses earlier have been pared, but we are still looking at declines on the order of 0.25%-0.4%.

Bond yields are generally lower, as expected, with Treasuries down by 1.5bps, a similar move to both Bunds and French OATS.  In fact, the only European bond market in the red is Greece, where yields have backed up by 4bps.  In the meantime, oil (WTI -1.0%) and gold (-0.5%) are leading the entire commodity bloc lower.

In the FX markets, the dollar reigns supreme this morning, higher against all its G10 counterparts.  That said, the magnitude of movement has been modest with AUD (-0.4%), NZD (-0.4%) and SEK (-0.3%) the leading decliners.  Clearly, pressure on commodities is undermining the former two, while SEK tends to move in the same direction as the bloc, just in larger increments.  (As an aside, USDSEK option volatility has consistently traded at a 2.5% premium to EURUSD volatility for the past eight months.)

In the emerging markets, a space that has received a lot of positive press of late, only one currency has rallied vs. the dollar this morning, TRY (+1.4%) after the Turkish central bank raised short-term interest rates by 4.75% to help support the currency as well as fight inflation, which is running at nearly 12% there.  But the rest of the bloc is weaker, led by KRW (-1.0%) and IDR (-0.6%), with even CNY (-0.4%) suffering on the day.  The won sold off after FinMin Hong Nam-ki said that they could step in to stabilize (read sell won) the market at “any time”.  A clear threat to speculators, and one well-heeded, at least today.  The rupiah fell after the central bank there cut rates by 25 basis points in a surprise move, as the country continues to try to cope with rising infections and thus is willing to add further support.  As to CNY, given the spectacular run it has had lately, a modest pullback needs no explanation.

Data has been sparse overnight, with only Australian job growth a bit higher than expected after the Victoria lockdown was eased.  This morning brings a few key readings here starting with Initial Claims (exp 700K) and Continuing Claims (6.4M).  Also, at 8:30 we see Philly Fed (23.0) then Leading Indicators (+0.7%) and Existing Home Sales (6.47M) at 10:00am.  While the Initial Claims numbers remain paramount, recall that Empire Manufacturing on Monday was much weaker than expected, so we may see clues as to just how Q4 is turning out.  For what it’s worth, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast is currently sitting at 5.6% for Q4, so still a pretty positive outlook.

Two more Fed speakers today are likely to continue to tell us that we need more fiscal stimulus but that they have plenty of ammo left.  And that’s really it.  The early fear seems to be abating somewhat as I finish just past 7am.  As such, it wouldn’t be that surprising to see a late day equity rally and the dollar cede its gains.  But absent some other piece of news, large movement seems unlikely.

Good luck and stay safe
Adf