A Bevy of Doves

The Fed has a bevy of doves
Whose world view was given some shoves
When Trump was elected
As they were subjected
To boxing, though without the gloves
 
But suddenly, they’ve found their voice
And rate cuts are now a real choice
So, bad news is good
And traders all should
Buy stocks every day and rejoice

 

Apparently, the signal has been given from on high at the Marriner Eccles building that discussing rate cuts is permitted.  Patience is no longer the virtue it was just last week.  In the past two days, three different FOMC members, Daly, Cook and Goolsbee, have returned to form and are quite open to cutting rates sooner after the recent employment data.  I would contend that rate cuts are their natural stance, but they were discouraged from expressing that view because it would put them in sync with the president, something that they very clearly have worked to avoid.  Regardless of the history, the Fed funds futures market is now pricing in a 93.2% probability of a cut next month as you can see below.  Perhaps more interesting is the fact this probability has risen from 37.7% in just the past week.  My how quickly things can change.

Source: cmegroup.com

I’m sure you recall that one of the key reasons Chairman Powell and his acolytes described the need to remain patient was the potential impact of tariffs on inflation.  This was even though the universal view was tariffs, a new tax, would be a one-off price increase, so would have no long-term impact, and that higher interest rates would do nothing to fight this particular cause of inflation, just like the price of food doesn’t respond to interest rates.  However, I want to highlight a piece from the WSJ this morning that asks a very good question, why wasn’t Powell concerned about all the tax increases from the previous administration, or for that matter, the tax increase that would have occurred had the BBB not been enacted.  Again, all the discussion that the Fed is apolitical is simply not true and never has been.

Moving on, I wanted to follow up on yesterday’s discussion as I, along with many market observers, have been trying to come to grips with the inconsistency in the data.  Some is strong, other parts are weak, and it is difficult to arrive at a broad conclusion.  My good friend, the Inflation_Guy™ put out a podcast the other day and made an excellent point, historically, there was a synchronicity between activity in the goods sector and the services sector, so when things in either sector started to decline (or rise) it took the other sector along with it.  But that is not currently the case.  

Instead, what we have seen is asynchronous behavior with the correlation between prices in the two sectors essentially independent of each other over the past five years, rather than tracking each other as they had done for the previous 30 years.  Extending the price action to overall activity, which seems a reasonable concept as prices follow the activity, depending on the data you observe, you may see strength or weakness, rather than everything heading in the same direction.  However, it is worthwhile to remember that systems in nature eventually do synchronize (see this fantastic clip) and so eventually, I suspect that both sectors will do so and a full blown recession (or expansion) will materialize.  Just not this week!

Which takes us to markets and how they have been responding to all the tariff news.  I think you can make one of the following two arguments regarding equity investors; either they have absorbed the tariff information and ensuing changes in trade behavior and have decided that earnings will continue to grow apace, or, they have no idea that there is a cliff ahead and like the lemmings they are, they are rushing toward the abyss.  Perhaps it is simply that President Trump has discussed tariffs so much that they have become the norm in any analysis thought process, and so modest adjustments don’t matter.  But whatever the reason, we continue to see strength pretty much across the board here.

The rally in the US yesterday was followed by strength across almost all of Asia with gains in Tokyo (+0.7%) and Hong Kong (+0.7%) as well as Korea, India and almost all regional bourses.  China, however, was unchanged on the session after their trade balance rose a less than expected $98.2B, as imports rose more than expected.  However, as this X post makes clear, it should be no surprise given the renminbi’s real exchange rate continues to fall, hence their exports remain quite competitive, tariffs or not.  As to Europe, strength is the word here as well (DAX +1.5%, CAC +1.2%, IBEX +0.5%) although the FTSE 100 (-0.5%) is lagging ahead of this morning’s expected BOE rate cut.  And don’t worry, US futures are higher across the board as well.

In the bond market, yields have been edging higher with Treasury yields up 2bps after yesterday’s 10-year auction was not as well received as had been hoped, but then, yields were 25 basis points lower than just a week ago, so demand was a little bit tepid.  European sovereign yields are also edging higher, mostly higher by 1bp and we saw the same thing overnight in JGBs, a 2bp rise.

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.6%) has found a short-term bottom, but is just below $65/bbl, which seems like a trading pivot of late as can be seen by the chart below from tradingeconomics.com.  As my personal bias is that the price is likely to decline going forward, the 6-month trend line heading down does appeal to me, but for now, choppy is the future.

Meanwhile, metals markets are in fine fettle this morning (Au +0.4%, Ag +1.4%, Cu +0.15%) as the dollar’s recent weakness seems to be having the expected effect on this segment of the market.

Speaking of the dollar, as more tariffs get agreed, I am confused by its weakness since I was assured that the response to higher US tariffs would be a stronger dollar.  But arguably, the fact that the Fed is suddenly appearing much more dovish is the driver right now, and while the euro is little changed this morning, we are seeing the pound (+0.4%), Aussie (+0.3%) and Kiwi (+0.4%) all move up, although the rest of the G10 space is higher by scant basis points.  In the EMG bloc, movement, while mostly higher in these currencies, is also measured in mere basis points, with INR (+0.25%) the largest mover by far.  Arguably, it is fair to say the dollar is little changed.

On the data front, the BOE did cut rates 25bps as expected, although the vote was 5/4, a bit more hawkish than forecast which is arguably why the pound is holding up so well.  US data brings Initial (exp 221K) and Continuing (1950K) Claims as well as Nonfarm Productivity (2.0%) and Unit Labor Costs (1.5%).  This is a much better mix of this data than what we saw in Q1 with productivity falling -1.5% while ULC rose 6.6%.  That was a stagflationary outcome.  In addition, we hear from two more Fed speakers, Bostic and Musalem, as the Fed gets back in gear this week.  It will be interesting to see if they are more dovish as neither would be considered a dove ex ante.

Apparently, we are back on board the bad news is good for stocks train, and it is hard to fight absent a collapse in earnings or some other catalyst.  As such, with visions of Fed cuts dancing in traders’ heads, I suspect the dollar will remain under pressure for a while.

Good luck

Adf

Bears’ Chagrin

The talk of the town is the Fed
And who Mr Trump will embed
As governor, next
Amid a subtext
That Powell, by May, will have fled
 
Meanwhile, other stories are muted
As tariffs’ impact seem diluted
And earnings have been,
To most bears’ chagrin,
Much better than had been reputed

 

Yesterday was a modest down day in equities, although the trend remains clearly higher at this point as evidenced by the chart below.  As well, the price action remains well above the 50-day moving average, a key technical indicator defining the trend, with no indication it is set to retrace there.  As of this morning, we are sitting about 2.5% above that average, so a decline of that magnitude will be necessary to get tongues wagging about a change.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

This is not to say that everyone is sanguine about the situation as just yesterday, three investment banks, Morgan Stanley, ISI Evercore and Deutsche Bank, all put out research calling for a retracement in the near term.  Certainly, the recent data has been mixed, at best, with still a lot of discussion regarding last Friday’s weak NFP data.  Meanwhile, the ISM Services data was weak (50.1 vs 51.5 expected), while the PMI Services was strong (55.7 vs 55.2 expected).  

Corporate earnings continue to be solid, with about two-thirds of the S&P 500 having reported Q2 numbers and 82% have beaten EPS estimates, higher than the recent 5-year average, and the growth rate at 10.3% on a quarterly basis.  This does not seem indicative of the recession that many continue to claim is ongoing or imminent.

But let us take this time to briefly consider both sides of the argument regarding the future of the economy, and by extension financial market activity.

On the plus side, while the NFP number was soft, the Unemployment rate remains at 4.2%, in the lowest quintile since 1948 as per the below chart.  

As well, Initial Claims data, the most frequent labor market data that is available, remains at the 13thpercentile, an indication that despite a great deal of concern by a certain segment of analysts, the labor market is still pretty strong.  In fact, the last time Initial Claims was this low during a recession, in 1970, the US population was about 205 million compared to today’s 340 million.  After all, this has been the issue on which Powell has been hanging his hat, and why Friday’s NFP number changed the narrative regarding the Fed.

The most recent GDP data was also quite positive, with Q2 growing at 3.0%, better than expected and then yesterday we saw the Trade deficit shrink to -$60.2B, its smallest level since September 2023.  Trade, though, is a double-edged sword as a smaller deficit could indicate weaker domestic demand, or it could indicate stronger domestic supply.  Naturally, this is the president’s goal, to achieve the latter, hence his tariff blitz.

As to inflation, it is off its recent lows, and remains well above the Fed’s 2.0% target, but with core CPI at 3.0%, it is hardly hyperinflationary.  The tariff impact remains uncertain at this point as so far, it appears many companies are eating a significant portion.  I guess that will become clearer in the Q3 earnings reports, although analysts continue to forecast strong growth there.  

So, across jobs, growth and inflation, there is a case to be made that things are doing fine.  Add to this the idea that fiscal stimulus is unlikely to end, merely be redirected from the previous administration’s favorites to this one’s, and you can understand the view that things are pretty good.

However, the other side of the story continues to have many adherents as well.  Most of the negative outlook comes from digging underneath the headline numbers and extrapolating out to the negative trends that may exist there blooming into the full story.

For instance, regarding employment data, while the headlines have been ok, ISM Manufacturing Employment has fallen to 43.4, its lowest level in more than 5 years and pretty clearly trending lower, even on a cyclical basis as per the below chart.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Too, ISM Services employment has fallen to 46.4 (anything under 50.0 indicates recession-type weakness). NFIB Employment surveys are negative, with small businesses planning to create fewer jobs in the next three months as per the below chart from the NFIB July report.

Challenger job cuts are rising again, with much of the blame put on AI.  JOLTS Job Openings have been trending lower since Covid, but it is difficult to really tell there, as the levels are far above pre-Covid data as per the below BLS chart.

There is also a hue and cry that the deportations are removing a significant number of manual workers in fields like construction and agriculture, which is likely true.  However, as I highlighted earlier in the week, the mix of employed in the US has turned to a greater proportion of US-born workers vs. foreign-born workers with net growth.  So, perhaps many of those jobs are being filled anyway.

From a GDP perspective, the economic bears tend to dig into the pieces and have focused on declining consumption data although Retail Sales continues to motor along pretty well, rising 5.3% in the past twelve months when looking at the control group (excluding food services, auto dealers, building materials and gas stations) which is what is used in the GDP data.  I am hard-pressed to look at the below chart and explain a dramatic slowing in growth.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As to inflation, there continues to be a strong set of beliefs that tariffs are going to create a significant uptick, although it has yet to appear.  ISM Prices paid did rise in Services, to 69.9, their highest level since the retreat from the 2022 “transitory inflation”.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

However, ISM Manufacturing prices appear to be stabilizing after some recent increases.  The overall ISM price data is more worrisome as tariffs are only going to be on goods, and if services prices are rising, that is likely to feed through to general inflation more directly.  

Concluding, we seem to be an awful long way from stagflation that some analysts are calling for as growth continues apace and there is no indication that fiscal stimulus is going to end.  Rather, I would expect that we will see overall hotter growth, with higher prices coming alongside, and likely higher wages as well.  I still have trouble seeing the collapsing US economy story, although things are hardly perfect.

And how will this impact markets?  Well, broadly, while equities have clearly had an impressive run, and the trend is your friend, a pullback would not be a huge surprise.  But dip buyers will be active, of that you can be sure.  

As to bonds, if the US does run things hot, unless the budget deficit starts to shrink substantially, with the next release coming on August 12, yields are very likely to continue to remain bid.  Right now, the curve is steepening because traders are banking on the Fed to cut next month so the 2yr yield has fallen sharply.  But if growth remains strong, I would say there is a floor to yields although absent a significant rise in inflation, I don’t see them exploding higher either.  And if the BBB actually does generate more revenue and reduce the budget deficit, look for yields to decline anyway.  

Finally, the dollar should do well unless the Fed become aggressive.  That story is too difficult to forecast given the machinations on the board and the questions of who the next Fed chair will be.  As I have written before, in the short and medium term, a dollar decline is quite viable, but long term, most other nations have much bigger problems than the US, and I think investment will ultimately flow in this direction.

My apologies for the length of the opening and given the fact that there is so little happening in markets, with just a little back and forth, I will skip the recap.

Good luck

Adf

Misguided

On Friday, the news was a sign
Of imminent US decline
The Fed was a hawk
And all of the talk
Was Trump’s actions wiped off the shine
 
But yesterday, markets decided
That Friday’s response was misguided
They’ve come to believe
A Fed funds reprieve
By Powell will soon be provided

 

As I have frequently written in the past, markets are perverse.  The narrative Friday was about the dire straits in which the US found itself with the employment situation collapsing and the recession that has been forecast for the past three years finally upon us.  Part of this story was because of the Fed’s seeming intransigence regarding interest rates as made clear by Chairman Powell’s relatively hawkish comments at the FOMC press conference last week.

But that story is sooo twenty-four hours ago. In the new world, the huge bond market rally that was seen on Friday, and equally importantly, the changing pricing of Fed funds rate cuts has the new narrative as, the Fed is going to cut so buy stonks!  Confirmation of this new narrative was provided by SF Fed President Mary Daly who remarked yesterday evening, “time is nearing for rate cuts, may need more than two.”  All I can say is wow!  

The below chart shows the daily moves, in basis points, of the 2-year Treasury note which is seen as the market’s best indicator or predictor of future Fed funds rates.  On Friday, the yield fell nearly 25bps, essentially pricing in one additional rate cut coming, and as we saw with the Fed funds futures market, that pricing is now anticipating three cuts this year.  Ms Daly merely reconfirmed that news.

Source: https://x.com/_investinq/status/1951356470877925408?s=46

Perhaps it is fair to ask why Daly has taken so long to come around to this view.  After all, she is a known dove and has been for her entire time at the Fed.  As I have asked before, why haven’t the other known doves, like Governors Cook and Jefferson, been out there talking about rate cuts?  For anyone who wants to continue to believe that the Fed is apolitical, nonpartisan or above politics, this is exhibit A as to why it is not.  In fact, if you look, only one Board member was considered a hawk in this analysis by In Touch Markets, and she just resigned.  The other hawks are all regional Fed presidents.  Perhaps this is why they were so slow to raise rates when inflation was roaring in 2022 and why they were so anxious to cut rates in 2024 on virtually no news other than the upcoming election. 

To be clear, until Friday’s NFP data, it was difficult to make the case, in my mind, for a cut because I continue to see inflationary pressures beyond any tariff impacts.  But if the labor market is weaker than had been assumed, that will certainly open the door to more cuts.  Of course, the conundrum is, if the economy is so weak that the Fed needs to cut, why are stocks rallying?  Arguably, a weak economy would foretell weaker earnings growth, a direct negative to equity valuations.  But that appears to be old-fashioned thinking.  I guess I am just an old-fashioned guy.

Ok, let’s turn to the overnight activity.  Starting with bonds, since the big move Friday, Treasury yields have been little changed, climbing 2bps overnight to 4.21%, but still hovering near the bottom of their recent trading range with only the Liberation Day announcement panic showing yields below the current level.  This is a great boon for the Treasury as auctions of 3-, 10-, and 30-year Treasuries are due this week starting with the 3-year today.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

European sovereign yields have also edged higher by 1bp across the board after PMI data was released this morning, pretty much exactly at expected levels.  The outlier last night was JGB yields which slipped -4bps and continue to slide away from designs of a BOJ rate hike.

In the equity markets, yesterday’s US rally was followed almost universally in Asia (Japan +0.65%, China +0.8%, Hong Kong +0.7%, Australia +1.2%) with only India (-0.3%) lagging there.  As to Europe, it too is having a good day with the DAX (+0.8%) leading the way although strength almost everywhere as the PMI data was good enough to keep spirits higher.

In the commodity markets, oil (-1.1%) is slipping for a fourth consecutive day, but is still right in the middle of its $60 – $70 trading range.  There remain so many potential geopolitical issues with saber rattling between the US and Russia and President Trump’s threatened excess tariffs on nations who buy Russian oil that it remains difficult to discern supply/demand characteristics.  Certainly, if the US is heading into a recession, that is likely to dampen demand for a while, but that remains unclear at this time.  As to the metals, gold (-0.65%) is giving back some of its post NFP gains but if I look at the chart below, all it shows is a relatively narrow trading range with no impetus in either direction.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

The rest of the metals complex is being dragged lower by gold this morning, but not excessively so.

Finally, the dollar is a touch stronger today, despite the rate cut talk, as the euro (-0.4%) and yen (-0.55%) lead the G10 currencies down.  While I understand the rationale for the dollar to soften in the short- and medium-term vs its counterparts, it is very difficult for me to look at the political and economic situations elsewhere in the world and think I’d rather be investing there.  Europe is a mess as is Japan.  And don’t get me started on the emerging market bloc.  So, remember, while day-to-day movements can be all over the map and are impacted by things like data releases or announcements, structural strength or weakness remains largely in place, and the US situation appears stronger than most others for now.   Touching briefly on EMG currencies, the dollar is firmer vs. virtually all of them, mostly on the order of 0.4% or so.

On the data front, today brings the Trade Balance (exp -$61.4B) and then ISM Services (51.5) at 10:00.  We don’t get the first post-FOMC speech until tomorrow by Governor Cook, so it will be interesting to see if there are more doves who are willing to show their colors.  But in the end, as demonstrated by the quick reversal of the narrative from Friday to Monday, there remains an underlying bid to risk assets and we will need to see substantial economic weakness to remove that bid, even temporarily.

Good luck

Adf

Typically Dumb

On Friday, the market was sure
The end was nigh, and we’d be poor
The dollar was sold
And stocks mem’ry-holed
While bonds sashayed like haute couture
 
But somehow, the end did not come
As markets around the world hum
Perhaps we should learn
That markets do churn
And pundits are typically dumb

 

I admit to being confused this morning as by Friday evening, the entire narrative was that the recession was here, equity markets had peaked, and the dollar was set to collapse.  All the negative outcomes that have been prognosticated by doom pornsters were arriving and Friday was merely the first step.

And yet, here we are this morning, and not only did the sun rise in the East again, but equity markets throughout Asia also saw far more winners (China +0.4%, Hong Kong +0.9%, Korea +0.9%, India +0.5%, Singapore +1.0%, Thailand +1.25%, Philippines +0.7%) than laggards (Taiwan -0.2%, Malaysia -0.4%, Indonesia -1.0%, New Zealand -0.35%).  As to Europe, it is universally green (DAX +1.25%, CAC +0.8%, IBEX +1.4%, FTSE 100 +0.3%) and US futures, at this hour (6:35) are higher by 0.7% or so.  

Meanwhile, the dollar is higher against the euro (-0.15%), yen (-0.2%) and Swiss franc (-0.5%), although we have seen modest gains in some G10 currencies (GBP +0.15%, AUD +0.15%).  And if we look across the EMG bloc, while KRW (+0.4%) has rallied along with CNY (+0.2%), those are the outliers with the rest of the space softer by about -0.2% or so.  In other words, there has not yet been a wholesale rejection of the dollar on global foreign exchanges.

As to bond yields, after Friday’s dramatic decline, falling 15bps in the hour after the NFP report, they have largely stagnated, rising 1bp this morning.  European sovereign yields have slipped about 3bps on average as they continue the Friday move having closed before all the fun was finished.  In fact, while I have chosen the EURUSD exchange rate as a graph to depict the movement, basically every chart looks the same as this with a dislocation at the 8:30 mark on Friday and then a new range quickly established.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

I highlight this because so frequently, the narrative gets ahead of itself, and Friday was one of those days.  Yes, as I explained last night, the NFP data was weak, albeit still positive regardless of the fireworks surrounding the firing of the BLS Commissioner.  And remember, the idea that President Trump fired McEntarfar because the data displeased him does not mean she was not incompetent.  Certainly, nothing in her career demonstrates keen economic insights.  But that is still the talking point du jour.

However, that is a tired story at this point.  In fact, arguably, the reason it is getting so much press is that there is precious little else new to discuss amid the summer doldrums.  After all, the Russia Ukraine war continues apace with no end in sight, although it seems the rhetoric has increased with ex-president Medvedev seeming to threaten nuclear war and the US moving attack submarines closer to Russia.  

Texas Democratic state legislators have fled the state to avoid a special session where redistricting is due to be completed, so that has a lot of headlines, but seems likely to end like the last time this occurred, with the redistricting being completed, and Fed Governor Adriana Kugler stepped down a few months earlier than her term ends which opens another seat on the Fed for Mr Trump to fill.  

Of these stories, while our antenna should be raised given the Russia nuclear war scenario, it still seems a very low probability event, while Texas may matter in the midterm elections if they successfully redistrict as it is supposed to ensure another 5 Republican seats in the House.  But a new Fed governor, perhaps a precursor to the next Chair will have tongues wagging in the market until the seat is filled, and then until Powell is gone.

So, take your pick as to what is important.  Personally, I think the actual payroll data is the most important issue as we continue to see significant gyrations within the numbers.  Less government hiring (I read that 154,000 federal employees took the buyout) is an unalloyed good for the nation.  After all, if nothing else, given the average federal government employee salary is $106,382 (according to Grok) then that is about $16.4 billion less expenditure by the Federal government.  Every little bit helps.  In fact, all the data we have seen of late shows that the private sector continues to grow while the public sector is shrinking.  Over time, that is undoubtedly a better situation for the US and will reflect in the value of US assets.

But that’s really all there is to discuss, so let’s look at the data upcoming this week:

TodayFactory Orders-4.9%
 -ex Transport0.1%
TuesdayTrade Balance-$61.6B
 ISM Services51.5
ThursdayBOE Rate Decision4.00% (-0.25%)
 Initial Claims220K
 Continuing Claims1947K
 Nonfarm Productivity1.9%
 Unit Labor Costs1.6%
 Mexican Rate Decision7.75% (-0.25%)

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In other words, while we will hear from two more central banks as they cut rates (compared to a Fed that remains on hold, for now) it is hard to get that negative on the dollar.  Fed funds futures are pricing an 87% chance of a rate cut in September and now a 56% chance of three cuts this year, one at each meeting left, so that will weigh on the buck a bit, but if the US is cutting because recession is arriving, the economic situation elsewhere will be more dire.  After all, the US remains the consumer of last resort, and if the US pulls back, everyone else will feel it.

The big picture remains that the broader dollar trend is lower, but it is starting to make a case that trend is ending.  The data this week is largely second tier, and we need to wait until next week for CPI.  I have a feeling we will see very little net movement until then.

Good luck

Adf

Stroke of a Pen

While NFP’s top of the list
For traders this morning, the gist
Of recent releases
Show more price increases
A trend that cannot be dismissed
 
As well, Tariff Man, once again
Imposed more by stroke of a pen
While stocks are declining
The dollar’s inclining
To rise vs. the euro and yen

 

Let’s get the upcoming data out of the way first as the Employment report is due to be released at 8:30. Current median expectations are as follows:

Nonfarm Payrolls110K
Private Payrolls100K
Manufacturing Payrolls-3K
Unemployment Rate4.2%
Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (3.8% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours34.2
Participation Rate62.3%
ISM Manufacturing49.5
ISM Prices Paid70.0
Michigan Sentiment62.0

Source: tradingeconomics.com

This report is obviously of great importance as the Fed continues to rely on a solid labor market as its key justification for not cutting rates.  At least that’s its public stance.  Recall, too, that last month’s result of 147K was significantly higher than forecast and really backed them up.  In fact, I would contend that one of the reasons that Chairman Powell was willing to sound mildly hawkish on Wednesday is because of the labor market’s ongoing performance.  

It is interesting to juxtapose this strength with the increasing number of stories about how the increase in investment and usage of AI, especially at tech firms, is driving a significant amount of personnel reductions.  And yet, the broad data continue to point to a solid labor economy.

However, I think it is worth taking a closer look at recent inflation focused data as that, too, is going to be a key driving force in the central bank debate worldwide.  Yesterday’s PCE data was largely as expected but resulted in a faster pace of inflation on both the headline and core bases.  If we consider the trend over the past three years, as per the Core PCE chart below, it appears that the nadir was reached back in June of last year, and while not every print has been higher, I will contend the trend is starting to point upwards.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Meanwhile, if we turn our attention to European inflation data, while this morning’s Eurozone flash print was unchanged from last month, it was higher than expected.  We saw the same trend in individual Eurozone nations yesterday with Germany, Italy and France all showing the recent disinflationary trend stopping, at least for the past month.  With these recent releases, the analyst community is of the mind that the ECB is likely to hold rates steady again in September, extending the pause on their previous rate cutting cycle.  The strong belief is that US tariffs are going to dampen economic activity and, with that, inflation pressures.

As to the US, with President Trump having announced another wave of tariffs yesterday, as the 90-day window closed, once again the analyst community is calling for inflation to rise here.  Ironically, these analysts may be correct that US inflation is going to be slowly heading higher, but whether that is due to tariffs, or perhaps the fact that more than ample liquidity remains in the economy and services prices continue to rise has yet to be determined.

At this point, I think it might be useful to break out an updated version of a chart that has made the rounds before showing price changes since 2000 broken down by categories.  Virtually every sector that has seen significant price rises is on the service side of the ledger while most goods saw either deflation or very modest (~1% per annum) inflation.

Housing, which is both a good and a service, and textbooks, which are directly linked to tuition, are the two outliers.  Now, many will complain that something like New Cars having risen only 24.7% since 2000 is crazy given their much higher sticker prices, and that is clearly hedonic adjustments doing its job.  But if you consider the key expenses in your life, housing, food and health care are generally top of the requirements.  It is abundantly clear from this chart that the American angst on prices is well founded.  With that in mind, tariffs are exclusively imposed on goods, not services, so given services represent 77.6% of the US economy as of 2022 (as per Grok), the inflationary impact of tariffs seems like it might not be quite as high as the hysteria indicates.

(This is a perfect time to remind you of a great way to manage your inflation risk if you participate in the cryptocurrency markets by buying USDi, the only fully backed inflation tracking coin available.  Learn more at www.usdi.com.  It is essentially inflation-linked cash.)

Coming back around to the market, I think it is a good time to review one of the other major narrative themes, that the dollar is collapsing as foreigners flee because of the massive debt load, and that the dollar will soon lose its reserve status.  You know I have dismissed this idea from the beginning as nothing more than doom porn and an effort by some analysts to get clicks.  

There is no doubt that there had been a downtrend in the dollar for the first six months of 2025, and as has been written repeatedly, the decline was the largest during the first half of the year since the 1980’s.  As well, my concern over the dollar has been based on the idea that the Fed would indeed be cutting rates despite no need to do so, and that would undermine its yield advantage.  But a funny thing happened on the way to the death of the dollar, it stopped falling.  While I have been using the DXY chart as my proxy, pretty much every chart looks the same as per the below of both the euro and yen, where the nadir was at the beginning of July and the dollar has risen vs. both somewhere between 3% and 5%.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In fact, as I look down my board, the dollar has risen against every major currency over the past month, with even tightly controlled CNY declining -0.8%, and the yen falling furthest, down nearly -5.0%.  Combine this with the news that Treasury auctions have been well attended with significant foreign interest, and it is hard to conclude the end is nigh for the US economy.

Ok, a really quick turn to markets here as this has gone on longer than I expected.  Equities are red everywhere this morning after yesterday’s US declines.  Japan (-0.7%), China (-0.5%) after weak PMI data, Hong Kong (-1.1%) and Australia (-0.9%) set the tone for Asia.  In Europe, it is even worse with the CAC (-2.2%) and DAX (-1.9%) both under more pressure as a combination of increased worries over trade (although given they ostensibly have a deal, I’m not sure what the issue is) and companies there reporting weaker than forecast results have been the problem.  US futures at this hour (7:30) are all pointing lower by about -0.85%.

Despite the fear in stocks, bonds are not seen as the answer this morning with Treasury yields edging higher by 1bp and European sovereign yields all higher by between 3bps and 5bps.  I guess the inflation reading has a few traders nervous.  Interestingly, if you look at the ECB’s own website showing rate change probabilities, there is a 14% probability of a rate HIKE priced in for the September meeting!  JGB yields have also edged higher by 1bp as the BOJ, in their policy briefing yesterday, raised their inflation forecasts for 2026, ostensibly as a precursor to the next rate hike there.  I’ll believe it when I see it!

As to commodities, oil (-1.1%) after touching $70/bbl yesterday has rejected the level.  While secondary sanctions on Russian oil exports continue to be discussed, they have not yet been implemented.  I continue to believe the price ought to be lower, but clearly there is a risk premium for now.  In the metals markets, gold (+0.4%) continues to find support despite weakness in other markets (Ag -0.6%, Cu -0.9%) as its millennia-long status as the only true safe haven is reasserting itself.  After all, Bitcoin (-0.6%) has not been able to match the relic’s performance of late despite its modern twist.

And that’s really all there is (I guess that’s enough) as we head into the weekend.  The market tone will be set by the NFP data, where my take is a strong report will see the dollar rally, bonds suffer, and stocks suffer as well as hopes for a rate cut fade further.  Conversely, a weak report should see the opposite impacts.

Good luck and good weekend

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Just a Bad Dream

Before yesterday traders whined
‘Bout how much that vol had declined
But President Trump
Caused copper to dump
And still, Chairman Powell, maligned
 
So, chaos is now the new theme
Though most hope it’s just a bad dream
And ere the week ends
Based on recent trends
We could see, results, more extreme

 

It isn’t often that copper is the talk of the town, but this is a new world in which we live, and as I’ve repeatedly explained, all that we think we knew about the way things work, or have worked in the past, is generically wrong.  It is with this in mind that I lead with a chart of the copper price, which after having rallied dramatically back in April, after Liberation Day, and again in July, both times on the back of tariff announcements, collapsed yesterday when President Trump altered the conversation by explaining that tariffs on copper would not be on the raw metal itself, but rather on refined products instead.  As you can see from the chart, this resulted in a massive decline, nearly 23% in the past twenty-four hours. 

Source: WSJ.com

Essentially, the US price, as traded on the COMEX, returned to be in line with the ROW price, as traded on the LME.  That doesn’t make the move any less dramatic, but the question of how long those price differentials could be maintained was always an open one.  At any rate, that was the biggest mover of the day yesterday and naturally, it had knock-on effects elsewhere with the entire metals complex falling sharply (Au -1.85%, Ag -3.0%, Pt -9.7%) as well as some currencies that are linked to those metals like CLP (-1.5%) and ZAR (-1.4%).  Remember how much complaining there was because market activity had slowed so much?  I bet most folks are looking wistfully at that pace this morning!

Turning to the other key focus of yesterday, the FOMC meeting, the FOMC statement was exactly as expected, with continued focus on “solid” labor market conditions and moderate economic activity acting as the rationale to leave rates on hold.  As widely expected, both Governors Bowman and Waller dissented, each calling for a 25 basis point cut.  The two schools of thought continue to be 1) headline data releases have been masking underlying economic weakness (declining home sales, declining air travel and restaurant activity); and 2) while those issues may be real at the margin, the fact that financial markets continue to rise, with significant speculative activity in things like meme coins and cryptocurrency in general, as well as Private Credit, indicate there is ample liquidity in the market and no reason to adjust policy.

This poet, while not a PhD economist (thankfully!), comes down on the side of number 2 above.  There has been talk by numerous, quite smart analysts, about the underlying weakness in the economy and how the data would be demonstrating it very soon.  Whether it is the makeup of the employment situation, the housing market showing a huge imbalance of homes for sale vs. buyers (at least at current prices) or the added uncertainty of tariffs and how they will impact the economy, this story has been ongoing for more than three years without any proof.  In fact, yesterday’s GDP reading for Q2 was a much higher than expected 3.0%, once again undermining the thesis that the economy is already in a recession.  If so, it is the fastest economic growth ever seen in a recession.

In fact, I do not understand the rationale for so many that a rate cut is necessary.  I realize the market continues to price a 60% probability of a cut in September and about 35bps of cuts by year end, but it makes no sense to me.  In fact, the market is pricing for 110 basis points of cuts through 2026.  Now, either market participants are anticipating a significant slowdown in inflation, which given all the tariff talk seems unlikely, or they see that recession on the horizon.  At this point, I have come to believe it is nothing more than wishful thinking because there is such a strong belief that Fed funds rate cuts lead to higher equity prices, and after all, isn’t that the goal?

Chairman Powell, despite all the pressure he receives from the White House, has not budged.  In this instance, I believe he is correct.  After all, if the data suddenly implodes, the Fed can cut far more substantially and do so on an intermeeting basis if necessary.  Remember, ahead of the election, he cut rates 50bps for no discernible reason based on the data.  Unemployment had risen from 3.9% to 4.2% over the prior three months and that was enough to scare him (although there was clearly a political motive as well).  If the Unemployment Rate rises to 4.5% on September 5th, they could cut that day if they thought things were really unraveling.  If the Fed is truly data dependent, then the data does not yet point to a major economic problem.  And the one thing we know about the Trump administration’s policies is they are going to try to run the economy as hot as possible.  That does not speak to lower interest rates.

Ok, let’s look at how markets around the world absorbed these changes, and how they are preparing for today’s PCE and tomorrow’s NFP data.  Despite all the noise, the DJIA was the worst performer yesterday, sliding just -0.4%, while the NASDAQ actually rallied at the margin, +0.15%.  And this morning, futures are pointing much higher (NASDAQ +1.4%, SPU +1.1%) as both Meta and Microsoft beat estimates handily.

Overnight, while Japanese shares (+1.0%) rallied nicely, China (-1.8%) and Hong Kong (-1.6%) significantly underperformed as weaker than expected PMI data put a damper on the idea that stimulus was going to solve Chinese problems.  A greater surprise is that Korea (-0.3%) didn’t perform better given the announcement that they had agreed a trade deal with the US with 15% baseline tariffs, although that may have been announced after the markets there closed.  But the rest of Asia had a rough session with most key regional exchanges (Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia) all declining about -1.0% with only Taiwan (+0.35%) on the other side of the ledger.  However, if we continue to see strength in the US tech sector, and trade deals keep getting inked, I suspect these markets will be able to rebound.

In Europe, the picture is also mixed, with the CAC and DAX essentially unchanged after in-line inflation readings, while Spain’s IBEX (+0.5%) reacted positively to Current Account data while the FTSE 100 (+0.5%) rallied on strong earnings data from Rolls Royce and Shell Oil.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of yesterday was how the bond market sat out the chaos.  Treasury yields edged higher by 2bps yesterday and this morning they have fallen back by -1bp.  European sovereign yields this morning are essentially unchanged, although a few nations have seen yields slip -1bp.  In many ways, I feel that this is confirmation that despite a lot of noise, not much has really changed.

Oil (-0.5%), is giving back some of yesterday’s $2.00/bbl surge which was based on more sanctions talk from President Trump on Russia and reviving the discussion on 100% secondary sanctions on nations that import oil from Russia.  While EIA data showed a major inventory build, the talk was more than enough to spook traders.

Finally, currency markets, which have seen dollar strength for the past several sessions, are relatively calm this morning, at least in the G10, where the DXY is unchanged, although at its highest level since just before Memorial Day.  In that bloc, JPY (-0.5%) is the laggard after the BOJ left policy on hold, as expected, and while the yen has not been the market’s focus lately, it is back to 150.00 this morning for the first time since March.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Remember all the talk about the end of the carry trade and how the yen was going to explode higher?  Me neither!  As to the EMG bloc, other than the aforementioned metals focused currencies, there has not been much movement in this space either.  However, overall, while the longer-term trend has clearly been lower, this bounce looks more and more like it is gaining strength.  The DXY is a solid 2% through the trendline and a move to 102 seems well within reason in the near term.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

On the data front, this morning brings Initial (exp 224K) and Continuing (1960K) Claims, Personal Income (0.2%) and Spending (0.4%) and PCE (0.3%, 2.5% Y/Y headline, 0.3%, 2.7% Y/Y Core) all at 8:30.  Then at 9:45 we see Chicago PMI (42.0).  There are no Fed speakers and assuming today’s data is in line, I expect that all eyes will turn to earnings from Apple and Amazon after the close and then NFP tomorrow.  So, despite yesterday’s volatility, I see a respite for the day.

Good luck

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A Scold

The market’s convinced that Chair Jay
Is going far out of his way
To keep rates on hold
‘Cause Trump’s been a scold
And strength’s what Jay wants to portray
 
But ask yourself why should rates fall?
With stocks at new highs, after all
And crypto’s exploded
Which clearly eroded
The storied liquidity fall

 

Yesterday’s market activity was benign with modest market movements in both equity and bond markets although the dollar did rally sharply, on the back of the EU trade deal.  Of course, economic theory predicts just that, when tariffs on a nation (or bloc of nations) are raised, that currency will decline in value to offset the tariffs.  Recall, this was the expectation in the beginning of 2025 when President Trump was just coming into office and calling himself ‘Tariff Man’ as he explained he would be imposing tariffs on virtually all US trading partners.  However, back then, the theory didn’t work out very well and the dollar declined throughout the first six months of the year as can be seen below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In fact, analysts quickly moved on and were virtually gleeful that the dollar’s decline of roughly 13% was the largest decline during the first six months of the year since the 1980’s.  Personally, I’m not sure why classifying the decline in terms of the time of year is relevant, but that was a key talking point in the narrative that described the end of American exceptionalism.  Other parts of that narrative were the end of the dollar as the global reserve currency (gold was going to take over) and the onset of other currencies as payment rails for trade.  

None of that ever made sense nor do current proclamations that the euro’s status has changed in any significant way.  There are still very significant long euro positions outstanding as the dollar decline theory has many adherents, but being long euros, aside from being expensive, just got a bit uglier after yesterday’s and this morning’s declines totaling about -1.5%.  

Remember, a key portion of the short dollar thesis is that the Fed is going to cut rates more than other central banks going forward.  And now that the FOMC’s meeting is starting this morning, let’s discuss that idea.  We all know that President Trump has been a vocal advocate for significant rate cuts immediately.  However, let’s look at some evidence.  On the one hand, equity markets are at historic highs in terms of prices as well as readings like the Buffett ratio (market cap/GDP) and P/E and P/S ratios as well.  Crypto currencies, arguably the most speculative of assets, have been flying, especially things like meme coins, which are literally a play on the greater fool paying someone more than they paid for a token with no intrinsic value whatsoever.  Credit spreads, especially for weak credits, are pushing historic lows as per the below chart.  All these things point to not merely ample liquidity and policy being appropriate, but excess liquidity and policy being easy.  

And yet the other side of that coin is a look at 2-year Treasury yields, which have a long history of accurately forecasting future Fed Funds levels.  Right now, as you can see in the below chart, they are trading at a 50 basis point discount to Fed Funds, an indication that the market is quite convinced the Fed is going to cut rates.  Ironically, I believe that Chairman Powell, a PE guy by background, is a strong believer in lower interest rates and I’m sure all his colleagues from his time at Carlyle Group are also pressing for lower interest rates, but he doesn’t want to seem cowed by Trump.

The market is pricing just a 3% probability of a cut tomorrow, but a 65% probability of a cut in September and then another cut in December.  It strikes me that we will need to see a major reversal in the economic situation in the US, with Unemployment rising and growth rapidly declining in order to bring about a situation where there is a real case to be made for a cut.  But we also know that politics plays an enormous role in this story, and while expectations are that we are going to see two dissents at tomorrow’s meeting, that will not change the outcome of no movement.

Adding this all up I conclude that the weak dollar thesis is largely predicated on the idea that the Fed is going to ease monetary policy going forward, catching down to what most other central banks have already done.  And I agree, if the Fed does cut rates, the dollar will fall.  But every day I watch market behavior and continue to see economic data that appears to be holding up pretty well despite a great deal of angst from the analyst community, and I find it harder and harder to come up with a reason to cut rates.  

Consider the story about the new effort by the Trump administration to remove 100,000 regulations by July 4th2026.  Estimates of the value that will unlock are upwards of $1.5 trillion and that assumes no policy changes.  That’s more than 5% of GDP.  I cannot help but believe that President Trump is going to be successful in completely changing the way the US economy works by changing the way (i.e. reducing) the government’s intrusions in the economy.  And if that is successful, it is not clear why interest rates need to decline.  Remember, too, there is an enormous amount of data compressed into this week, so by Friday afternoon, we will have much more information.

Ok, a quick turn round markets shows that after a mixed session in the US yesterday, Japan (-0.8%) slipped on concerns over the nature of the trade deal, while China (+0.4%) edged higher as trade talks continue in Stockholm between the US and China.  Elsewhere in the region both Korea and India rose a bit, spurred by hopes for trade deals there, and the rest of the area was mixed with no large movement.  In Europe, green is today’s color as investors have taken the avoidance of a trade war as a positive and added the euro’s weakness as a positive as well, helping European exporters.  So, gains are strong (DAX 1.3%, CAC 1.4%, FTSE 100 0.7%) and things are generally bright despite grumbling by some nations that the trade deal is going to hurt them.  And at this hour (7:30), US futures are higher by 0.3% or so.

In the bond market, yields are edging lower this morning (Treasuries -2bps, Gilts -1bp, Bunds unchanged) as investors remain either comfortable with the current situation or uncertain what to do to change things at current yields.  I vote for uncertainty.

In the commodity markets, neither oil nor metals markets are moving much at all this morning with daily fluctuations less than 0.2% in all of them.  This has all the feel of a consolidation ahead of tomorrow’s Fed and the rest of the week’s data including GDP, PCE and NFP.

Finally, the dollar is firmer again today vs. almost all its counterparts with gains on the order of 0.2% to 0.3% in most G10 and EMG currencies.  However, two CE4 currencies (PLN -0.6% and HUF -0.9%) are under pressure with the former complaining that the trade deal will cost them > €2 billion, while the latter is suffering from poor economic data heading into an election where President Orban is on shakier ground that normal.  But net, expect to hear about some more dollar strength in the wake of higher tariffs.

On the data front this morning, we see the Goods Trade Balance (exp -$98.4B), Case Shiller Home Prices (3.0%), JOLTS Job Openings (7.55M) and Consumer Confidence (95.8).  With so much focus on trade lately, I suspect that number could matter, but really the JOLTS number will be of more interest, especially for the bond market, as any weakness in the labor market will encourage the lower rates story.

And that’s really all for today.  Until we hear from Powell, it is hard to make a dollar call in the short-term, and the medium term is dependent on the Fed’s actions.

Good luck

Adf

Filled With Gilding

There once was a banker named Jay
Who yesterday, tried to allay
Fears that his building
Was too filled with gilding
But Trump seemed to have final say
 
The fact that this story’s what leads
The news, when one looks through the feeds
Is proof that there’s nought
Of note to be bought
Or sold, as price action recedes

 

According to Merriam-Webster, this is the definition of the word frequently bandied about these days, and rightly so.  

Market activity is just not very interesting.  While there is a new battle brewing on the Thai-Cambodian border, it is unlikely to have much impact on the rest of the world, and the Russia-Ukraine war continues apace, with very little new news.  Congress is in recess, sort of, which means new legislation is not imminent.  And while the Fed meets next week, just like the ECB and the BOE and the BOJ, no policy changes are imminent.  Doldrums indeed.

Which is why the story about President Trump visiting the construction site at the Marriner Eccles Building, the home of the Federal Reserve, has received so much press.  And frankly, a quick look at this clip is so descriptive of the current relationship between Trump and Powell it is remarkable.

But frankly, I just don’t see much else to discuss this morning.  equity markets in the US have generally been creeping higher, the DJIA excepted, the dollar is doing a slow-motion bounce and bond yields trade within a 5bps range.  Yesterday’s jobs data was solid, with both types of claims slipping, while the Flash PMIs showed net strength, although it was entirely Services driven.  And it’s Friday, so I won’t take up too much time.

Here’s the overnight review.  Asian markets followed the Dow, not the S&P or NASDAQ with Tokyo (-0.9%), Hong Kong (-1.1%) and China (-0.5%) all under pressure.  In Japan, there are starting to be more questions asked about whether PM Ishiba can hold on, and if he cannot (my guess is he will go) there is no obvious successor as no party there has any substantial strength.  Remember, the populist Sanseito party is a new phenomenon there and really is screwing up their electoral math.  As to the rest of the region, only Korea and New Zealand managed any gains, and they were di minimis.  Red was the color of the session.

Not surprisingly, that is the story in Europe as well, with most bourses lower on the day (DAX -0.6%, FTSE 100 -0.3%, IBEX -0.5%) although the CAC is essentially unchanged despite LVMH earnings being a little soft.  German Ifo data was slightly better than June, but lower than expected and UK Retail Sales were modestly weaker than forecast on every measure.  Again, it is hard to get excited here.  As to US futures, they are pointing higher by 0.2% at this hour (7:00).

In the bond market, Treasury yields have bounced 2bps from yesterday but are still right around 4.40% while European sovereign yields are higher by 3bps across the board.  Apparently, there is residual concern over European spending plans and absent a trade agreement with the US, investors there are not sure what to do.

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.4%) is bouncing for a second day, but remains within that recent trading range where we have seen choppy trading but no direction.  The gap lower earlier in the week was filled, but it is hard to get excited here about a new trend either.

Source: tradingeconmics.com

Meanwhile, metals markets remain under pressure as we head into the end of the month.  They have had a solid rally this month and it looks to me like some profit taking, but this morning gold (-0.7%), silver (-0.8%) and copper (-0.7%) are all under pressure.

Perhaps one of the reasons that the metals are soft is the dollar is stronger today.  I know we continue to hear about the death of the dollar, but as Mark Twain remarked, “the report of [its] death was an exaggeration.” Instead, what we see this morning is a pattern in the DXY that could easily be mistaken for described as a bottoming and we are simply waiting for confirmation.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Looking at individual currencies, the dollar is firmer against every G10 currency with the euro (-0.25%) and pound (-0.4%) indicative of the magnitude of movement.  In the EMG bloc, KRW (-0.6%) and ZAR (-0.7%) are the worst performers, with the latter clearly following precious metals lower while the former is feeling a little heat from the fact that Japan struck a trade deal while South Korea has not yet done so.   Otherwise, things are just not that interesting here either.

On the data front, this morning brings Durable Goods (exp -10.8%, 0.1% ex Transports) which tells me that a lot of Boeing deliveries were made last month when Durables rose 16.4%.  But otherwise, nothing and no Fed speakers.  As I said before, it is a summer Friday, and I suspect that most trading desks will be skeleton staffed by 3:00pm if not earlier.

Good luck and good weekend

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Not Crashing

The data was pretty darn good
And so, it must be understood
The world is not crashing
Though some things are flashing
Red signs, where recession’s a ‘could’

 

A review of yesterday’s economic data shows that Retail Sales were stronger than expected on every metric and subcomponent, Import Prices rose a scant 0.1%, the Philly Fed Index was much stronger than expected and Jobless Claims fell on both an Initial and Continuing basis.  In truth, it was a sweep of positive economic news.  As such, we cannot be surprised that equity markets responded positively, as did the dollar, while bonds held their ground, given the lack of inflationary signals.  But if we look at the movements in markets, they remain very modest overall.  Sure, the S&P 500 made a new high, by 2 points, but if you look at the chart below, since July 3rd, the rally has been 26 points, or 0.4%.  This is hardly the stuff of excitement.

Source: tradingecononmics.com

Of course, this did not stop the pundits who are calling for recession to highlight any negative subtext, nor did it prevent Fed Governor Waller from claiming that a rate cut in July was appropriate because the labor market is on the edge.  But the naysayers find themselves with diminishing attention these days as market price action has been quite positive.  In fact, most markets have shown similar behavior.  Whether gold or oil or other equity indices or bonds, we have been in a narrow range for a while now and it is not clear what it will take to break us out.  But here’s one thought…

On Sunday, Japan
Will vote for their Upper House
Is there change afoot?

While market insiders will discuss today’s options’ expirations as the key driver of things in the short-term, I think we need turn our eyes Eastward to Japan’s Upper House elections this Sunday.  PM Ishiba’s LDP-Komeito coalition is already in a minority status in the more powerful Lower House, a key reason why so little has been accomplished there.  But at least he had a majority in the Upper House to rubber stamp anything that was enacted.  However, signs are pointing to the LDP losing their majority in the Upper House which could well lead to Ishiba getting forced out.

Now, why does this matter to the rest of us?  There is a case to be made that flows in the JGB market are an important driver of global bond flows, including Treasuries.  For instance, Japan is the second largest net creditor nation with about $3.73 trillion invested abroad (according to Grok), much of which is Japanese insurance companies searching for higher yields than have been available there for the past decades. You may remember back in May, when there was a spike in long-dated JGB yields as all maturities from 20 years on out reached new historic highs (see below chart), well above 3.0%. 

Source: tradingeconomics.com’

Now, consider if you were a Japanese life insurer looking to match your assets to your liabilities.  Historically, buying Treasury bonds, with their much higher yield, was the place to be, especially over the past several years when the yen weakened, adding to your JPY gains.  However, that is still a risky trade, and hedging the FX risk is expensive given the yield differential between the US and Japan.  (Hedgers need to sell USD forward and the FX points reduce the effective exchange rate and by extension the benefits of the higher bond yields.)

But now, for the first time ever, JGB yields are above 3.0%, and that can be earned by a Japanese life insurer with zero FX risk, a very attractive proposition.  In fact, Bloomberg has an article this morning discussing just such a situation with one of the larger insurers, Fukoku Life.

Circling back to the election, it appears that the key issues are the rising cost of living and what the government is going to do about it.  Apparently, there are two approaches; the LDP is talking about giving out cash bribes grants of ¥20,000 to individuals while the opposition is talking about reducing consumption taxes on necessities like food.  However, in either case, the reality is that fiscal policy would loosen further with the MOF needing to issue yet more JGBs to make up for either the increased outlays or reduced income.  Add to that the uncertainty over future Japanese policy if the LDP loses its majority, and the pressure from the US regarding tariff negotiations and suddenly, it makes a lot more sense that the knock-on effects of this election can be substantial, at least with respect to the global bond markets and the USDJPY exchange rate.  (It must be said that Japanese inflation data last night actually fell to 3.3%, but that was due entirely to declining oil prices as fresh food prices, the big issue there, continue to rise.)

An election outcome that weakens PM Ishiba, potentially leading to a fall of his government and new elections in the Lower House, would be a distinct negative for the yen, and likely for the JGB market.  The impact would be felt in global bond markets as yields in the back end would almost certainly rise everywhere around the world.  This is not to imply that yields would rise by 100bps or more, but rather that the current trend of rising long-dated yields would continue for the foreseeable future.  And that will make things tough on every government.

Ok, sorry, I went on a bit long there.  A quick turn through markets shows that other than Japan (-0.2%) Asian equity indices were mostly nicely in the green following the US lead with the biggest winners Australia (+1.4%), Hong Kong (+1.3%) and Taiwan (+1.2%).  Meanwhile, in Europe this morning, while green is the color, the movement has been miniscule, averaging about 0.1% gains.  And US futures are also modestly higher at this hour (7:00) about 0.15% across the board.

In the bond market, Treasury yields have edged lower by -2bps but European sovereign yields are all higher by 2bps across the board.  The talk in Europe is over concerns regarding the conclusion of a trade deal with the US, where concerns are growing nothing will be achieved by the end of the month.

In the commodity markets, oil (+1.3%) is continuing its rebound, perhaps on the beginnings of a belief that the economy is not going to crater in the US.  Certainly, yesterday’s data was positive.  As to the metals markets, they are in fine fettle this morning with both gold (+0.4%) and silver (+0.4%) trading back to the middle of their trading ranges and copper (+1.3%) pushing back toward its recent all-time highs.

Finally, the dollar is under pressure this morning, sliding against the euro (+0.25%), pound (+0.2%) and AUD (+0.4%).  But the real movement has been in the commodity space where NOK (+0.8%) and ZAR (+0.7%) are both having solid days.  There continues to be a great deal of discussion regarding President Trump’s desire to fire Chairman Powell with a multitude of articles describing how that would be the end of the world as we know it because the Fed cherishes their “independence”.  Let’s not have that discussion.

On the data front, this morning brings Housing Starts (exp 1.3M) and Building Permits (1.39M) and then Michigan Sentiment (61.5) at 10:00.  There are no Fed speakers on the slate for today although Governor Kugler, not surprisingly, explained that waiting was the right call for the Fed when she spoke yesterday.  

It is a Friday in the summer with relatively unimportant data.  Absent another surprise from the White House Bingo card, I expect a quiet session overall as most traders and investors leave the office early for the weekend.  The dollar’s biggest risk is the Fed does cut early, but if the data keeps cooperating, it will be much harder for dollar bears, especially since so many are already short, to sell it aggressively from here.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Kvetched

The story on everyone’s lips
A central bank apocalypse
If Trump fires Powell
The markets will howl
With yields rising numerous bips
 
However, said Trump, it’s farfetched
Despite plans that he’d clearly sketched
Thus, markets reversed
While bears, losses, nursed
And “right-thinking” people all kvetched

 

If you had Trump fires Powell on your White House Bingo card, congrats, it looked like a winner.  That was the story all morning yesterday, overshadowing PPI data that was quite benign, printing at 0.0% M/M for both headline and core, as the punditry postulated the problems with Trump doing that.  At this point, we are all familiar with the fact that the Fed Chair can only be fired for “cause” although exactly what “cause” represents is unclear.  Too, we know that in Trump’s efforts to reduce the size of the government, the Supreme Court gave him authority to remove the heads of many departments but explicitly carved out the Fed from that process.

In the end, though, despite rampant rumors that he had composed a letter for just such an occasion, at a press conference with Bahraini Crown Prince, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, he said it was “highly unlikely” he was going to fire Powell, although he once again castigated him for not cutting rates. Most markets, after getting all excited about the prospects of this action, reverted to the previous solemnitude of doing nothing over the summer.  The below chart of the S&P 500 was replicated in virtually every market.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

It is also no surprise that the Fed Whisperer was out in the WSJ this morning defending his bread-and-butter relationship, but my take is this is just a feint on the president’s part to move the discussion away from issues he doesn’t like.  Given that Supreme Court protection and given that the Supreme Court has been very good for Mr Trump, I’m pretty confident that Powell will serve out his full term as Chair and be replaced next year.  I would, however, look for a candidate to be announced at the earliest possible time.

While that was the story that sucked up all the oxygen yesterday, life still goes on and this morning, arguably the biggest news is that UK Unemployment rose to 4.7% with earnings slipping and the Claimant count rising.  The punditry continues to harp on how the US is set to go into stagflation because of Trump’s tariffs which are driving inflation higher while weakening the economy (despite all evidence to the contrary) while ignoring the UK which saw inflation rise faster than expected yesterday, to 3.6% while Unemployment is rising.  That feels a lot closer to the stagflation story than in the US, and as we heard from BOE Governor Bailey yesterday, it’s all Trump’s fault because of the tariffs.  Talk about deflection.  However, a little sympathy for the Guv is in order as he really doesn’t know what to do.  After today’s data, there is more discussion of another rate cut by the BOE when they next meet on August 7th.  Certainly, the pound (-0.1%) is behaving as though a rate cut is coming as evidenced by the chart below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

However, remember that the UK government of PM Starmer has proven its incompetence on virtually every issue it has addressed, both domestically and on an international basis, so the pound’s decline could well be a general exit from the UK by investors.  Speaking of currencies, the dollar is having quite a positive day across the board.  Aussie (-0.9%) is the laggard across both G10 and EMG blocs as its employment situation report showed a much weaker economy than expected, although the yen (-0.4%) is starting to feel real pressure as the Upper House Election approaches.  In fact, there is growing talk that USDJPY above 150 is likely if the PM Ishiba’s LDP loses their majority in the Upper House, or even if it wins given the amount of increased deficit spending they are promising.  Does anyone remember all the talk of the end of the yen carry trade and how the yen was going to rise dramatically?  There’s a theme that did not age well.  As to the rest of the currency market, the dollar is rising vs. everybody with a rough average gain of ~ 0.4%.  The dollar is not dead yet.

Heading back to equities, despite all the angst about Powell yesterday, US indices all managed a gain on the day.  In Asia, most markets performed well with Japan (+0.6%) and China (+0.7%) indicative of the movement.  Australia (+0.9%) responded to its jobs data with growing expectations of an RBA rate cut and there were many more regional exchange gainers than losers overnight.  In Europe, green is also today’s theme, with both the CAC (+0.9%) and DAX (+0.8%) having very nice sessions and most of the rest of the continent climbing around 0.5%.  The only data of note was the final CPI reading for the Eurozone, which was right on the button at 2.3% core.  However, at this hour (7:00) US futures are essentially unchanged.

Bonds were actually the biggest concern yesterday on the Powell news with a huge divergence between the 2-year and 30-year as the rumors flew, although most was forgiven after Mr Trump said he would not be firing Powell.  The Chart below shows that divergence and the retracement although 2-year notes did remain lower for the session.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But that was yesterday.  This morning, 10-year Treasury yields have edged higher by 1bp, and European sovereigns have largely followed suit.  In Asia, though, it is noteworthy that Australian government bonds saw yields decline -5bps after the data, and JGB yields slid -2bps as election promises seem to imply more QE, not less.

Lastly, commodity prices also got the whipsaw treatment on the Powell story, but this morning, with the dollar showing strength across the board, we see metals prices slipping (Au -0.6
%, Ag -0.25%, Cu -0.15%) although oil (+0.5%) is finding a bottom it seems as per the below chart from tradingeconomics.com.

On the data front, in addition to the weekly Initial (exp 235K) and Continuing (1970K) Claims data, we also get Retail Sales (0.1%, 0.3% ex autos) and Philly Fed (-1.0).  We hear from one Fed speaker, Governor Kugler, but if anything, after yesterday’s Powell drama, I expect everybody we hear from to rally round the Chair, so there will be no talk of rate cuts.  Aside from yesterday’s PPI data, the Fed’s Beige Book indicated modest economic growth, again, not a reason to cut interest rates.

Let me leave you with a thought experiment though.  Last night, the Senate passed the first (of many we hope) rescission bill to actually reduce spending.  Tariff income has grown as evidenced by last month’s budget surplus.  What if Trump and his team are correct, and through reduced regulations as well as tariff and increased inward investment, the private economy grows more strongly and the budget deficit declines far more than current estimates, perhaps achieving Secretary Bessent’s goal of 2%?  Will yields rise or fall?  Will the dollar rise or fall?  Will equities rise or fall?  On the White House Bingo card, I would suggest very few believe in this outcome and are not managing their portfolios to address this.  But I would also suggest it is a non-zero probability, although not my base case.  Just remember, stranger things have happened.

Good luck

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