Ending QT

The lady from Dallas explained
The balance sheet might be constrained
So, ending QT
Is likely to be
The way the Fed’s goals are attained
 
However, investors ain’t sure
That ending QT is the cure
So, worries abound
As traders have found
Most stocks have now lost their allure

Over the weekend, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, whose previous role was head of markets at the NY Fed and so knows a thing or two about the monetary plumbing, explained in a speech that QT, at its current pace, is likely going to be too restrictive going forward.  While she threw in the obligatory line about the idea the Fed may still need to raise the Fed funds rate if inflation remains too robust, I would contend that this is another sign the Fed is coming to the end of its tightening regime.  She explained that the swift decline in the Reverse Repo (RRP) facility indicated there may be a significant decline in liquidity in markets and that could have a detrimental impact on equity prices the economy’s future path and derail the widely assumed soft-landing scenario.

For some context, the RRP facility peaked almost exactly one year ago, touching about $2.55 trillion as the Fed was paying more on excess reserves than was available in short-term paper and Treasury bills.  But as the government has flooded the market with T-bills of late, and there is no indication that pace is going to slow down, the yield on bills rose above the IOER rate the Fed was paying.  As such, money market funds have pushed funds from the RRP into purchasing bills and the RRP facility now has “just” $694 billion as of Friday.  A look at the chart below from the FRED database of the St Louis Fed shows the sharp downward trajectory of the facility’s balances.  But also notice that prior to March 2021, this facility basically was at $0 for its entire history.  My point is that this facility does not have a long history of supporting market activities or liquidity, rather it is a recent construct designed to help smooth out temporary fluctuations.  It’s just that the concept of temporary here seems akin to the Fed’s concept of transitory when it comes to inflation.

At any rate, the FOMC Minutes also mentioned the idea that QT would likely need to slow down, and the committee needed to discuss the proper timing of these things.  Logan’s comments were exactly in this vein as the Fed seem like they are working very hard to prepare market participants for the beginning of an easing cycle.  It’s kind of funny that throughout November and December, the Fed seemed a bit concerned that markets were overexuberant, but after a modest equity market sell-off to start the year, much of which can probably be put down to profit-taking on a tax advantaged* basis, they seem suddenly concerned that things are falling apart.

Logan’s comments were in the wake of Friday’s data which showed NFP stronger than expected, although another month of downward revisions for previous readings, and showed wages gaining a bit more than expected.  The initial move here was that further tightening was on the way, or certainly that easing was delayed, but then the ISM Services index was released at 10:00am and it was much worse than expected, 50.6, with the Employment sub-index printing at a horrible 43.7, its lowest level excluding the Covid months, and indicative that perhaps the job market is not quite so robust.  This helped unwind the tightening discussion and Friday’s markets ultimately closed little changed.

Which brings us to this morning, where the most noteworthy price action is in the commodity space with oil (-2.8%) sharply lower after Saudi Arabia cut its pricing indicating that demand is slow, and gold (-1.25%) falling sharply although a rationale there is far harder to find given the dollar is essentially unchanged on the day and it certainly doesn’t appear that peace is breaking out in either Israel/Gaza or in Ukraine.

While there has been a bit of data released from Europe, none of it was substantially different from expectations and it showed that the status quo remains there, overall, a weak Eurozone economy with prices still on the sticky side.  As well, there have been no speakers this morning which just leaves us all unsure of the next big thing.

Now, in fairness, we do have the next big data point coming on Thursday, CPI in the US, which I am assured by so many analysts is THE critical data point.  I was also confident that NFP was critical, so perhaps CPI will be less exciting than forecast.  In the meantime, a look at the rest of the overnight session shows that Japan was on holiday so there was no market activity, but Chinese shares have continued their weak ways, falling more than -1.3% across all the indices there.  It seems to me that despite some very real efforts to inculcate fear of China by certain politicians, President Xi has an awful lot of domestic issues to address.  European shares, though, are little changed with a few very modest gainers (DAX +0.15%) and a few very modest decliners (FTSE 100 -0.2%) and everything else in between.  US futures are softer this morning as the weekend story regarding Boeing’s 737 Max being grounded is weighing on the stock and the market as a whole.

In the bond market, Treasuries are unchanged on the day while European sovereigns are all seeing yields climb between 4bps and 5bps.  This move seems like a catch-up to Friday’s US price action, which if you remember saw a sharp decline in yields early and a rebound later on.  Ultimately, this space will continue to be driven by the central banks with the Fed funds futures market still pricing in a > 60% probability of a 25bp cut in March with Europe seen likely to follow shortly thereafter.

Having already touched on commodities, a look at the dollar shows that while the euro, pound and yen are all little changed, there is a bit more movement in the dollar’s favor amongst some less liquid currencies with AUD (-0.4%), NOK (-0.85% on weak oil prices) and KRW (-0.4%) leading the way.  I continue to see the FX markets as an afterthought to the broad economic picture right now but have not changed my view that if the Fed does lead the way in easing policy, the dollar is likely to slide.

On the data front, here is what this week brings:

TodayConsumer Credit$9B
TuesdayNFIB Small Biz Optimism91.0
 Trade Balance-$65.0B
ThursdayInitial Claims210K
 Continuing Claims1853K
 CPI0.2% (3.2% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.2% (3.8% Y/Y)
FridayPPI0.1% (1.3% Y/Y)
 -ex food & energy0.2% (1.9% y/Y)

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As well, we do hear from several Fed speakers this week starting with Bostic today and then Williams and Kashkari as the week progresses.  At this stage, I expect that we are likely to see less volatility as my guess is most profit adjustments have been made and all eyes are turned to CPI on Thursday.  Until then, it is likely to be a dull week (famous last words!)

Good luck

Adf

*This tax advantage is simply that taxes will not be due until April 2025, so perhaps tax deferred is a better description.

Already Wary

In China, the news wasn’t great

As Moody’s no longer could wait
Because of a glut
Of debt, they did cut
The outlook for China’s whole state

Investors were already wary
And as such, since last January,
Afraid of more shocks
Have been selling stocks
In quantities not arbitrary

The biggest news overnight was Moody’s downgrading their outlook for Chinese debt to negative from its previous stable view.  Moody’s currently rates the nation at A1, 4 notches below the best available of Aaa, but still a solid investment grade rating.  However, citing the property downturn in the country and the concomitant fiscal pressures that are building on local governments’ balance sheets, it appears there is a growing concern that national debt will be issued to cover the local failures.  

It must be very difficult to be a local government financial official in China as the competing pressures of ever faster growth and maintaining sound finances have become impossible to attain simultaneously.  The real question is, will President Xi determine that fiscal stability is more important than economic growth?  While that appeared to be his view last year, this year he seems to have changed his focus to growth.  Perhaps the fact that the US economy seems to be maintaining very solid growth while China is stumbling has become too much of a bad look for him to tolerate further.  (And that’s not to say things are fantastic here.) 

At any rate, his efforts to encourage more widespread economic activity while simultaneously deflating the immense property bubble there is starting to run into trouble.  As the pace of growth slows in the country, exacerbated by the demographic decline of the population (it is getting old and the population is shrinking), Xi appears to have thrown fiscal caution to the wind.  Once again, my concern is that if the domestic economy continues to deteriorate, Xi will determine that it is time for some international adventures to shore up his support at home.  I would contend that is not on anyone’s bingo card right now, but it is something to watch.

The market response to the news was to further sell Chinese equities with both onshore and Hong Kong markets suffering, each declining nearly 2%.  This weighed on Japanese markets (Nikkei -1.4%) as well as Taiwan, South Korea, and Australia, with only India ignoring the story.  It makes some sense that the China and India stories are uncorrelated given India is one of the few nations not reliant on China for much with respect to trade.  

Away from that story, however, things have been remarkably quiet on the economic front.  We saw Services PMI data from around the world with China, interestingly, one of the few nations printing above 50 (Caixin Services PMI 51.5), while all the continent remains firmly below the 50 boom-bust line save the UK which printed a much better than expected 50.9 reading.  While the market is waiting for US ISM Services data (exp 52.0) as well as JOLTS Job Openings data (9.3M), there is scant little else to discuss this morning.  Recall, though, as the week progresses, we will be receiving much more important data, notably the payroll report, which may help clarify the state of things now.

But, lacking anything else to discuss, let’s run down markets.  Away from Asia, equity markets are mixed with continental bourses all modestly firmer, on the order of 0.3%, although the FTSE 100 is lower by -0.5% despite the better than expected PMI data.  US futures are also pointing lower this morning, about -0.5% after a desultory day yesterday on Wall Street.

In the bond markets, Treasury yields have edged a bit lower this morning, -3bps, resuming what has been a powerful downtrend in yields.  In Europe, though, yields have really taken a dive, with sovereign bonds there all seeing declines of between 7bps and 9bps.  The weak PMI data has investors now bringing forward EB rate cuts to June.  Adding to this story were comments from the ECB’s Schnabel, historically one of the more hawkish members, describing the possibility of rate cuts next year as appropriate.  This seems quite similar to the Waller comments last week given Schnabel’s presumed importance on the ECB.  Finally, JGB yields are 2bps softer after slightly softer than expected Tokyo CPI data was seen as a harbinger for slowing inflation across Japan.  Once again, the idea that interest rate policy in Japan is due to normalize soon is being challenged by the facts on the ground.

Turning to commodities, oil (-0.3%) is slipping again as the weak PMI data encourages worries of an impending recession and the OPEC+ meeting was not taken seriously by the market as an effective manner to reduce supply.  Inventories have been building lately, so further pressure seems viable.  Meanwhile, metals markets are under further pressure with both copper and aluminum falling by more than -1.0% and gold, which had a remarkable session yesterday with a greater than $100 trading range, edging down a few bucks, but still well above the $2000/oz level.

Finally, the dollar refuses to obey the narrative and die.  Instead, it is higher again this morning vs. almost all its counterparts, both G10 and EMG.  The laggard today is AUD (-0.9%) which fell after the RBA left rates on hold, as expected, but apparently was not seen as hawkish as traders anticipated and the market has removed the pricing for any further rate hikes there.  The only exception to this movement has been the yen, which is now 0.1% firmer although in the wake of the Tokyo CPI data, it fell sharply.  USDJPY remains beholden to the twin narratives of declining US interest rates and normalizing monetary policy in Japan.  Right now, those stories are not working in concert, so until they do so, in either direction, I expect the yen will be choppy but not really make much headway in either direction.

Aside from the ISM and JOLTS data, we only see the API Crude Oil inventory data with a draw of 2.2 million barrels expected.  As there are no Fed speakers, it is shaping up to be a quiet day overall.  With that in mind, look for limited activity until 10:00 when the data is released and then I suspect that we remain in a ‘bad news is good’ regime.  So, weak ISM is likely to encourage risk taking on the belief the Fed will cut more aggressively and vice versa.  The same is true with the JOLTS data.  As to the dollar, I suspect it will follow the rate story, so strong data will help the buck and weak will see a bit of selling.

Good luck

Adf

On the Schneid

While data at home is robust
In Europe and China the thrust
Is weakness abounds
Which seems to be grounds
For traders, their risk, to adjust

So, equities are on the schneid
While bond yields have been amplified
The dollar’s on fire
Continuing higher
And oil’s climb won’t be denied

Another day, another wave of bad economic news from elsewhere in the world.  However, the US continues to surprise with better than expected results.  Yesterday’s ISM Services data was far better than forecast with a headline print of 54.5, 2 points above both last month and expectations for this month, while the sub-indices all showed significant strength, including the Prices Paid index.  The latter is clearly a concern for Chairman Powell and his crew as it is an indication that inflationary tendencies have not yet been snuffed out.  Ultimately, the market response was to sell stocks and bonds while increasing the probability of a November Fed funds rate hike a few points.  Interestingly, the market pricing for a September hike has fallen to just a 7% probability despite the hotter than expected data.  My sense is that the big market adjustment is going to come as traders come to understand that higher for longer means no cuts until 2025 on the current basis, especially if we continue to see data like the ISM print yesterday.

But the US storyline is clearly not the same as the storyline elsewhere in the world.  Last night, for example, Chinese trade data was released and both imports (-7.3%) and exports (-8.8%) fell sharply again, with the Trade Surplus falling to $68.3B.  Granted, the declines were not as bad as last month, nor quite as bad as expectations, but there is no way to spin the data as indicating a positive economic impulse in China right now.  While Chinese equity markets fell sharply (Hang Seng and CSI 300 both -1.4%) we also saw further weakness in the renminbi.  

The PBOC is still desperately trying to prevent the renminbi from weakening too quickly, but they are having a hard time at this stage.  The difference between the CFETS fixing and the onshore spot market is now 1.8%, dangerously close to the 2.0% boundary.  At the same time, the offshore renminbi, CNH, is pushing back to its highs from last October, now trading above 7.3400, which is 1.97% above the fixing.  This is a losing battle for the PBOC unless they change their monetary policy, but given the Chinese economy’s weakness, tighter money seems an unlikely step.  7.50 is still on the cards here.

China, though, is not the only problem.  European data this morning was uniformly lousy with German IP (-0.8%) and Eurozone GDP (Q2 revised lower to 0.1% Q/Q, 0.5% Y/Y) highlighting the problems facing the old world.  Alas, price pressures have not yet abated there, and stagflation is the new watchword on the continent.  

When the US was faced with stagflation in the 1970’s, Paul Volcker opted to fight inflation first, sending the country into a double dip recession in 1980 and 1981-82, before things turned around.  But that was a different time…and Christine Lagarde is no Paul Volcker!  Is it even possible for an “independent” central bank to knowingly create a recession to slay inflation these days?  I suspect inflation would need to be far higher, stable in double digits, before politicians would accept that it is a bigger problem than a recession, at least electorally.  The upshot of this scenario is that the ECB, despite ongoing higher than targeted inflation, is very likely at the end of its hiking cycle.  This, combined with the overall weak economy there, is going to continue to undermine support for the euro.  While the movement will be gradual, I expect that the single currency will slide below 1.05 and possibly get to parity by the end of the year.

And I would be remiss if I didn’t touch quickly on Japan, where they released their Leading Indicators at a weaker than expected 107.6, continuing the two-year downtrend.  Slowing growth in Japan and still extraordinarily loose monetary policy is going to continue to weigh on the yen.  While it has bounced slightly this morning, 0.2%, it continues to weaken steadily closer to the psychological 150.00 level.  

So, with all that happy news, let’s tour the overnight session to see the results.  The rest of the APAC equity markets also were under pressure overnight with Japan, Australia and South Korea all in the red as well.  In Europe this morning, the picture is more mixed with some gainers and some losers but no large movements overall, mostly +/- 0.2%.  US futures, after a lousy session yesterday, are all pointing lower at this hour (7:30) as well.

In the bond market, Treasury yields are essentially unchanged on the day, holding onto their gains for the past week and just below the 4.30% level.  European sovereigns, though, are seeing a bit of support as the weak economic data has engendered hope that inflation will stop rising and the ECB will be okay to pause.  The latter remains to be seen.  I cannot get over the idea that the uninversion of the yield curve is going to come because long rates are going to rise, not because short rates are going to be cut, and I’m pretty sure nobody is ready for that outcome.

Oil (-0.5%) is consolidating its recent gains with WTI north of $87/bbl and showing no signs of backing off.  If OPEC+ keeps a lid on production, you have to believe that prices will continue to rise.  In the metals markets, both copper and aluminum are soft today, responding to the weak Chinese and German data, while gold, after a selloff this week, is bouncing slightly.

Finally, the dollar remains king of the hill, stronger against virtually all its counterparts in both the G10 and EMG blocs.  I’m old enough to remember when the prevailing narrative was the dollar was dead and would be replaced by the euro, or the yuan, or a BRICS currency and yet, it continues to be subject to more demand than virtually every other currency around.  The broad story is the US economy continues to lead the global economy and the prospects for Fed rate cuts are diminished relative to other nations.  Tight monetary and loose fiscal policy combinations have historically been very supportive of a currency and clearly that is the current US state.

Two quick stories in the EMG bloc are from Poland (-0.7%), where yesterday’s surprising 75bp rate cut has undermined the zloty amid concerns that inflation is going to remain unhindered there, and MXN (+0.75%) where traders are unwinding some positions after a sharp decline over the past week.  The peso has been one of the few currencies that has outperformed the dollar this year as Banxico has been ahead of the curve on inflation and tight monetary policy.  However, with an election upcoming it appears there may be a change in attitude there.  If that is the case, then look for the dollar to regain some lost ground.

On the data front, Initial (exp 234K) and Continuing (1719K) Claims are released along with Nonfarm Productivity (3.4%) and Unit Labor Costs (1.9%).  As traders and investors bide their time ahead of next week’s CPI and the following week’s FOMC meeting, it is not clear that today’s numbers will have much impact.  As such, I see no reason for the dollar to cede its recent gains, especially if equities remain under pressure.

Good luck

Adf

In For a Bruising

The data’s still somewhat confusing
As hard numbers claim growth is cruising
But surveys keep showing
That growth should be slowing
And bears think we’re in for a bruising

Another month, another series of weaker than expected PMI/ISM data with limited corresponding weakness in the ‘hard’ numbers.  On Monday, ISM Manufacturing fell to 46.0, basically a point worse than last month and expectations.  The sub-indices were no better with weakness across Prices, Employment and New Orders.  This is hardly the sign of a strong economy.  In fact, we are at levels consistent with recession.  The same story has been playing out internationally, with weakness across virtually the entire Eurozone and weakness in China as well.  In fact, this morning’s bearish risk tone seems to have been driven by the weakness in the Caixin PMI overnight which fell to 52.5 on much weaker Services activity.  At least that is the current story making the rounds.

 

The confusion comes from the fact that the hard data, measurement of actual activity and output rather than surveys of what people or businesses are planning or expecting, remains far better than the Survey data implies.  Consider that the average reading of the regional Fed manufacturing surveys in June was -9.86, a pretty clear indication that manufacturing is in recession territory.  Meanwhile, the Citi Economic Surprise Index remains at a solidly positive 57.5, which is a level consistent with solid GDP growth.

 

So, which is it?  Has the Fed achieved its objective of a soft landing, with inflation heading back to the 2% target while growth continues apace?  Or is the survey data truly descriptive of the future with a more dramatic slowing of growth soon to appear on our screens?

 

Alas, it is very difficult for me to view the total picture and see the soft landing as anything but a tiny probability.  The term ‘long and variable lags’ was created because they are just that, long and variable.  There is no consistency as to the time between the Fed’s policy actions and their impact on the economy, with examples of the adjustment being anywhere between 9 and 27 months.  Arguably, this time we have seen some unusual timing given the starting point of the economy and all the unique policies that were a consequence of the pandemic response.  And as of today, we are 15 months into the tightening cycle, so plenty of time yet to remain within the historical landscape here.

 

For instance, the dramatic rise in interest rates were assumed to have been devastating to the housing market and home builders yet that has not been the case.  Instead, the result that was generally unforeseen, was that the supply of existing homes on the market shrank dramatically as people are now ‘locked into’ extremely low mortgage rates (having refinanced during the ZIRP period) and either cannot afford to, or simply will not give them up.  The result is that housing demand is largely being satisfied by new homes, thus home builders are killing it while consistent housing demand results in higher prices.

 

Similarly, fiscal policy has been pumping money into the economy at a far faster rate than during previous recessions with Congress passing the ironically named Inflation Reduction Act, as well as the CHIPS act and various other spending measures.  At the same time, the student loan forbearance has resulted in millions of people having much greater disposable income than they otherwise would have been able to spend, thus supporting demand.  However, it appears that the student loan situation may be changing after the recent Supreme Court ruling and the debt ceiling deal also included some spending reductions.  The point is that the taps may be slowly turning off in two areas that have been broadly economically supportive thus reducing overall demand and correspondingly economic activity.

 

This week, however, we get some of the most important ‘hard’ data with both the Trade Balance and the employment report.  In fact, I have maintained that NFP is the single most important piece of data currently as its continued strength has been the key reason the Fed has been able to defend its policy choices.  As long as Unemployment remains low, Chairman Powell can point to that and rightly claim that the economy can withstand higher interest rates and the Fed will continue their quest to drive inflation to their 2% target.  This is not an argument for their policies, just an observation that they will not change until there is a sufficient catalyst to do so.  Hence, I continue to watch the weekly Initial Claims data as crucial.  It has already started to move higher, with the 4-week moving average having risen to 257.5K from a low point of 190.5K back in September 2022.  While this number is not recessionary in its own right, the trend is clearly a concern.

 

Ultimately, I remain in the camp that the widely forecast recession is still coming down the tracks, it has just taken the scenic route.  In the meantime, a quick look at the overnight session shows risk is under pressure everywhere with Asian equity markets all in the red and Europe seeing the same thing.  As mentioned above, today’s narrative is about the Caixin PMI printing a weak number, but we also saw weakness throughout Europe in today’s PMI releases.  US futures are also under pressure at this hour (8:00), currently down about -0.5%.

 

Bonds are seeing some haven demand with yields sliding a bit across the continent, somewhere in the 1bp-2bps area, although Treasury yields are essentially unchanged this morning, maintaining the gains from the much higher than expected GDP print last week.  If we continue to see strong economic data, I expect that Treasury yields can head higher still.  The yield curve inversion is now at -105bps, its lowest point during this period and an indication that the market is more accepting of the Fed’s higher for longer comments.  Remember, this remains a very powerful recession indicator as well, and it has been inverted for just over a year at this point.

 

Oil prices have rebounded 2% this morning and are back above $70/bbl after Saudi Arabia indicated they were going to continue at their recently reduced production level and there is word that the Biden administration may tender for more oil to start refilling the SPR.  Remember, though, oil remains far lower than it has been in the past year, so there is plenty of room for it to move higher.  Metals prices are mixed this morning with gold rejecting a sell-off below $1900/oz and both copper and aluminum still trending lower.

 

Finally, the dollar is broadly stronger today but in truth is mixed since I last wrote on Friday.  In the G10, the commodity bloc is suffering most with AUD (-0.45%) and NOK (-0.4%) the laggards although all currencies are softer on the day.  In the EMG bloc, HUF (-0.9%) and BRL (-0.5%) are the laggards with the forint responding to both budget cuts and expectations of central bank interest rate cuts, while the real appears to be tracking the broader risk-off sentiment.

 

On the data front, it is obviously an important week with the following on the docket:

 

Today

Factory Orders

0.8%

 

FOMC Minutes

 

Thursday

ADP Employment

223K

 

Initial Claims

245K

 

Continuing Claims

1750K

 

Trade Balance

-$69.0B

 

JOLTS Job Openings

9900K

 

ISM Services

51.3

Friday

Nonfarm Payrolls

225K

 

Private Payrolls

200K

 

Manufacturing Payrolls

5K

 

Unemployment Rate

3.6%

 

Average Hourly Earnings

0.3% (4.2% Y/Y)

 

Average Weekly Hours

34.3

 

Participation Rate

62.6%

Source: Bloomberg

 

While everybody will be looking forward to the payroll report, this afternoon’s FOMC Minutes should be interesting as well.  Given the entire skip/pause question, there is heightened interest as to how that conversation played out.  But ultimately, this is all about payrolls this week.  Aside from the Minutes, we hear from two other Fed speakers, NY’s Williams and Dallas’s Logan, with the market still trying to determine just how high higher for longer really means.

 

The funny thing about the FX market is that despite my growing belief that the US is still due a recession, I believe that the dollar may well hold up as Europe and many emerging markets find themselves in the same situation.  As such, the description of, the cleanest dirty shirt in the laundry still applies to the buck.

 

Good luck

Adf

Disinflation’s Deceased

The plan that the Prez just released
Has taxes and spending increased
As well as what’s planned
There’s pent up demand
As such, disinflation’s deceased

Risk remains in vogue this morning as the details of the $2.3 trillion spending plan released last evening by President Biden were more than enough to keep the risk train rolling.  While there was no mention of ‘shovel ready’ projects, and expectations are that it won’t be until sometime in the summer that any bill will make it to the president’s desk, it is full speed ahead for the investor community.  Certainly, there are no concerns over either financing the new bill nor with the prospect that adding more stimulus demand is likely to drive up prices even more rapidly than currently seen.  In other words, everything is great!

But is it really that great?  It is hard to live in the real world and not have noticed that the cost of living is rising, and seemingly faster than the data indicates.  By now, we have all heard about the shortage of microprocessors causing a reduction in auto production and even iPhones.  I’m pretty sure that less supply in these products will not lead to lower prices.  And if you still drive at all, you are aware of how much the price of gasoline has risen during the past year.  But lately we have heard from a number of companies on more mundane products and how prices are being raised there as well.  Kimberly-Clark, General Mills, J.M. Smucker and Hormel Foods have all announced price hikes in the past week or two, and they all make things we buy in the supermarket each week.  So, while the rising price of a once every 3-6 year purchase of an automobile is not likely to impact any individual regularly, when your toilet paper goes up in price, you notice.  The Fed must be thrilled.

In that vein, I often wonder how the Fed considers its relationship with inflation.  Perhaps Powell rehearses discussions with an anthropomorphized version of inflation.  Maybe it would sound like this:

Inflation: Jay, I have to tell you, I’m feeling pretty strong lately.  I’ve been resting for the past 12 years and have a lot of energy available to jump pretty high.

Chairman Powell: That’s awfully nice, but let me warn you, ‘we have tools.’

Inflation: Tools?  What does that even mean?  Are you going to build a house?  (Nah, too expensive with prices rising 10% annually).  Repair the infrastructure?  (That will certainly drive up raw material prices even further.)

Chairman Powell:  Just what I said, we have tools.  My dear friend Paul Volcker, may he rest in peace, taught us how to deal with you 40 years ago.  We can stop you anytime we want.

Inflation:  Well, 40 years ago, was a different time and place.  The amount of outstanding debt was a fraction of where it is today.  Since you haven’t used those ‘tools’ in 40 years, I suspect they are rusty and ineffective now.  And even if you have them, I’m willing to bet you are either afraid to use them, or don’t know how.  I’m looking forward to our next conversation when I will be bigger, stronger and higher!

Chairman Powell:  Don’t mess with me, I told you, ‘we have tools!’

As Powell awakes shaking from this nightmare, he repeats to himself, we have tools, just like Christine has tools.  It will all be fine.

But seriously, it is very difficult to see the ongoing data releases, especially in the US, where GDP is clearly going to see a very big jump in Q2 and analysts are fighting to forecast the biggest GDP growth number in decades, and not wonder how prices are not going to rise even more rapidly.  In fact, we seem to be approaching a perfect storm, increased demand meets supply shortages.  The Fed is going to get their inflation, as will most central banks, and it is ultimately going to have a big impact on financial markets.  But not today.  Today, investors continue to see only the positives.

After yesterday’s Tech led rally in the US stock markets, Asia performed well (Nikkei +0.7%, Hang Seng +2.0%, Shanghai +0.7%) and Europe is largely green as well (DAX +0.3%, CAC +0.2%, FTSE 100 +0.4%).  As it is the first day of a new month and quarter, we saw PMI and Tankan data overnight, all of which continues to show positive vibes for the near future (although the Japanese data has been lagging that of the US and even Europe on these measures.)  US futures, meanwhile, are also looking good with the NASDAQ (+0.9%) once again leading things higher with lesser gains in the other two main indices.

Bond markets, interestingly, are also in fine fettle this morning, with yields declining in Treasuries (-2.1bps), bunds (-1.2bps), OATs (-1.2bps) and Gilts (-2.1bps).  But 10-year Treasury yields remain firmly above 1.7% and their spread to bunds and JGBs remain right at recent highs.  It appears to me as though bond traders are taking a rest ahead of tomorrow’s payroll report, which will be released on Good Friday, a day of limited liquidity.  If the economic bulls are right, and there is a print above 1 million jobs in NFP, I would expect that we will test 1.8% in the 10-year before the weekend arrives.  However, until then, it looks like the growing short position in bonds is getting adjusted.

Oil prices are firmer this morning with WTI up by 1.1%, alongside gains in gold (+0.25%) and the agricultural space.  Meanwhile, base metals are mixed with Cu (-0.65%) and Zn (-0.2%) softer while Al (+0.65%) and Ni (+0.8%) are firmer.

Lastly, the dollar is mixed today as well, with most of the G10 softer led by AUD (-0.4%) and CHF (-0.3%), although the euro has stopped its freefall, at least temporarily, and is currently 0.1% firmer on the session.  Aussie seems to be slipping on the view that the RBA’s first QE plan, A$100 billion, is complete but that there will be a second one announced next Tuesday.  The Swiss franc, on the other hand, seems to be developing some momentum on a technical view and is responding to market internals rather than fundamentals.

EMG currencies have had a much more mixed picture with both gainers and losers evident.  On the plus side, TRY (+0.8%) and ZAR (+0.5%) lead the way higher, while we are seeing RUB (-0.6%) and CNY (-0.3%) as the key laggards.  The rand seems to be benefitting from seasonal factors as technicians look at recent history when the ZAR has rallied consistently in April.  TRY is simply so volatile these days given the ongoing mess at the central bank, that it is difficult to ascribe any move less than 2% to a specific issue.  As to the negatives, RUB, despite oil’s gains, is suffering from news of a surprising new bond offering of RUB 1 trillion, while CNY seems to have been guided lower by the PBOC as the Chinese government has decided that a weaker currency is clearly going to be necessary to support their economy for now and the current US administration isn’t going to make a big deal about it.

Data this morning brings Initial Claims (exp 675K), Continuing Claims (3.75M) and ISM Manufacturing (61.5) and Prices Paid (85.0).  FYI, that Prices Paid index is back at levels seen during the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s, all times when CPI inflation was far higher than 1.3%!

Frankly, with the payroll data tomorrow, I anticipate a generally quiet session, especially as much of Europe will be taking a long Easter holiday weekend starting quite soon.  The dollar’s trend remains firmly higher, but I don’t expect much movement today.

Good luck
Adf

A Wake of Debris

Investors are pining to see
A rebound that’s shaped like a “V”
But data of late
Could well extirpate
Those views midst a wake of debris

For everyone who remains convinced that a V-shaped recovery is the most likely outcome, recent data must be somewhat disconcerting. There is no question that June data will look better than May’s, which was substantially better than April’s, but if one takes a few steps back to gain perspective, the current situation remains dire. One of the features of most economic statistical series is that they tend to measure both monthly and annual changes. The idea is that the monthly data offer’s a picture of the latest activity while the annual data gives a view of the longer-term trend. The problem for the bulls to overcome right now is that while June’s monthly data is showing record-breaking monthly gains, the annual numbers remain horrific. This morning’s German IP data is a perfect example of the situation. While this was actually data from May, it is the latest reading. During the month, Industrial Production rose 7.8%, the largest monthly gain on record, and arguably good news. Alas, expectations were for an even greater 11.1% rebound, and more importantly, the annual data showed a still terrible 19.3% decline from 2019’s levels. So, while there is no question that May’s numbers were an improvement over April’s, it is hardly sounding an all-clear signal.

This has been the pattern we have seen consistently for the past two months and is likely to continue to be the case for quite a while. Ergo, it is fair to state that the economy is rebounding from its worst levels, but to imply that things are even approaching the pre-Covid economy is completely erroneous. This is especially so in the survey data, which, if you recall, simply asks if this month was better than last. We saw some incredible PMI data at the nadir, with readings in the low teens and even single digits in a few countries, indicating that more than 80% of respondents saw things decline from the previous month. As such, it is no surprise that things got better from there, but does a rebound to a reading above 50 on a monthly series, with no annual analog, actually mean the same thing today as it did in January? I contend it is not a reasonable comparison and to imply that the economy is doing anything but slowly climbing back from a historic decline is just plain wrong.

The European Commission clearly understands this issue as they reduced their outlook for the EU’s economic growth in 2020 by a full percentage point to -8.7%, with most member nations seeing a substantial downgrade. A key reason for this downgrade has been the recent uptick in infections and the sporadic second closures of areas within the economies. The second wave of infections is dreaded for exactly this reason, it is preventing economies around the world from gaining growth momentum, something that comes as confidence builds that things will get better. Every interruption just extends the timeline for a full recovery, a prospect that none of us welcome. Alas, it appears that the most likely outcome right now is a very slow, drawn out recovery with a continued high rate of unemployment and ongoing fiscal and monetary support abetting every economy on the planet while simultaneously preventing markets from clearing and thus insuring slower growth ahead when it finally returns.

With that as preamble, a look at today’s markets shows essentially a full reversal from yesterday’s price action. Yesterday was always a bit odd as there was no clear rationale for the risk rally, yet there it was, around the world. However, this morning, the data continues to demonstrate just how far things are from the pre-Covid world, and it seems the risk bulls are having a tougher time. Starting in Asia, we saw weakness in Japan (-0.45%) and Hong Kong (-1.4% and long overdue given what is happening there) although Shanghai (+0.4%) has managed to keep the positive momentum going for yet another day. While there were no articles exhorting share ownership in the papers there last night, it remains a key feature of the Chinese government’s strategy, encourage individuals to buy stocks to support both markets and confidence. We shall see how long it can continue. European bourses have reversed much of yesterday’s gains as well, down a bit more than 1.0% on average and US futures are trading at similar levels, -1.0%. Bond markets continue to prove to be irrelevant at this stage, no longer seen as haven assets given the fact that there is no yield available but unwilling to be sold by traders as central banks have promised to buy them all if they deem it necessary. So, for the time being, it is extremely difficult to gain any credible price signals from these markets.

Commodity markets are under a bit of pressure, with oil prices lower by 1.5% and gold falling 0.5%, while the dollar is today’s big winner. Yesterday it fell against all its G10 counterparts and most EMG ones as well. This morning, it is just the opposite, with only the pound, essentially unchanged on the day, not declining while AUD and NOK lead the way lower with 0.55% and 0.45% declines respectively. The data situation continues to show that the early signs of a rebound are leveling off, so investing based on a brighter outlook is not in the cards.

In the EMG space, MXN is today’s big loser, down 1.25%, but here, too, it is nearly universal as only IDR (+0.35%) has managed to eke out a gain, ostensibly on the back of views that the central bank’s debt monetization plan will draw inward investment. We shall see.

On the data front, yesterday’s ISM Non-Manufacturing number was a much better than expected 57.1, but as I discuss above, I don’t believe that is indicative of growth so much as a rebound from the worst conditions in the series history. This morning we only see the JOLTS Job Openings data, (exp 4.5M), but this is a delayed number as it represents May openings. Remember, too, this is down from more than 7.5M in early 2019 and 7.0M earlier this year.

Yesterday we heard from Atlanta Fed President Bostic who sounded a warning that the second wave, if it expands, would have a significantly detrimental impact on the US economy, and thus he was quite concerned with the future trajectory of growth. Remember, it is the Atlanta Fed that calculates the widely watched GDPNow number, which is currently reading an extremely precise -35.18% decline for Q2. It is no surprise he is worried.

Overall, risk is on the back foot today and appears set to continue this move. Barring some overly upbeat commentary from the White House, something that is always possible on a down day, I expect the dollar to drift slightly higher from here.

Good luck and stay safe
Adf

 

No Longer Appealing

Today pound bears seem to be feeling
That shorts are no longer appealing
The polls keep on showing
The Tory lead growing
Look for more complaining and squealing

As well, from the trade front we’ve heard
That progress has not been deterred
Some sources who know
Say Phase One’s a go
With rollbacks the latest watchword

Yesterday was so…yesterday. All of that angst over the trade deal falling apart after President Trump indicated that he was in no hurry to complete phase one has completely disappeared this morning after a story hit the tape citing ‘people familiar with the talks’. It seems that the president was merely riffing in front of the cameras, but the real work has been ongoing between Mnuchin, Lighthizer and Liu He, and that progress is being made. Naturally, the market response was to immediately buy back all the stocks sold yesterday and so this morning we see equity markets in Europe higher across the board (DAX +1.1%, CAC +1.3%) and US futures pointing higher as well (DJIA +0.5%, SPY +0.45%). Alas, that story hit the tape too late for Asia, which was still reeling from yesterday’s negative sentiment. Thus, the Nikkei (-1.1%), Hang Seng (-1.25%) and Shanghai (-0.25%) all suffered overnight.

At the same time, this morning has seen pound Sterling trade to its highest level since May as the latest polls continue to show the Tory lead running around twelve percentage points. Even with the UK’s first-past-the-poll electoral system, this is seen as sufficient to result in a solid majority in Parliament, and recall, every Tory candidate pledged to support the withdrawal agreement renegotiated by Boris. With this in mind, we are witnessing a steady short squeeze in the currency, where the CFTC statistics have shown the size of the short Sterling position has fallen by half in the past month. As a comparison, the last time short positions were reduced this much, the pound was trading at 1.32 which seems like a pretty fair target for the top. Quite frankly, this has all the earmarks of a buy the rumor (Tory victory next week) sell the news (when it actually happens) situation. In fact, I think the risk reward above 1.30 is decidedly in favor of a sharper decline rather than a much stronger rally. Again, for Sterling receivables hedgers, I think adding to positions during the next week will be seen as an excellent result.

Away from the pound, however, the dollar is probably stronger rather than weaker this morning. One of the reasons is that after the euro’s strong performance on Monday, there has been absolutely no follow-through in the market. Remember, that euro strength was built on the back of the dichotomy of slightly stronger than expected Eurozone PMI data, indicating stabilization on the Continent, as well as much weaker than expected US ISM data, indicating things here were not so great after all. Well, this morning we saw the other part of the PMI data, the Services indices, and across all of the Eurozone, the data was weaker than expected. This is a problem for the ECB because they are building their case for any chance of an eventual normalization of policy on the idea that the European consumer is going to support the economy even though manufacturing is in recession. If the consumer starts backing away, you can expect to see much less appealing data from the Eurozone, and the euro will be hard-pressed to rally any further. As I have maintained for quite a while, the big picture continues to favor the dollar vs. the rest of the G10 as the US remains the most robust economy in the world.

Elsewhere in the G10, Australia is today’s major underperformer as the day after the RBA left rates on hold and expressed less concern about global economic issues, they released weak PMI data, 49.7, and saw Q3 GDP print at a lower than expected 0.4%. The point here is that the RBA may be trying to delay the timing of their next rate cut, but unless China manages to turn itself around, you can be certain that the RBA will be cutting again early next year.

In the EMG bloc, the biggest loser was KRW overnight, falling 0.6% on yesterday’s trade worries. Remember, the positive story didn’t come out until after the Asian session ended. In fact, the won has been falling pretty sharply lately, down 3.5% in the past month and tracking quickly toward 1200. However, away from Korea, the EMG space is looking somewhat better in this morning’s risk-on environment with ZAR the big gainer, up 0.5%. What is interesting about this result is the South African PMI data printed at 48.6, nearly a point worse than expected. But hey, when risk is on, traders head for the highest yielders they can find.

Looking to this morning’s US session, we get two pieces of data starting with ADP Employment (exp 135K) at 8:15 and then ISM Non-Manufacturing at 10:00 (54.5). Quite frankly, both of these are important pieces of data in my mind as the former will be seen as a precursor to Friday’s NFP report and the latter will be scrutinized to determine if Monday’s ISM data was a fluke, or something for more concern. The ISM data will also offer a direct contrast to the weak Eurozone PMI data this morning, so a strong print is likely to see the euro head back toward 1.10.

And that’s really it today. Risk is back on, the pound is rolling and whatever you thought you knew from yesterday is ancient history.

Good luck
Adf

 

Started To Fade

On Monday, the data released
Showed growth in the US decreased
As well, hope ‘bout trade
Has started to fade
And snow overwhelmed the Northeast

In a word, yesterday sucked. At least that’s the case if you were bullish on essentially any US asset when the session started. Early equity market gains were quickly reversed when the ISM data printed at substantially worse than expected levels. Not only did the headline release (48.1) miss expectations, which was biased toward a modest improvement over the October readings, but all of the sub-indices along with the headline number actually fell further from October. Arguably the biggest concern came from the New Orders Index which printed its lowest level (47.2) since the financial crisis. Granted, this was the manufacturing sector and manufacturing represents only about 12% of the US economy, but still, it was a rout. The juxtaposition with the green shoots from Europe was not lost on the FX market either as the dollar fell sharply across the board. In fact, the euro had its best day since early September, rallying 0.6%.

This morning, the situation hasn’t improved either, as one of the other key bullish stories for equity sentiment, completion of the phase one trade deal with China, was dealt a blow when President Trump explained that he was in no hurry to complete the deal and would only do so when he was ready. In fact, he mused that it might be better to wait until after the 2020 elections before agreeing a deal with China, something that is clearly not priced into the market. When those comments hit the tape, US equity futures turned around from small gains to losses on the order of 0.3%. Bullishness is no fun yet.

Perhaps it’s worth a few moments to consider the essence of the bullish US case and determine if it still holds water. Basically, the broad consensus has been that despite its sluggish pace, growth in the US has been more robust than anywhere else in the developed world and that with the FOMC having added additional stimulus via 75 bps of interest rate cuts and, to date, $340 billion in non-QE QE, prospects for continued solid growth seemed strong. In addition, the tantalizing proximity of that phase one trade deal, which many had assumed would be done by now or certainly by year end, and would include a reduction in some tariffs, was seen as a turbocharger to add to the growth story.

Now, there is no doubt that we have seen some very positive data from the US, with Q3 GDP being revised higher, the housing market showing some life and Retail Sales still solid. In fact, last week’s data releases were uniformly positive. At the same time, the story from Europe, the UK, China and most of the rest of the world was of slowing or non-existent growth with central banks having run out of ammunition to help support those economies and a protracted period of subpar growth on the horizon. With this as a backdrop, it is no surprise that US assets performed well, and that the dollar was a key beneficiary.

However, if that narrative is going to change, then there is a lot of price adjustment likely to be seen in the markets, which arguably are priced for perfection on the equity side. The real question in the FX markets is, at what point will a risk-off scenario driven by US weakness convert from selling US assets, and dollars by extension, to buying US dollars in order to buy US Treasuries in a flight to safety? (There is a great irony in the fact that even when the US is the source of risk and uncertainty, investors seek the safety of US Treasury assets.) At this point, there is no way to know the answer to that question, however, what remains clear this morning is that we are still in the sell USD phase of the process.

With that in mind, let’s look at the various currency markets. Starting with the G10, Aussie is one of the winners after the RBA left rates on hold, as widely expected, but sounded less dovish (“global risks have lessened”) than anticipated in their accompanying statement. Aussie responded by rallying as much as 0.65% initially, and is still higher by 0.35% on the day. And that is adding to yesterday’s 0.85% gain taking the currency higher by 1.2% since the beginning of the week. While the longer term trend remains lower, it would not be a surprise to see a push toward 0.70 in the next week or so.

The other major winner this morning is the British pound, currently trading about 0.4% higher after the latest election poll, by Kantar, showed the Tories with a 12 point lead with just nine days left. Adding to the positive vibe was a modestly better than expected Construction PMI (45.3 vs. 44.5 expected) perhaps implying that the worst is over.

Elsewhere in the G10, things have been far less interesting with the euro maintaining, but not adding to yesterday’s gains, and most other currencies +/- a few bps on the day. In the EMG bloc, the noteworthy currency is the South African rand, which has fallen 0.55% after a much worse than expected Q3 GDP release (-0.6% Q/Q; 0.1% Y/Y). The other two losing currencies this morning are KRW and CNY, both of which have suffered on the back of the Trump trade comments. On the plus side, BRL has rallied 0.4% after its Q3 GDP release was better than expected at +0.6% Q/Q. At least these moves all make sense with economic fundamentals seeming to be today’s driver.

And that’s really it for the day. There is no US data this morning, although we get plenty the rest of the week culminating in Friday’s payroll report. Given the lack of economic catalysts, it feels like the dollar will remain under general pressure for the time being. The short term narrative is that things in the US are not as good as previously had been thought which is likely to weigh on the buck. But for receivables hedgers, this is an opportunity to add to your hedges at better levels in quiet markets. Take advantage!

Good luck
Adf

 

QE We’ll Bestow

The data continue to show
That growth is unhealthily slow
The pressure’s on Jay
To cut rates and say
No sweat, more QE we’ll bestow

The market narrative right now is about slowing growth everywhere around the world. Tuesday’s ISM data really spooked equity markets and then that was followed with yesterday’s weaker than expected ADP employment data (135K + a revision of -38K to last month) and pretty awful auto sales in the US which added to the equity gloom. This morning, Eurozone PMI data was putrid, with Germany’s Services and Composite data (51.4 and 48.5 respectively) both missing forecasts by a point, while French data was almost as bad and the Eurozone Composite reading falling to stagnation at 50.1. In other words, the data continues to point to a European recession on the immediate horizon.

The interesting thing about this is that the euro is holding up remarkably well. For example, yesterday in the NY session it actually rallied 0.45% as the market began to evaluate the situation and price in more FOMC rate cutting. Certainly it was not a response to positive news! And this morning, despite gloomy data as well as negative comments from ECB Vice-President Luis de Guindos (“level of economic activity in the euro area remains disappointingly low”), the euro has maintained yesterday’s gains and is unchanged on the session. At this point, the only thing supporting the euro is the threat (hope?) that the Fed will cut rates more aggressively going forward than had recently been priced into the market. Speaking of those probabilities, this morning there is a 75% probability of a Fed cut at the end of this month. That is up from 60% on Tuesday and just 40% on Monday, hence the euro’s modest strength.

Looking elsewhere, the pound has also been holding its own after yesterday’s 0.5% rally in the NY session. While I think the bulk of this movement must be attributed to the rate story, the ongoing Brexit situation seems to be coming to a head. In fact, I am surprised the pound is not higher this morning given the EU’s reasonably positive response to Boris’s proposal. Not only did the EU not dismiss the proposal out of hand, but they see it as a viable starting point for further negotiations. One need only look at the EU growth story to recognize that a hard Brexit will cause a significant downward shock to the EU economy and realize that Michel Barnier and Jean-Claude Juncker have painted themselves into a corner. Nothing has changed my view that the EU will blink, that a fudged deal will be announced and that the pound will rebound sharply, up towards 1.35.

Beyond those stories, the penumbra of economic gloom has cast its shadow on everything else as well. Government bond yields continue to decline with Treasury, Bund and JGB yields all having fallen 3bps overnight. In the equity markets, the Nikkei followed the US lead last night and closed lower by 2.0%. But in Europe, after two weak sessions, markets have taken a breather and are actually higher at the margin. It seems that this is a trade story as follows: the WTO ruled in the US favor regarding a long-standing suit that the EU gave $7.5 billion in illegal subsidies to Airbus and that the US could impose that amount of tariffs on EU goods. But the White House, quite surprisingly, opted to impose less than that so a number of European companies that were expected to be hit (luxury goods and spirits exporters) find themselves in a slightly better position this morning. However, with the ISM Non-Manufacturing data on tap this morning, there has to be concern that the overall global growth story could be even weaker than currently expected.

A quick survey of the rest of the FX market shows the only outlier movement coming from the South African rand, which is higher this morning by 0.9%. The story seems to be that after three consecutive weeks of declines, with the rand falling more than 6% in that run, there is a seed of hope that the government may actually implement some positive economic policies to help shore up growth in the economy. That was all that was needed to get short positions to cover, and here we are. But away from that story, nothing else moved more than 0.3%. One thing that has been consistent lately has been weakness in the Swiss franc as the market continues to price in yet more policy ease after their inflation data was so dismal. I think this story may have further legs and it would not surprise me to see the franc continue to decline vs. both the dollar and the euro for a while yet.

On the data front, this morning we see Initial Claims (exp 215K) and then the ISM Non-Manufacturing data (55.0) followed by Factory Orders (-0.2%) at 10:00. The ISM data will get all the press, and rightly so. Given how weak the European and UK data was, all eyes will be straining to see if the US continues to hold up, or if it, too, is starting to roll over.

From the Fed we hear from five more FOMC members (Evans, Quarles, Mester, Kaplan and Clarida), adding to the cacophony from earlier this week. We already know Mester is a hawk, so if she starts to hedge her hawkishness, look for bonds to rally further and the dollar to suffer. As to the rest of the crew, Evans spoke earlier this week and explained he had an open mind regarding whether or not another rate cut made sense. He also said that he saw the US avoiding a recession. And ultimately, that’s the big issue. If the US looks like a recession is imminent, you can be sure the Fed will become much more aggressive, but until then, I imagine few FOMC members will want to tip their hand. (Bullard and Kashkari already have.)

Until the data prints, I expect limited activity, but once it is released, look for a normal reaction, strong data = strong dollar and vice versa.

Good luck
Adf

It’s Now or Never

Like Elvis said, it’s now or never
For Boris’s Brexit endeavor
The Irish are chuffed
As Coveney huffed
He’s not, but he thinks he’s so clever

Around 7:00 this morning, PM Boris Johnson will be addressing the Tory party at their annual convention and the key focus will be on his plan to ensure a smooth Brexit. The early details call for customs checks several miles away from the border on both sides with a time limit of about four years to allow for technology to do the job more effectively. However, he maintains that the whole of the UK will be out of the EU and that there will be no special deal for Northern Ireland. His supporters in Northern Ireland, the DUP, appear to have his back. In addition, he is reportedly going to demand that an agreement be reached by October 11 so that it can be agreed in Parliament as well as throughout the EU.

Interestingly, the Irish are still playing tough, at least according to Foreign Minister Simon Coveney, who said that the leaked details formed “no basis for an agreement.” Of course, as in everything to do with this process, there are other views in Ireland with Irish PM Varadkar seemingly far more willing to use this as a basis for discussion. His problem is the Fianna Fail party, a key coalition member, is unhappy with the terms. I say this is interesting because in the event of a no-deal Brexit, Ireland’s economy will be the one most severely impacted, with estimates of 4%-5% declines in GDP in 2020.

With respect to the market, it is difficult to untangle the effect of the latest Brexit news from the dreadful economic data that continues to be released. This morning’s UK Construction PMI fell to 43.3, within ticks of the lows seen during the financial crisis in 2009. The pound has suffered, down 0.4% as I type, although it was even softer earlier in the session. The FTSE 100 is also weak, -1.8%, although that is very much in line with the rest of the European equity markets (CAC -1.6%, DAX -1.3%) and is in synch with the sharp declines seen yesterday in the US and overnight in Asia.

Speaking of yesterday’s price action, it was pretty clear what drove activity; the remarkably weak ISM Manufacturing print at 47.8. This was far worse than forecast and the lowest print since June 2009. It seems pretty clear at this point that there is a global manufacturing recession ongoing and the question that remains is, will it be isolated to manufacturing, or will it spill over into the broader economy. Remember, manufacturing in the US represents only about 11.6% of GDP, so if unemployment remains contained and services can hold up, there is no need for the US economy to slip into recession. But it certainly doesn’t help the situation. However, elsewhere in the world, manufacturing represents a much larger piece of the pie (e.g. Germany 21%, China 40%, UK 18%) and so the impact of weak manufacturing is much larger on those economies as a whole.

It is this ongoing uncertainty that keeps weighing on sentiment, if not actually driving investors to sell their holdings. And perhaps of most interest is that despite the sharp equity market declines yesterday, it was not, by any means, a classic risk-off session. I say this because the yen barely budged, the dollar actually fell and Treasuries, while responding to the ISM print at 10:00am by rallying more than half a point (yields -7bps), could find no further support and have not moved overnight. If I had to describe market consensus right now, it would be that everyone is unsure of what is coming next. Will there be positive or negative trade news? Will the impeachment process truly move forward and will it be seen as a threat to the Administration’s plans? Will Brexit be soft, hard or non-existent? As you well know, it is extremely difficult to plan with so many potential pitfalls and so little clarity on how both consumers and markets will react to any of this news. I would contend that in situations like this, owning options make a great deal of sense as a hedge. This is especially so given the relatively low implied volatilities that continue to trade in the market.

Turning to the rest of the session, a big surprise has been the weakness in the Swiss franc, which has fallen 0.6% this morning despite risk concerns. However, the Swiss released CPI data and it was softer than expected at -0.1% (+0.1% Y/Y) which has encouraged traders to look for further policy ease by the SNB, or at least intervention to weaken the currency. But just as the dollar was broadly weaker yesterday, it has largely recouped those losses today vs. its G10 counterparts. Only the yen, which is up a scant 0.15%, has managed to show strength vs. the greenback. In the EMG space, KRW has been the biggest mover, falling 0.55% overnight after North Korea fired another missile into the sea last night, heightening tensions on the peninsula there. Of course, given the negative data (negative CPI and sharply declining exports) there is also a strong case being made for the BOK to ease policy further, thus weakening the won. Beyond that, however, the EMG currency movement has been mixed and modest, with no other currency moving more than 25bps.

This morning after Boris’s speech, all eyes will turn to the ADP employment data (exp 140K) and then we have three more Fed speakers this morning, Barkin, Harker and Williams. Yesterday, we heard from Chicago Fed president Charles Evans, who explained that he felt the economy was still growing nicely and that the two rate cuts so far this year were appropriate. He did not, however, give much of a hint as to whether he thought the Fed needed to do more. Reading what I could of the text, it did not really seem to be the case. My impression is that his ‘dot’ was one of the five looking for one more cut before the September meeting.

And that’s what we have for today. Barring something remarkable from Boris, it appears that if ADP is in line with expectations, the dollar is likely to consolidate this morning’s gains. A strong print will help boost the buck, while a weak print, something on the order of 50K, could well see the dollar cede everything it has gained today and then some.

Good luck
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