As skeleton teams return to the trading desks in New York, the US dollar is largely where they left it at the end of last week. Japanese markets were open yesterday, while UK, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Canadian markets are still closed today. The Australian and New Zealand dollars are up about 0.2% from before the weekend. Sterling is trading with a downside bias after falling every session last week. The euro and yen are practically unchanged.
Among emerging market, the South African rand and Russian ruble are faring best (~0.3%-0.4%). Equity markets are narrowly mixed, but of note, bargain-hunting finally emerged to allow the Indonesian equities to post their first advance since December 9 (the longest losing streak since 2005). While most markets are quiet, we note that gold is up 0.8%, which, if sustained, would be the largest advance in a month.
While the dollar is little changed, bond markets are mostly softer, though Germany appears to be experiencing mild, safe haven flows. Asian equities were mixed, while European equities are firmer. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index eked out a minor gain (less than 0.1%), but sufficient to snap a five-session pullback. Although the dollar is trying to end a four-session drop against the yen, the TOPIX extended its correction for a fourth session (and five of the past six). In contrast, the Nikkei edged higher (less than 0.1%) and broke ended its three-day decline.
Japan reported November inflation and employment figures. The key takeaway is that although the labor market remains tight, inflation remains elusive. The jobless rate ticked up to the still-enviable 3.1%. The job-to-applicant ratio stands a 1.41. However, the key measure of inflation, CPI minus fresh food, remained at minus 0.4%, which is what it has averaged this year. Excluding both food and energy, Japan's CPI stood at 0.1% in November down from 0.2% in October. The Tokyo data, which is reported with less of a lag, gives no reason to be optimistic. The December headline CPI fell to zero from 0.5%, and the core rate, which excludes fresh food, fell to minus 0.6% from minus 0.4%.
Moreover, the full employment is not only failing to boost prices, but it is not boosting consumption. Overall household spending slumped to minus 1.5% in November from minus 0.4% in October. The Bloomberg median had expected a rise to 0.1%. Japan also reported weak housing starts and construction orders. Forecasts for Q4 GDP will likely be revised lower. Japan will report industrial output and retail sales tomorrow.
There are three developments to note from Europe. First, at the very end of last week, Fitch downgraded Belgium from AA to AA-. It cited the high debt-to-GDP ratio for an AA rating and noted that fiscal consolidation has been weak. There does not appear to be much of a market reaction. The 10-year yield is up half a basis point, in line with the change in French yields today.
Second, Italy is finding that supporting Monte Paschi (MI:BMPS) may be more expensive than it may have anticipated. The ECB has argued that due to the deterioration in liquidity, the troubled bank needs 8.8 bln euros rather than five bln. Also, the Bundesbank has expressed concerned that the new EU rules are not being respected. Italy's bank stock index is off 0.6%, or about what it had gained before the holiday weekend. Italian two and 10-year yields are half a basis point higher.
Third, after a short disagreement over what Greece could do given that its revenues surpassed targets and expenditures were below targets, the Greek government insisted on an extra pension payment to civil servants and a VAT break for a few islands overwhelmed by refugees. It appears that an agreement was reached. Greece's 10-year bond yield is off nearly 12 bp.
The US reports house prices, the Conference Board's measure of consumer confidence, and the Richmond Fed's manufacturing index. None are typically market-moving.