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Markets Catch Collective Breath

Published 02/16/2023, 06:40 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
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On the heels of a dramatic jump in US job creation and firmer than expected year-over-year CPI, the US reported a larger-than-expected jump in retail sales and a strong recovery in manufacturing output. Few think that the economic momentum that the recent data implies can be repeated, the "no landing" camp has gained adherents.

We suspect that says more about psychology than the economy. The United States 2-Year note threatens to snap a five-day 20 bp advance today and coincides with a somewhat heavier dollar tone. There is a batch of US economic data today, including PPI, weekly jobless claims, and housing starts and permits. Several Fed officials speak today, including St. Louis Fed's Bullard, who is among the leading hawks.

China reported new house prices did not fall last month. It is the first time it has said this since August 2021. Nevertheless, mainland equities bucked the strong regional advance following the recovery of US equities yesterday. Europe's Stoxx 600 is extending its advance for the fourth consecutive session, while US futures are slightly softer.

Benchmark United States 10-Year yields are mostly 1-2 bp lower, putting the US 10-year around 3.78%. A softer US dollar and interest rates are helping gold stabilize after falling to $1830 yesterday. The low for the year is closer to $1825. April Crude Oil WTI Futures is steady after initially extending yesterday's recovery from about $77.50 to about $79.75 today.

Asia Pacific

Japan reported a record trade deficit last month of about JPY3.5 trillion (~$26 bln), which was still a little smaller than expected as exports rose 3.5% year-over-year rather than fall 1.7% as the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey had it. In December, exports have risen 11.5%. And Japanese imports rose a milder 17.8% rather than 20.6% as economists expected. Of note, exports to China fell slightly more than 17%, led by autos, parts, and, notably, chip-making equipment. Exports to the US rose by 10.2% and 9.5% to the eurozone. Separately, the Ministry of Finance reported that Japanese investors bought JPY716 bln of foreign bonds last week. It was the second consecutive week of purchases, and in the two weeks, Japanese investors bought the most amount of foreign bonds since August (JPY1.8 trillion).

Australia's jobs data disappointed, and the AUD/USD initially fell in response before recovering in the face of a broader pullback in the US dollar. Australia reported a loss of 11.5k jobs. Economists had expected a 20k increase. Moreover, it lost 43.3k full-time positions after growing a revised 14.4k in December (initially 17.6k). The unemployment rate rose to 3.7% from 3.5%. The central bank delivered a 25 bp hike last week, and the next meeting is on March 7. The futures market does not have another 25 bp hike fully priced until the April 4 meeting.

The US dollar reached JPY134.35 yesterday, its best level since the year's high was set on January 6, slightly above JPY134.75. It is consolidating in a narrow range and held above JPY133.60, with chart support seen around JPY133.50. There are options for $3.2 bln that expire tomorrow at JPY135. The poor jobs data saw the Australian dollar retest yesterday's low near $0.6865, holding above the month's low set closer to $0.6855. Session highs were recorded in late Asia Pacific turnover around $0.6935, which stretched the intraday momentum indicators.

Yesterday's high was by $0.6990. The greenback reached CNY6.8640, its best level since January 6 but retreated below yesterday's settlement to test the CNY6.8550 area in late dealings. Of note, the 50-day moving average has fallen below the 200-day moving average for the first time since May of last year. Meanwhile, the PBOC set the dollar's reference rate slightly stronger than expected (CNY6.8519 vs. CNY6.8508). Lastly, as expected, the Philippines central bank raised its policy band 50 bp to 5.50%-6.00%.

Europe

Recent developments provide an opportunity to review two internal European market developments. First, we note that the rightist government in Italy carried the local elections in Lombardy and Lazio. In the latter, it turned out the center-left government. Salvini's League gained ground in Lombardy, but the strain in the coalition comes from Berlusconi blaming Ukraine's war on Zelenskyy. Prime Minister Meloni has supported the EU's criticism of Putin and efforts to defend Ukraine. Still, the latest polls suggest Italian support for Ukraine has slipped over the past year, and slightly more than 40% support sending weapons to Ukraine.

Still, Berlusconi's comments caused teeth-gnashing and cries of protest from within the EPP (European People's Party, the center-right coalition in the EU parliament). According to Politico, members from at least nine countries have threatened to boycott the gathering planned shortly in Naples if Berlusconi attends.

Ahead of next year's EU parliament elections, there was a desire to reach out to Meloni. Tajani, an ally of Berlusconi, Italy's foreign minister and deputy PM, has reiterated the government's support for Ukraine, which the EPP endorses. EC President von der Leyen and the president of the EU parliament, Metsola, hail from the EPP. Italy's 10-year premium over Germany fell slightly above 250 bp in late September to almost 170 bp in mid-January. It spiked back to 200 bp at the start of February but is hovering in the 180-185 bp area. The two-year premium peaked around 70 bp in late September and fell to almost 27 bp in mid-January. It has traded mostly between 35-45 bp this month.

Second, after the euro rose above CHF1.0 for the first time since last July, the single currency has pulled back to around CHF0.9850. Switzerland reported higher than expected January CPI (3.3% year-over-year for 2.8%), and the core rate is above 2% (2.2%) for the first time this century. The SNB meets on March 23. It will have another inflation report (March 6) in hand before it meets. Still, a 50 bp move is expected, which lift the policy rate to 1.5%. The swaps market is pricing in one more quarter-point hike, possibly in June, to reach the peak.

The EUR/USD has steadied after falling from $1.08 on Tuesday to $1.0665 yesterday. It reached almost $1.0725 today. Resistance is seen in the $1.0735-50 area, which may be tested in the North American session. The euro has set a few lows in the $1.0655-65 areas this month, and stops are likely building below there. Sterling has also steadied today. It briefly traded below $1.20 yesterday for the first time in a week, though it has not settled below there since January 5. It recovered to around $1.2075 today. Initial resistance is seen by $1.21. The intraday momentum indicators are stretched late in the European morning, suggesting it may struggle as North American activity resumes.

LEI Index

America

Since the monster January jobs report and strong services ISM on February 3, the markets have been in a new phase. Short-term US rates have surged, and the dollar, which had peaked in late September/early October, has bounced smartly. Retail sales had collapsed by a little more than 1% last November, and December jumped 3% last month, blowing past expectations. Similarly, manufacturing output slumped by 0.8% and 1.8% in November and December, respectively, and rose by 1% last month. Ironically, the unusually warm weather may have helped lift retail sales and weighed on industrial output via weaker utility output. Industrial output was flat last month.

Until February 3, the swaps market was not convinced that the Fed funds target would peak above 5%, and now it is flirting with 5.25%. The prospect of a rate cut this year has fallen from a sure thing to about a 50/50 proposition. The upside correction in the dollar we anticipated may be of greater duration and magnitude. The Dollar Index, which we had projected to test 103.80-104.00, could extend toward 105.50-106.50, for example. Still, we suspect the talk of "no landing" says more about market psychology than the real economy. January's snapback was outsized and unlikely to be repeated. The inversion of yield curves and fall of M2 herald foretell of economic challenges, even if with a lag. Tomorrow, the US reports the index of leading economic indicators. It has not risen since last February. It is off 7.5% over the past six months annualized, and such weakness has clearly been associated with recessions (see above chart).

The Fed's Mester, Bullard, and Cook speak today. The key issue is whether the recent data has swayed officials to change what they saw as the terminal rate in December. Recall that seven officials thought it ought to be above the median of 5.1%. Lastly, we note that President Biden will shortly nominate a candidate to replace Brainard as vice chair of the Fed. Brainard was rumored to have been a likely candidate to be Treasury Secretary if Clinton won in 2016 and is seen as a possible replacement if Yellen steps down next year. Reports speculate that the new Chicago Fed president Goolsbee, a former adviser to Obama, is a likely candidate for the vice chair role. Although the US talks about reforming the multilateral organizations, it seems most likely that the changes will not include breaking from a tradition that lets an American lead the World Bank. The current president, Malpass, has indicated plans to resign around mid-year, nearly a year before his term expires.

Before we get to the LEI, there are today's reports of PPI, housing starts and permits, weekly jobless claims, and the Philadelphia Fed's February business survey. Producer prices have some components that economists use to fine-tune expectations for the PCE deflator due at the end of next week. In and of themselves, though, producer prices may generate a muted market response. Sequentially, prices may rise (in December, the headline fell by 0.5%, and the core rose by 0.1%), but the year-over-year pace is expected to continue to slow. Still, what is driving consumer prices are not so many goods as services (which typically are not resource intensive). Housing starts are expected to have declined last month, which would be the fifth consecutive monthly fall, but permits, a leading indicator, are expected to snap a three-month decline with a 1% gain. Meanwhile, weekly initial jobless claims may have bottomed in late January at around 183k. They rose for the first time in six weeks in the week ending February 3 and are expected to have risen to 200k last week. If true, that would translate into the first increase in the four-week moving average since early December. That said, it is this week's activity that will be reported next week that coincides with the monthly February jobs report.

The US dollar recovered from CAD1.3275 on Tuesday to CAD1.3440 yesterday, seemingly driven by US data and the volatility of US equities. A quieter tone has emerged today, and the greenback barely traded above CAD1.3400, where options for $470 mln expire tomorrow. Support is seen around CAD1.3340-50 today. The US S&P 500 still offers a reasonably good direction cue. The US dollar spiked from MXN18.50 to about MXN18.75 yesterday. But once again, a bounce in the greenback was sold and settled close to MXN18.5855. It is hovering near there and has spent little time above MXN18.60 today. It looks set to consolidate after setting 4 1/2-year lows. Chart resistance may be closer to MXN18.65, while the MXN18.55 area looks firm.

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