Equities down, yen up
The minutes of the FOMC last December confirmed that the Fed discussions adopted a more dovish tone, recognizing the growing headwinds facing the US economy, and promised a more cautious, patient approach to further rate hikes this year.
Given the dovish rhetoric we’d already heard from Fedspeakers, this came as no real surprise to the markets and as such the Asian session saw some profit-taking after a good run higher. All indices were lower with magnitudes ranging from -0.09% for the China 50 index to -0.45% for the Australia 200.
The yen was bid across the board as equity markets slid, with USD/JPY dropping 0.26% to 107.88 and EUR/JPY down 0.03%. AUD/JPY suffered more as a result of yen buying and Aussie selling. It fell 0.15% to 77.44.
China inflation numbers fall
Inflation in China looks as if it becoming less of a problem for the central bank, with December CPI coming in at +1.9% y/y, lower than November’s 2.2% and below economists’ forecasts of a 2.1% gain. The drop in producer prices was more pronounced, with the index rising 0.9% y/y. That’s the slowest annual increase since 2016.
There wasn’t much reaction in the markets as the broader profit taking theme dominated. USD/CNH hit a near 4-1/2 month low of 6.7918 on the day.
USD/CNH Daily Chart
Fedspeak continues
Hot on the heels of yesterday’s Fedspeak overload, we have another four speakers today (one a repeat from yesterday). Powell, Bullard, Evans and Clarida are all on tap and are expected to affirm the dovish tone of the minutes and previous speakers.
Aside from the Fed speakers, the minutes of the last ECB meeting will be released along with the Bank of England’s credit conditions survey.