The Bank of Japan defied expectations and its economic assessment to
leave policy unchanged. The inaction spurred a 3% rally in the yen and
an even larger slump in stocks. The financial sector took its the hardest
and dropped almost 6%. The yen's surge helped underpin other Asian
currencies, especially the South Korean won, which gained nearly 1%.
At the end of January, the BOJ surprised by adopting negative interest
rates for a small part of Japanese banks' excess reserves. The yen
strengthened markedly. Now the BOJ disappoints in not easing
policy. Prior to the
BOJ's announcement, and in response to poor data that showed the most deflation
in three years (-0,3% year-over-year on a core
measure of CPI that excludes fresh food), a larger than expected slide in
overall household consumption (-5.3% year-over-year), the dollar had approached
JPY112.00. The dollar dipped briefly below JPY108 in early European
activity. The greenback sits near its lows ahead of the start of the
North American session.
The BOJ did do something. It cut its inflation and growth
forecasts and delayed for the fourth time in around a year when it would
achieve its inflation target. It now stands at some time in the next
fiscal year. We have long argued that it is unhelpful for the BOJ cast
its inflation target as a near-term objective. Other major central banks are talking about their inflation target
as a medium-term objective, and this
provides more degrees of freedom.
BOJ Governor Kuroda sounded dovish,
and the pressure to ease policy in the coming months, perhaps in July, remains
possible. The ostensible argument for standing pat is to monitor the
impact of the recent easing. However, the BOJ's economic forecasts are
consistent with the aggressive easing having little positive impact. Some
speculate the Kuroda was sending a message to the Abe government, consistent
with the G7/G20 concerns about the over-reliance on monetary policy. The
lack of new monetary action may add pressure on
the government for a bolder fiscal policy initiative.
The Nikkei sold off hard. We had warned yesterday that should
the BOJ disappoint, the Nikkei could fall toward 16773. In fact, it fell
to 16652 and closed on its lows. Depending, of course, on what happens over the next 12 hours, the Nikkei could
gap lower tomorrow. The downside risk extends toward 16000 now.
Most Asian markets fell, and the
MSCI Asia-Pacific Index slipped 0.2%, extending its declining streak to the
fifth consecutive session. Recall losses at the start of last week
snapped an eight-day advance.
European bourses are lower, and the Dow Jones
Stoxx 600 is off 1.25%, led by health care and financials.
The S&P 500 is trading nearly 0.8% lower.
The push higher in global bond yields ended with a bang today.
Core 10-year benchmarks in Europe are off six
bp. Of note so is the 10-year Portuguese bond. Tomorrow DBRS will
review Portugal's credit rating. It is the only rating agency that the
ECB uses that give Portugal an investment grade. If it takes it away,
Portuguese bonds will not qualify for
purchases under the ECB's bond-buying
program. It would join Greece and Cyprus.
The US 10-year yield, which had been approaching 2.0% earlier this week,
fell yesterday after the FOMC failed to alter investors skepticism about a June
hike. Perhaps in anticipation of easier BOJ policy would spur
Japanese demand for US Treasuries also weighed on yields. Today the yield
is close to 1.80%.
The US reports weekly initial jobless claims and the first estimate of Q1
GDP. Recall that last week, the week of the nonfarm payroll survey,
weekly initial jobless claims fell to their lowest level since 1973, and
continuing claims fell to their lowest level since 2000. A small
correction would not be surprising. Yesterday's better than expected
advance report of US merchandise trade balance encouraged economists to revised
their Q1 GDP forecasts a bit higher. Nevertheless, a poor number is
expected today. The US economy practically stagnated. The median
expectation is for 0.6%, which is an annualized pace.
The FOMC statement recognized the weaker demand (consumption is expected
to have slowed to 1.7% in Q1 from 2.4% in Q4 15)
but seemed to emphasize the strength of the labor market and that associated
income that can fuel consumption going forward. Note that the Core
PCE deflator in the GDP report is expected to rise from 1.3% to 1.9%, though
tomorrow with the month report, the core PCE deflator is expected to ease to
1.5% from 1.7%.
The failure of the FOMC to
reestablish a risk assessment in its
statement failed to convince investors one iota that a June hike was likely. Surveys suggest economists are more
enthusiastic than investors about the prospects for a hike. We agree with the Fed’s domestic economic assessment that the economy is likely
to recovery in the months ahead from the soft patch it hit over the past six months, and we expect price pressures to be
steady to higher. However, our concern
is the global and financial developments, which the Fed dropped as a risk but
said it would continue to monitor closely, are likely to be less favorable in
two months than they may appear today.
After the Japanese yen, the New Zealand dollar is the strongest of the
majors. It is up about 1.6%, having been up closer to 2%
earlier. The central bank left policy on hold. Although this seemed
like the odds-on more likely decision, as we argued, the OIS market had a
little more than a third of a cut discounted. There was nothing hawkish
in the statement. There were the usual complaints about the currency's
strength, and the central bank was clear that further easing may be
"required" to bring inflation toward the middle of its target
range.
Today seems to be one of the few occasions that the Australian dollar
followed the New Zealand dollar. Soft inflation reported yesterday
weighed on the Aussie, pushing it down two cents to $0.7550. Dragged higher
by the Kiwi, it reached almost $0.7660 before running out of steam.
European news has been overshadowed by the
Asian-Pacific developments. However, it should not be lost on
investors that the preliminary CPI readings from Germany and Spain were poor.
Deflationary forces strengthened in Spain. The harmonized CPI measure
slumped to -1.2% year-over-year. This is
the matches the low from February 2015, which is just above the cyclical low
from the month before (-1.5% in January 2015). German states mostly
reported softer than expected inflation and this poses downside risk for the
national measure due early in the North American morning.
Despite the German Finance Ministry and others complaining about too easy
of monetary policy, and ideas that the euro is undervalued
for German producers, the world's fourth-largest
economy does not appear to have escaped deflation either. The March
CPI was 0.1% above a year ago
levels. Prior to the states'
reports today, the median expected a flat reading in April.
Separately, Germany reported a decline in unemployment for the seventh
consecutive month, with the unemployment rate steady at 6.2% a record
low. We note that Japan's unemployment rate eased to 3.2%
from 3.3%. In both Germany and Japan, which have full employment, wage
growth is minimal. US wage growth is only slightly better.
Central Banks Roil Markets
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
April 28, 2016
Rating: