The US dollar rally that moved into a higher
gear in the second half of last week has begun the new week with a bang.
It is up against nearly all the major and emerging market currencies.
Even sterling, which last week, managed to eke out modest gains against the
greenback is under pressure today.
Of note, the US Dollar Index has made new highs
for the year today edging briefly through 100.00. The last December
high was set near 100.50. It had
hit a low near 96.00 in the knee-jerk move when the election results had been
clear. Today's advance has lifted
the intraday technicals stretched, and some consolidation is likely.
Support is seen in the 99.15-99.50
band.
The euro
dripped below $1.0730 in late-Asian turnover but is stabilizing in the European
morning. Sterling slid to $1.2464, off more than 1.25 cents. The
bounce in the European morning seemed to fizzle out ahead of $1.2550. The
greenback traded at JPY108 for the first time since early June. The
dollar was recording session highs against the yen in Europe. The Turkish
lira and South African rand are the hardest high among emerging market
currencies. The Mexican peso is off another 0.7% today.
The driving force continues to be the
anticipated shift toward the more fiscal
stimulus, while confidence grows of Fed rates hikes, with the second in the
cycle expected to be delivered next
month. The magnitude of the US stimulus the investors seem to be
assuming will pass a Republican-controlled Congress has spurred a shift out of
bonds, emerging markets, and
gold. These broad developments continue today.
Bonds continue to sell-off, and as European
bonds sell-off the risk premium over Germany is widening, and this will be a
source of strain if it
persists. The 10-year Bund yield is up six bp, while the
French yield is up nearly 10 bp, and the
peripheral yields are up 13-14 bp. The US 10-year Treasury yield is
up nine basis points to 2.24%, it highest since the start of the year.
The 30-year bond yield is poking through 3.0% for the first time since
January.
The euro-sensitive US-Germany two-year
interest rate differential is at 157 bp today, which is a new ten-year extreme.
It began the month near 145 bp. The US 10-year premium has risen to
284 bp, the most since 2010. The spread has widened by nearly 40 bp so
far this month.
The same pattern is evident between the US and Japan. The US
10-year premium is at 275 bp. It is the most in nearly three years.
It began the month a little below 190 bp. The two-year premium is near
120 bp, which is the highest since 2008.
While Japanese and Chinese shares are advanced, the MSCI Asia-Pacific
Index slipped 0.55%, as rest of the region lost ground. MSCI
Emerging Market equity index is off 0.8% before South American markets
open. It is the fourth day of declines. Since October 20, this
benchmark has only risen in four sessions, and two of them were recorded at the start of last week.
It stands at a four-month low today.
In addition to the anticipated US fiscal
stimulus, Japan and China reported constructive news today. Japan's Q3
GDP rose 0.5% more than twice what the Bloomberg median forecast (0.2%).
The details, however, were disappointing
and did not seem to presage a stronger
pick-up in the Japanese economy. Private consumption rose 0.1%, which is
better the flat reading that was expected,
but the Q2 figure was revised to
0.1% from 0.2%. Business spending was flat, which was
disappointing. Government spending added 0.1 percentage points to GDP but was up 0.4% on the quarter. The
main impetus came from next exports which
rose 0.5%. The GDP deflator fell to -0.1% from 0.7% in Q2. It is
the first negative reading since Q4 13.
China reported fairly stable industrial
output, retail sales, and fixed-asset investment. Industrial
output rose 6.1% year-over-year in October, matching the September pace.
Year-to-date retail sales rose 10.3% after
a 10.4% pace in September. Investment rose 8.3% after 8.2% year-over-year in September.
The Chinese yuan is off about 0.5% against the
dollar today. The dollar
reached almost CNY6.85, the highest since 2008. It is more of a dollar
story than a yuan story. Since the even of the US election, the yuan has
fared better than most in the region, falling almost 1%. Only the pegged
Hong Kong dollar and the Indian rupee has fared better (and Indian markets are
closed today for a national holiday). The offshore yuan has not fallen
as much as the onshore yuan.
There is a light economic calendar in North
America today. Three Fed officials speak, Kaplan, Lacker, and Williams, but the latter two are
late in the session. The most important thing now for investors is the
signals from President-elect Trump and potential cabinet members.
Disclaimer
Dollar Steps Up to Start Week
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
November 14, 2016
Rating: