Sterling has stolen the US dollar's spotlight. The issue facing
market participants was if the rise in hourly earnings reported as part of the
pre-weekend release of US December jobs data was sufficient to end the dollar's
downside correction. Instead, May's comments over the weekend indicating not just a desire but
strategic thrust to abandon the single market in exchange for regaining control
over immigration and not being subject to the European Court of Justice has cost sterling more than one
percent.
Sterling has been sold through
$1.22 for the first time since the end of October. Last week's
recovery fizzled near $1.2430. It reached $1.2125 in the European
morning. The next downside target is near $.12080. The $1.22 area that was once support is likely to be seen as
resistance. The weakness of sterling is helping allow the FTSE 100
extend its winning streak to its tenth session and 14 of 15 sessions (yes, it had declined once since December 14 when the
Fed hiked rates).
European shares are otherwise heavy today, with the Dow Jones Stoxx 600
off 0.4%, lead by the telecoms and real estate sectors. If sustained,
it would be the third decline in four sessions as the momentum seen early last
week fades. Italian and German data drew some attention. Even though
Italy created 19k jobs in November, the
employment ticked up to 11.9% (from 11.8%). When combined with the other
EMU members, the aggregate unemployment rate was unchanged at 9.8%.
Germany reported a 0.4% rise in November industrial output, which was a
bit softer than the 0.6% median forecast. However, the year-over-year
pace of 2.2% was above expectations and the best in three months, and the third
best of the year. This, alongside
the PMI, provides more evidence
acceleration of the Germany economy in Q4. Construction output rose
1.5%. Manufacturing production rose 0.4%, while energy output fell
0.4%.
It appears that some of the manufacturing was for exports, as separately,
Germany reported exports rose 3.9% in November. This is a four and a half year high. The
median forecast was for a 0.5% increase. German imports rose 3.5%.
The net result was a 22.6 bln euro trade surplus, up from 19.4 bln euros in
October. The surplus was steady around 21.1-21.6 bln euros where the six-
and 12-month moving averages are found.
The three-month average is 22.1 bln.
Outside of sterling and European
data, the third development on investors radar screens is the easing of the money
market squeeze has seen the Chinese yuan come under new pressures.
The overnight offshore yuan (CNH) deposit rate fell 12.5 percentage points,
after hitting 105% before the weekend. CNH fell nearly 0.5% today
as some of the bears who were squeezed out
last week may have begun reestablishing positions. The onshore yuan fell
0.2%.
Asian equities extended their pre-weekend losses, without Japan, where
markets were closed due to a national
holiday. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index excluding Japan fell nearly
0.25%. The loss before the weekend snapped an eight-day advance.
Chinese shares bucked the trend. The Shanghai Composite gained a little
more than 0.5%.
South Korea rivaled China for attention today in Asia. The won
fell nearly 1.3%. Part this may be a strong dollar. Part of this
may be concern that North Korea may launch a long-range missile any day.
However, the won's weakness also seems to
be partly a function of a spat with Tokyo relating to the so-called comfort
women. Japan not only recalled its ambassador
but also suspended talks about the currency swap arrangement. Lastly,
there was also some concern that the influence-peddling scandal that toppled
the Park government may be spreading to industry.
The US economic calendar is light with only November's consumer credit on
tap late in the session. Fed's regional Presidents Rosengren and Lockhart
speak. After the rise in hourly earnings, the market increased the
probability of a March rate hike. We note that the base effect means likely
means that the pace of hourly earnings growth slows in January.
Disclaimer
Sterling Pounded by May's Hard Brexit
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
January 09, 2017
Rating: