The beleaguered US dollar is enjoying a
respite from the selling pressure that pushed it lower against all the major
currencies in the first six months of 2017. A measure of the dollar on a trade-weighted basis fell about 5% in the
first half after appreciating nearly 8% in Q4 16.
Paradoxically, the dollar's
recovery today has not been sparked by a new fundamental development but seems to be a reflection of
sentiment and a cautiousness about the proximity of key chart points. In fact, the economic data that has been reported today, which includes Caixin
manufacturing PMI for China, Japan's Tankan Survey and the eurozone's
manufacturing PMI all came in stronger than expected. The UK
manufacturing PMI was an exception and as it fell more than expected.
However, overall, the fact that the dollar is broadly higher suggests
that the market may have already discounted the strengthening global macro
picture.
For the record, China's
Caixin manufacturing PMI rose to 50.4 from 49.6. It is the strongest
reading since March. Output rose to 50.6 from 50.2.
The improvement seen in the official measure speaks to the larger
businesses and exporters. The Caixin measure says that the economic
strength is also being seen in the domestic economy among smaller businesses as
well.
Japan's Tankan Survey showed
improvement across the board: large and small manufacturers and
non-manufacturers. Of particular interest, capex plans jumped dramatically. Large
businesses intend to boost capital spending by 8% after a 0.6% increase was
planned in Q1. The median expected a 7.2% gain. Separately, the LDP
was trounced in the Tokyo election.
It may take a little time for the results to impact policy. A
cabinet reshuffle and prospects for a supplemental budget, a typical response
may be forthcoming. Finance Minister Aso is consolidating his power among
LDP factions, and it is out of Aso's faction that a rival to Abe may emerge.
In the eurozone, the final manufacturing PMI
ticked up to 57.4 from a flash reading of 57.3 and a May reading of 57.0. It is the highest level since April 2011. Forward-looking new orders to 58.7 from 57.8, which is the highest since
February 2011. The country breakdown as a bit disappointing, however.
Germany, where the flash
reading had shown a decline, bounced back. It rose to 59.6 from a 59.3 flash
report and 59.5 in May. France was revised down from its 55.0 flash
report to 54.8. In May, it stood at 53.8. Italy eked out the
slightest of gains, rising to 55.2 from 55.1, while Spain slipped to 54.7 from
55.4
The Scandi's showed
improvement. Sweden's manufacturing PMI jumped to
62.4 from 58.8. The Riksbank meets on Tuesday and today's report
underscores expectations that it will adopt less dovish forward guidance like
the ECB. Norway's manufacturing PMI rose to 55.1 from 54.2.
It UK where
the disappointment is more significant. First,
the May series was revised to 56.3 from
56.7. Second, the June manufacturing PMI fell to 54.3. It is the
second consecutive decline and suggests
that the early bounce back from Q1 weakness quickly faded as the quarter
progressed. While the service sector PMI covers much larger part of the
UK economy and is due out later this week, the fact that price pressures
moderated is an important reminder of why BOE policymakers ought not to be in a hurry to remove more
accommodation. Input manufacturing prices fell to their lowest level in
12 months, while output prices eased to nine-month lows.
Although most Asia equity
markets advance, the basket that makes up the MSCI Asia Pacific Index edged
0.15% lower, after shedding nearly 0.7% before the weekend. European shares are faring better, and the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is about 2/3 a percentage point
higher, led by energy, materials, and
financials. Oil prices are trying to extend last week's recovery.
Gains today would be the eighth consecutive session, during which the
price of oil has risen almost 9% after falling more than 20%.
Asia-Pacific bonds were
under pressures after the pre-weekend sell-off in the US and Europe. The BOJ did buy bonds today, but the 10-year yield edged
less than half a basis point higher. Benchmark 10-year yields are lower
in Europe, especially in the periphery. UK Gilts are an exception, and
the 10-year yield is up a little more than a basis point. US 10-year
Treasury yields are also firmer, after finishing last week near 2.30%.
US markets close early today
ahead of tomorrow's holiday. There are several readings on the US
economy that will be reported in today's
abbreviated session. The manufacturing ISM is first. The price and
employment components may be just as important as the forward look new orders.
Construction spending is expected to have recovered after a steep 1.4% drop in
May.
Perhaps the most important
reading may come from the auto industry,
where June sales figures will be reported.
Auto sales appear
to be gradually slowing. Auto sales have fallen in four of the first five
months of the year. Auto sales averaged 17.44 mln vehicles a month (SAAR)
in 2016 and had averaged 16.97 mln over the first
five months of 2017. June auto sales are expected to slip to 16.5 mln, which would be the slowest since February
2015.
We would not want to
exaggerate the significance of the dollar's better tone today. The market was over-extended, and the bounce has not
taken out important chart points. The bounce was not sparked by fresh fundamental positive developments for the
US. We do think the market got ahead of itself in thinking that Draghi or
Carney was signaling a near-term change
in rates at last week's ECB conference. Sentiment
is a key driver, even if not always fully appreciated, and we suspect that it
will take more than a modest bounce to persuade many that the dollar's H1
losses were too much.
Disclaimer
Dollar Bounces to Start H2
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 03, 2017
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