Overview: The New Year begins slowly. Japan,
mainland China, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK markets remain closed.
While Hong Kong shares traded heavily, Taiwan, South Korea, and India moved
higher. Led by consumer discretionary and staple sectors, Europe's Stoxx
600 is up about 0.6%. US futures are 0.4%-0.6% higher. European
yields have drifted lower, with the periphery doing bettter than the core. The US 10-year yield will begin the local session
at 1.51%. The dollar is mostly firmer, after weakening broadly at the end of last year. The Norwegian krone and New Zealand
dollar are the most resilient, while the Canadian dollar is off
nearly 0.3% to pare the year-end gains, followed by the euro, which is in the
middle of its $1.1335-$1.1380 range. The greenback is holding above
JPY115.00. Emerging market currencies are mixed but mostly softer.
Higher than expected inflation is weighing on the Turkish lira. The South Korean won leads the other softer EM currencies. It is off about 0.25%. The South African rand (~0.7%) and Russian ruble
(0.5%) lead the advancers. The JP Morgan Emerging Market Currency Index
rose by about 2.5% in the last two weeks of 2021 and is slightly firmer
today (~0.2%). Iron ore is higher for the third consecutive session and rallied
more than 45% from the middle of November through Xmas, before falling 5.3%
last week. Copper has a four-week 4.6% rally in tow but is slightly
softer today. Gold is stalling near $1830, the (61.8%) retracement of its
sell-off from $1880 mid-November high. Oil rallied for the last two weeks, with
February WTI gaining about 6.2%. OPEC+ meets tomorrow and WTI is up a nearly 1.5% to push above $76. US natural gas gained slightly
more than 1% in the past two weeks and is hovering around little changed level. Recall that diverted
shipments from the US and Asia to Europe saw natural gas prices collapse from
above 180 euros on December 21 to 65.5 euros at the end of last
week.
Asia Pacific
China's property developers
remain in the spotlight. Bloomberg estimates that the sector's debt servicing costs,
including deferred wages, and maturing obligations are at $197 bln this
month. Evergrande shares were suspended in Hong Kong. When the
problems, bubbling below the surface for some time, emerged last September,
global risk appetites were shaken, and many observers made comparisons to the
Great Financial Crisis. However, so far, the problems seem localized and
unlike the US and Europe, new lending has not frozen.
The macro data highlights
include China's Caixin PMI after the official one surprised on the
upside. The
preliminary PMIs for Australia and Japan steal the thunder from the final
report. Japan's weekly MOF report on portfolio flows may be noteworthy. Foreign
investors have been on a buying spree, buying the most Japanese bonds over the
first three weeks of December in at least 20 years.
The dollar has risen for the
past four weeks against the Japanese yen. It closed the last two sessions slightly above
JPY115.00 and remains above it today. Recall, last year's high, set in
late November, was near JPY115.50. Today's high thus far is about
JPY115.35. The market may be reluctant to push the dollar much higher
before Tokyo returns. The Australian dollar advanced almost 2% in
the second half of December. It is stalling near the (50%)
retracement of its decline from around $0.7555 in late October, found close to
$0.7275. Support is ahead of $0.7200. Thin trading on New
Year's Eve saw the dollar plunge to its low for the year near CNY6.34 before
settling slightly above CNY6.3560. Chinese officials have
signaled their desire to avoid further yuan appreciation. If the divergence of
monetary policy and higher fx reserve requirements are not sufficient,
investors must be wary that other tools can be deployed.
Europe
The uptick in Germany's
December manufacturing PMI was revised away, leaving it unchanged from November
at 57.4. The
flash estimate put it at 57.9. In contrast, the French reading was
revised up to 55.6 from 54.9. This pared the decline from 55.9 in November.
Italy's manufacturing PMI held in better than expected, slipping to 62.0
from 62.8, the post-Covid high. Spain, on the other hand, disappointed,
with its manufacturing PMI falling to 56.2 from 57.1, its lowest since last
February. The net result was the flash aggregate estimate of 58.0 was
sustained (58.4 in November).
The final Eurozone aggregate
PMI is of passing interest. The main takeaway from the preliminary estimate continues to
resonate: the economic activity was slowing. The flash estimate put the
composite at 53.4 (down from 55.4), the lowest since March. It has risen once
in the last five months. More notable for the market will be the preliminary
estimate of December inflation. Consumer prices are expected to have stabilized
after reaching 4.9% year-over-year in November (2.6% core).
The Turkish government has tried
to absorb the currency-risk that it has unleashed by forcing the central bank
to cut key interest rates by 500 bp since mid-September. It managed to spur a powerful
short-covering squeeze in the lira, which saw the dollar fall from around
TRY18.36 on December 20 to nearly TRY10.25 on December 23. The greenback
recovered to nearly TRY14.00 today, its sixth consecutive advance.
Today's CPI report blew away expectations. Just in the month of December,
Turkish consumer prices jumped nearly 13.6%. This sent the year-over-year
rate to almost 36.1%. The core rate rose about 31.9%
year-over-year.
Short covering helped lifted
the euro a little more than 1.1% over the past two weeks. It reached about $1.1385 on New
Year's Eve. It has not traded above $1.14 since mid-February. Ahead
of this week's two key economic reports (EMU CPI and US employment), the market
may not have the conviction necessary to extend its year-end gains. Sterling
gained about 2.1% in the last two weeks. It reached $1.3550 at the
end of last week, its best level since mid-November. It is little changed
today. The $1.3575 area corresponds to the (50%) retracement of its
sell-off from $1.3835 area in late October. Initial support is seen in
the $1.3455-$1.3465 area.
America
The US economic diary is
jammed packed to begin the New Year. The highlight is the jobs report at the end of the week.
The median forecast (Bloomberg survey) calls for a 400k increase after being
disappointed with the 210k increase in November. The unemployment rate is
expected to ease to 4.1% from 4.2%, and average earnings growth likely
moderated. At the end of last year, an article in the Financial Times made two
important observations. First, the uniqueness of the covid-impact renders
seasonal adjustments suspect. The response rate was less than two-thirds, the
lowest for the month of November in more than a decade. In November, the raw
establishment survey showed a 778k gain in nonfarm payrolls, but the BLS
adjustment cut a record 568k. Second, also complicating the data is the
participation by businesses. The response rate was less than two-thirds, the
lowest for the month of November in more than a decade.
The monthly auto sales
report seems under-appreciated as a broad economic indicator. The supply chain disruptions depressed
auto production and, in turn, auto consumption (not just in the US). However,
late in the year, there seemed to be some improvement. The median forecast
(Bloomberg survey) December US auto sales (seasonally adjusted annual rate) at
13.1 mln, which would then be the most since July. Elsewhere, the preliminary
goods trade balance, like the flash PMI, is the real new news. The final
reading tends not to be very meaningful. In any event, the trade deficit will
widen considerably. The goods deficit widened to a record $97.8 bln from $83.2
bln. Lastly, the FOMC minutes will be looked at especially for
clues about the timing of the first hike. March?
It is unreasonable to expect
Canada to match the nearly 154k job increase reported for November. The median forecast is 25k. Canada also
reports November trade figures. Canada's trade balance has steadily improved
since March 2020, and the 12-month moving average through October was the
highest in around six years. The swaps market has a little more than half of
the first hike (25 bp) priced in at the January 26 Bank of Canada
meeting.
Mexico's data highlights
include worker remittances, which could be the most important source of private
capital inflows. Without
meaningful fiscal support and in the face of tightening monetary policy, the
economy lacks much momentum. The December CPI is expected to have edged higher
toward 7.5%. Monetary policy is where the drama will be as the new central bank
governor takes the reins (Rodriguez). The 50 bp hike in December lifted the
overnight target to 5.5%. If the market is concerned about a policy mistake or
possible erosion of its independence, you would not know it from looking at the
peso. It was the strongest currency in the world in December, rising almost
4.5% against the dollar.
The Canadian dollar rallied about 2% over the past two weeks. This saw the US dollar retrace half of its rally from the mid-October low below CAD1.23 that peaked on December 20 by CAD1.2965. That retracement came it near CAD1.2625. The momentum indicators are still headed down, but the greenback is recovering today. Initial resistance is seen around CAD1.2700. A move above CAD1.2750 warns that a low may be in place. The Mexican peso has rallied for the past five weeks, and despite the poor close at the end of the year, it is bid today. The US dollar was sold from near MXN20.55 to MXN20.45 in the European morning but has found a bid near midday. The low from New Year's Eve was set around MXN20.3070 and the 200-day moving average is closer to MXN20.27.
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