Overview: Yesterday’s strong US equity gains failed to carry over into today’s session. Japanese and Australian shares fared the best among the large Asia Pacific market, with the Nikkei off less than 0.4% and the ASX off less than 0.25%. However, China’s markets were off more than 1%, while Taiwan and South Korea indices slumped more than 2%. India is off nearly 1.5%. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is down 1.5% and is giving back all of its gains in the past three sessions. US futures are approaching a 2% fall. The US 10-year yield is down about seven basis points to 3.20%. European yields are mostly 8-12 bp lower, but the peripheral premium is widening over the core. The UK's somewhat firmer than expected inflation report did not prevent the 10-year Gilt yield from tumbling more than 12 bp today. The yen and Swiss franc are the most resilient against the dollar today, but the other major currencies, led by the Antipodean and Norwegian krone are 1%+ lower. Leaving aside the Russian rouble, most emerging market currencies are lower, including the Czech koruna, where the central bank is expected to lift the repo rate by over 100 bp today. Gold is on the defensive as it trades near a four-day low below $1825. Last week’s low was around $20 lower. August WTI is taking another leg down after consolidating yesterday. It has traded at a one-month low around $103.20 before steadying. US natgas is lower for the third consecutive session and is also hovering around one-month lows. The surge in Europe’s benchmark continued with the eighth day of gains. Iron ore bounced yesterday to snap an eight-day slide but is giving it all back plus some today with a 5.85% drop. Copper is off nearly 3.5% to new 15-month lows. July wheat is jumping back almost 3% after falling almost 10% over the past two sessions.
Asia Pacific
After a quiet local session
yesterday, the dollar went bid against the yen in the European morning and
accelerated to JPY136.70 into the North American close. The greenback's gains came as the US
10-year yield firmed to retest the 3.30% level. The dollar is consolidating
those gains today, holding above JPY136, as the US 10-year yield surrendered yesterday's five basis point rise. Still, ideas that Japanese officials will
not strengthen their "protests" until the JPY140 area is approached
may be emboldening the dollar bulls. Yet, there may be a misconception as
Japanese officials have been clear of their concern about the pace of the move
not the level. Earlier this month, the greenback was fraying the upper
Bollinger Band, which is set at two standard deviations above the 20-day moving
average. It comes in now around JPY138.40. On the weekly charts, the upper
Bollinger Band is slightly above JPY138.80. The takeaway is that while the dollar
is climbing against the yen, the move is more orderly than previously. One-month
implied volatility was around 14.4% on June 15. Today it is closer to 14.0%.
Note that the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey sees the dollar at JPY130
at the end of September and JPY128 at the end of the year. In the futures
market, the net short yen position reached a four-year high of 112k contracts in
mid-April but has fallen for the past five weeks, through June 14. At 69.75k
contracts, it is the smallest in three months. Gross long positions have
increased for four of the five weeks and has nearly tripled to 32.5k contracts
over the span.
The US is said to be
considering reducing some of the tariffs on Chinese goods that the Biden
administration inherited from its predecessor. This has been a talking point for a couple
of months. The tariffs need to be kept in the realm of foreign economic policy
not US price pressures. They are a distraction. A study by
Kathryn Russ of the Peterson Institute for International Economics found that
only 2% of extra tariffed Chinese goods are included in the CPI basket and 2.7% of
the PCE deflator. She calculates that the direct impact of unwinding the Trump
tariffs would be worth a one-off 0.25% percent off the CPI and 0.35% off the
PCE deflator. Consider that since the start of last year, CPI has risen by an
average about 0.6% a month (vs. 0.2% average in the two years before Covid) and
the PCE deflator has risen by 0.5% on average (vs. 0.1% previously). Meanwhile,
the US import ban on goods from Xinjiang came into effect yesterday. Under the
new rules, the goods made there are assumed to use forced labor and businesses
that want to import must demonstrate that it is not the case. Cotton and tomato
imports were previously banned. Neither Europe nor Japan have enacted similar
laws yet but may face increased pressure to do so.
The push lower in US 10-year
yields appears to have removed the immediate pressure on the dollar that lifted
it to JPY136.70. There is
a $330 mln option at JPY136.95 that expires today. The minutes from the April
BOJ meeting give no sign that the extraordinarily easy monetary policy was
about to be jettisoned. The JPY138.00-JPY138.60 area is seen as the next
important technical area. A break of JPY136.00 may see JPY135.50. The
Australian dollar was capped in front of $0.7000 on Monday and Tuesday, and it
is come back offered today, falling to a five-day low near $0.6880. Last
week's low was by $0.6850 and last month's low was closer to $0.6830. The
intraday momentum studies are getting stretched. A move back above the
$0.6900-$0.6920 area would help stabilize the tone. The broadly
stronger greenback helped it gain against the Chinese yuan for the first time
this week and only the second time in the past seven sessions. In fact, the
dollar gapped slightly higher (today's open was the low around CNY6.7028, and
yesterday's high was slightly above CNY6.7005. The dollar briefly poked above
CNY6.7260. A move above CNY6.7280 could be a constructive technical sign and
warn of a move back to the recent high a little above CNY6.76. The PBOC set the
dollar's reference rate at CNY6.7109, a bit stronger than the CNY6.7082 median
projection (Bloomberg survey). It was the first fix in four sessions that was
for a firmer than expected dollar.
Europe
The ECB appears to have
gotten as much from its verbal intervention--talking about a new mechanism to
curb widening interest rate spreads, including an "emergency" ECB
meeting which confirmed a tool was in the works-- as it likely will. The Italian 10-year bond yield jumped
above 4% last early last week, which some claimed prompted ECB meeting. By the
end of the week, it approached 3.50%. Kudos. Recall that the yield had moved
above 3% in the first half of May and consolidated in the second half. Italy's
premium over Germany peaked above 240 bp on June 14. Yesterday, it reached 185
bp, the lowest since last April. The momentum seemed to wane yesterday. Given
Italy's size and debt, it is understandable why it was the focus, but do not
lose sight that the fragmentation threat is not limited to Italy. Consider
Spain. Its 10-year premium over Germany has been trending up since early
January (~67 bp) and consolidated around 90-100 bp from mid-February through
April. The widening resumed and spiked to 136 bp on June 13. The ECB's guidance
drove it back toward 100 bp where it stabilized yesterday above 105. Spain's
10-year yield began the year near 0.5%. By the end of the first quarter, it had
risen 100 bp and rose another 100 bp mid-June. It then jumped another 50 bp in
a few days, lifting the yield to 3.12% on June 14. It fell back to almost 2.65%
by the end of last week. It has been consolidating higher this week. Today, the
Italian and Spanish premium has widened 4-5 bp.
UK May CPI rose 0.7% for a
9.1% year-over-year pace. This
was in line with expectations. CPIH, which includes owner-related costs ticked
up to 7.9% from 7.8%. While this is a touch higher than expected the core rate
eased more than expected. Excluding food and energy, prices rose 5.9% above
year ago levels, down from 6.2% in April. The slowing was a little more than
expected and the first slippage since last September. With the energy price cap
to be raised in October, the BOE has warned of an 11% peak in inflation. Producer
prices were also a little firmer than expected. Note that the implies year-end
rate rose to 3.08% on Monday. It slipped a couple of basis points yesterday,
but is off 12 bp today to around 2.93%, the lowest in a week.
Norway was the first G10
central bank to hike rates in this cycle. Beginning last September, the Norges Bank has hiked 25 bp
once a quarter (alternating meetings) and is widely expected to hike by another
25 bp tomorrow. It would bring the deposit rate to 1.0%. Policymakers have
guided market expectations for quarter point hikes through the end of next year.
However, with CPI accelerating, the swaps market is pricing in an acceleration
of hikes. In May, headline CPI was up 5.7% above year ago levels, rising. Norges
Bank's most recent forecasts are that CPI will fall back to 3.4% by the end of the
year and 1.6% next. The market is less optimistic with the median forecast in
Bloomberg's survey for 4.0% CPI this year and 2.3% next. The swaps market has
begun discounting the strong chance of two 50 bp moves this year. The krone was
little changed against the dollar in Q1, but it has been pummeled in Q2. It is
the worst performing G10 currency this quarter. It is off almost 11.7% since the
end of March, eclipsing the Japanese yen, (~-10.7%), as other major central
banks outflank Norway.
The euro stalled in front of
last week's $1.06 high yesterday, unable to make much headway above $1.0580. There are options for about 600 mln euro
struck there that expire today. Another set at $1.05 (~600 mln euros) may have
already been neutralized. Still, for the fourth consecutive session, the euro
is consolidating within last Thursday's broad range (~$1.0380-$1.0600). The
euro trended lower through yesterday's North American session and the retreat
carried through the Asian session today. The euro turned a bit better bid in
late dealings and recovered further in the European morning. The $1.0540 looks
like a reasonable cap today. Sterling also was sold to a four-day low
(~$1.2160) and it also is recovering in the European morning to recover toward
$1.2240. The $1.2260-$1.2280 area may provide nearby resistance. Tomorrow
is the anniversary of the UK Brexit referendum in 2016.
America
Fed presidents Barkin,
Evans, and Harker speak today, but the focus is on Chair Powell's semi-annual
testimony before Congress. Today
he appears before the Senate Banking Committee and tomorrow he does it again
for the House Financial Services Committee. At the recent post-FOMC press
conference, Powell pushed back vigorously against ideas that the economy was
rolling over. However, in his prepared remarks, he recognizes some preliminary
signs that the labor market may be cooling. Because the Fed is tightening
financial conditions, lower equity prices, slower housing activity, and higher
rates are expected. That alone won't get the Fed to change course. Outside of a
material decline in inflation, which may prove difficult, as the changing
composition points to resilient shelter costs, a sharp deterioration in the
labor market would likely get the Fed's notice. The December Fed funds contract
shows a year-end rate of a little more than 3.5%. It has reached 3.64% last week.
Canada reported stronger
than expected April retail sales (1.3% excluding autos, twice what the median
projection in Bloomberg's survey anticipated, and the March series was revised
to 2.6% from 2.4%). On
tap today is May CPI and it is expected to have accelerated. The year-over-year
pace is projected to have increased to 7.3% from 6.8%. The average of the
different core measures is seen rising to 4.5% from about 4.25%. The swaps
market is pricing in more than a 90% chance of a 75 bp hike at the July 13 Bank
of Canada meeting. It has the year-end rate slightly north of 3.50%. It had
reached almost 3.70% at the start of last week, following stronger than
expected employment data.
The surge in US equities
helped lift the Canadian dollar to three-day highs yesterday, and the pullback
today is taking a toll. The
US dollar approached CAD1.29 yesterday but is back near CAD1.30 today. A move
above CAD1.3020 would signal a retest on last week's high near CAD1.3080. Still,
the directional cues from the broader risk environment (S&P 500 is a
reasonable proxy) remains robust. Today's risk-off mood is weighing on the
Mexican peso ahead of tomorrow's biweekly CPI report and the central bank meeting,
which is widely expected to result in a 75 bp hike. The greenback fell to a
six-day low yesterday in front of MXN20.12. It bounced to almost MXN20.25
before steadying, just shy of the five-day moving average (~MXN20.2580) that
has not closed above since last Thursday. Yesterday's high was slightly above
MXN20.31. Lastly, investors reacted to the Colombian weekend election results
yesterday after Monday's holiday. The stock market got tagged for almost a 4%
loss and peso fell 3%., the most since March 2020.
Disclaimer