Overview: The sharp sell-off in US equities yesterday, led by tech, is weighing on today’s activity. Most of the large Asia Pacific markets excluding Japan and India lost more than 1% today. The three-day rally in Europe’s Stoxx 600 is being snapped today. US futures are posting small losses. The US 10-year yield is little changed around 3.17%, while European benchmarks are narrowly mixed, with the periphery doing better than the core. The dollar is enjoying a firmer bias against most of the major currencies but the Swiss franc and Norwegian krone. The Antipodeans and yen are the poorest performers today. Among emerging market currencies, outside of the Russian rouble, a couple central European currencies and the Chinese yuan are showing a little resilience in the face of the firmer greenback. Gold is trading at a two-week low near $1812. The month’s low was closer to $1805. August WTI is moving in the opposite direction and above $112.00 is at its best level since the big outside down day on June 17. US natgas is 3% higher and is up more than 8% this week. Europe’s natgas benchmark is up almost 5% today. It rose 5.7% last week. Iron ore pulled back less than 1% today after advancing by more than 8.5% in the past two sessions. Copper is off fractionally after edging higher for the past two sessions. September wheat is threatening to post its first back-to-back gain since the middle of last month.
Asia Pacific
Japanese retail sales rose
for the third consecutive month in May. The 0.6% rise was less than expected but the April series was
revised up to 1.0% from 0.8%, making up some of the difference. The world's
third-largest economy is recovering, and ahead of the weekend, Tokyo CPI is
expected to show another small acceleration that will lift the year-over-year
pace this month. Separately, Australia reported a 0.9% rise in May retail
sales, which was a little more than twice the gain expected. Australian retail
sales have risen by an average of 1.3% this year. They rose by an average of
0.4% last year. The Reserve Bank of Australia meets next week, and the cash
rate futures market has about an 80% chance of a 50 bp hike discounted.
US denies China's
accusations that it is building an Asian NATO. Yet for the first time, Japan, South
Korea, Australia, and New Zealand will attend the NATO Summit. Leave aside
President Xi, what would a liberal reformer in Beijing make of it? The
largest trading partner for these countries is China. Russia had gone to war
with Georgia in 2008. It had invaded Ukraine in 2014 and took Crimea. The
strong international response did not come until Putin went back into Ukraine
in 2022. That international response will decouple Europe from Russia. What will
Xi have to do to get Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand to decouple
from China? Surely that is the more likely scenario of bringing the
economic and political interests back into harmony than realigning the
political interests. The US pulled out of the TPP, and it seems unlikely that
it will ratify the international corporate tax reform that Biden championed
last year. A threatening China enhances rather than weakens the US leadership
in the region.
The dollar remains firm
against the yen, holding above JPY135.75. The JPY136.55 area has capped the greenback as US yields
soften a little. Recall that the multi-year high was set a week ago near
JPY136.70. Australia's retail sales failed to stem the selling pressure on
the Australian dollar amid concerns above the global growth slowdown. Yesterday's
price action was poor, and the Aussie settled on its lows yesterday and continued
lower today. It slipped through last week's low near $0.6870. This month's low was
closer to $0.6850, and May's two-year low was near $0.6830. The technical
outlook looks poor, and a break of the $0.6830 area could target the $0.6760
area next. The greenback posted an outside up day yesterday against the
Chinese yuan by trading on both sides of Monday's range and closing above its
high. However, there was no follow-through dollar buying today. A consolidative
tone and a narrow range emerged. For the third consecutive session, the PBOC
set the dollar's reference rate slightly above expectations. Today's fix was at
CNY6.7035 compared with the median projection in Bloomberg's survey for
CNY6.7028.
Europe
Spain's June CPI reading
shocked the market, jumping 1.8% in the month, which lifted the year-over-year
rate to 10.0%. The
Bloomberg survey found a median forecast of a 0.8% month-over-month increase. The
year-over-year rate was supposed to edge up to 8.7% from 8.5%. The core rate
rose to 5.5%, its highest in nearly 30 years. Last week, the government
announced a 9 bln euro package of fiscal support that included an extension
until the end of the year of the 0.2% subsidy for gasoline that was introduced in
March but was set to end this week. The package also included a lower tax on
energy bills, which is expected to help ease measured headline inflation. The
news from Germany looks considerably better. Most of the states have reported
and the national figure will be out later today. Only one state reported larger
than a 0.1% month-over-month increase, and the year-over-year rate fell in all
the states. On the EU-harmonized measure, the national figure was projected to
rise by 0.4% after the 1.1% increase in May for an 8.8% year-over-year rate
(from 8.7%).
After some extensive
lobbying, a deal was struck that lifts Turkey's veto over Finland and Sweden
joining NATO. It may
still take several months for Finland and Sweden to formally join but the
signing of the accession agreement will ensure the collective defensive. Turkey's
objections stemmed from Finland and Sweden's seeming support for Kurds and its
arms embargo against Ankara since the 2018 Syrian invasion. Although officially
denying an arms embargo existed, Finland and Sweden appeared to indicate that
they would have a different stance as NATO members. The independent judiciary
means that the extradition of Kurds that Ankara seeks is beyond the ability of
government officials to promise, argued Stockholm and Helsinki. Both countries
have banned the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) since the EU and US declared it a
terrorist organization. The US denies that it secretly signaled to Erdogan that
Turkey would have access to new F-16 fighter jets (blocked after Ankara bought
air defense system from Russia, which incidentally was the same system India
also bought but without the repercussions) perhaps after a suitable time passed.
In any event, Finland and Sweden joining NATO is a diplomatic success for the
Biden administration, which is also boosting NATO troops in Europe.
One consequence besides the
obvious strategic mistake by Putin, and despite talk of globalization breaking
down, in the post-invasion world that is emerging, Europe will be more
dependent on the US (for energy and defense). The sanctions imposed on the Russian
central bank and the secondary sanctions were not just a US project. Europe has
participated fully. This would suggest that maybe instead of a gold-commodity
new Bretton Woods that what is emerging is a US-European condominium. Does a
move from dollars to euro reserves really say something about the international
system changing or that the US role is diminishing? If the Canadian
dollar or Australian dollar offer higher yield or diversification, does it mean
that the dominance of the US dollar is being challenged or undermined?
The euro was turned back
from $1.0615 on Monday and today tested support near $1.0485. This corresponds to the (50%) retracement
of the advance from the mid-June low near $1.0360. The next retracement
objective (61.8%) is slightly below $1.0460. The euro stabilized in the
European morning but it needed to push above the $1.0540 area to help the tone. There
are options for nearly 980 mln euros struck at $1.0550 that expire today. Sterling
is trading lower for the third consecutive session. It stalled on Monday ahead
of the 20-day moving average, (~$1.2355), which it has not closed above for
three weeks. It is testing last week's lows (~$1.2160). That said, it
continues to trade in the range established on June 16 (~$1.2040-$1.2405). The
$1.2220 area now offers initial resistance.
America
Yesterday's US economic data
did not tell us much that we did not already know. The preliminary look at the merchandise
trade balance stabilized in May at $104.3 bln, which was in line expectations
and in line with the monthly shortfalls in April and before the blowout in March to
$125.6 bln. The takeaway is that the net export component of Q2 will not be as
much of a drag as it was in Q1. May wholesale inventories were as expected
though retail inventories were surprisingly light (1.1% not 1.8% of the median
forecast in Bloomberg's survey). However, like trade, economists have
anticipated that the change in inventories will be not subtract as much from Q2
GDP as it did in Q1. House price increases in April were largely in line with
expectations. The Richmond Fed's manufacturing survey (-19 vs. -9) was
consistent with other manufacturing surveys that have shown a sharp loss of
momentum. The deterioration of the Conference Board's measure of consumer
confidence had been foretold by the University of Michigan's survey. To
complete this week's coupon sales, the US Treasury sold $40 bln seven-year
notes, and like the early auctions this one produced a small tail. Primary
dealers also were left with the most this year. This is often seen as a bearish
sign as they may be tempted to mark down their inventory to sell it.
On tap today are mortgage
applications, which have risen for the past two weeks, and more revisions to
the official estimate of Q1 GDP. Neither will hold the market's interest for long. The highlight
today may be the appearance of the heads of the Federal Reserve, European
Central Bank, and the Bank of England at the ECB's gathering at Sintra. That
may begin around 9 am ET. The Fed's Mester and Bullard are scheduled to speak
later in the day. For both, the bar to another 75 bp hike seems low. Lastly,
Brazil's FGV inflation estimate is arguably best understood as a mid-month update
given its methodology. The year-over-year rate began falling in June 2021. We
point this out because the median forecast in Bloomberg’s survey expects an
increase to 10.83% from 10.72%. The central bank does not meet again until
August 3. The market has two 50 bp rate hikes discounted for H2, with the Selic
rate peaking at 14.25%.
The greenback's sell-off
that began on June 17 from around CAD1.3080 appeared to end yesterday near
CAD1.2820 as the sharp sell-off in equities (risk-off) sapped the Loonie's
strength. It recovered to
almost CAD1.29 yesterday and is trading sideways today (~CAD1.2860-CAD1.2885).
A move above CAD1.2900 could signal a move to CAD1.2920 and then CAD1.2950. The
US dollar had found support near MXN19.82 on Monday and Tuesday, and amid the
risk-off move yesterday, bounced to MXN20.1665, a four-day high. It poked
above MXN20.20 briefly earlier today. The next upside target is closer to
MXN20.26. Initial support is seen near MXN20.10.
Disclaimer