There are four large
macro forces shape the investment and business climate here at the start of the
last quarter of the year. First, the US economic outperformance has been stark.
This has helped underpin US rates and bolsters the dollar. The divergence is
likely to narrow in coming months as US growth slows rather than stronger
growth prospects in other high-income countries. Second, Beijing has taken
numerous measures, which although stopping well shy of the fiscal bazooka (like
in 2008) many critics advocate, the cumulative effect boosts the chances that
the 5% growth objective is achieved.
Third, OPEC+, and especially Saudi Arabia, are committed to keeping world oil supplies tight. This has driven the price of oil above $90 a barrel. In the first instance, it will elevate headline measures of inflation and measures of nominal retail sales. However, for most countries, it will act as a headwind for growth. In last month's forecast update, the OECD noted that Europe is more vulnerable than the US from surging oil prices, as it lifted its US growth forecast (to 2.2% this year and 1.3% next from 1.6% and 1.0%, respectively), while reducing its forecast for the eurozone to 0.6% and 1.1% (from 0.9% and 1.5%, respectively).
Fourth, the post-Covid monetary tightening cycle is ending, though there may still be scope for some G10 countries to raise rates in Q4 23 or even Q1 24. Still, investors typically respond to what is perceived to the last hike differently than the first move in the cycle. Speculation is shifting toward the timing of the first cut. Several emerging market countries, especially in South America have already begun an easing cycle, as has Poland. Over the past 30 years, the Federal Reserve, for example, delivered the first rate cut, on average, of about 10.5 months after the last hike. The range has been five to 18 months. Currently, the derivatives market is anticipating something around the average. That dovetails with around when the market expected the European Central Bank to cut rates, which is in early Q3 24.
Japan is an outlier. It is the only country that still has a
negative policy rate (-0.10%). Also, the Bank of Japan’s balance sheet
continues to expand, while other major central banks are allowing the
previously bought assets to roll-off the balance sheets. The upper-band of the
10-year bond yield has been doubled twice over the past year to 1.00%. It
finished Q3 at it high a little above 0.75%. Bank of Japan Governor Ueda seemed
to have suggested rates could be hiked late this year, but then appeared to
soften the rhetoric after the recent policy meeting. Some observers think that
Yield Curve Control will be abandoned before the central bank exits from the
negative policy rate. Still, the swaps market seems to be pricing in a small
rate hike at the end of Q1 24.
Politics is never far from the surface, though perhaps the widespread practice of import-substitution industrial policies make the invisible hand more visible. The polls warn that the Labour government could be replaced by a center-right government in New Zealand. Switzerland holds the first part of its federal elections in October and the second part in December. Poland's national election may have the most far-reaching implications. The Law and Justice Party is seeking a mandate for its third consecutive government. When Russia first invaded Ukraine, Poland absorbed nearly seven million Ukrainian refugees. An estimated 1.5 mln remain in Poland, but the focus has shifted to keeping Ukrainian grain out and this has strained the bilateral relationship.
Moreover, and some link the upcoming election in late October to Warsaw's stance toward Ukraine. The government said last month that it would not send new weapons to Ukraine. This is somewhat bombastic, as Poland's contribution was rarely about its weapons transfers and more about it being a conduit for other countries to get their weapons into Ukraine. Warsaw indicated this would continue. Still, between, the dispute over Ukrainian agriculture goods (Poland is not the only EU country to maintain a ban) and the push back in the US among (some) Republican against the administration's proposal, from Moscow's (and maybe Beijing's) perspective, the coalition may fray. At the same time, overcoming an earlier reluctance, the US will send long-range army tactical missile systems. They will expand the Kyiv's firing zone. The takeaway is that the war is likely to persist and could broaden in the period ahead. By early next year, Ukrainian pilots would have completed their training for the F-16 fighter jets the NATO members, including the US, are providing.
The UK will likely hold a general election late next year, but there are two byelections in October that portend insight into the mood of voters. One is for a district what the Tories held, but previously by a Johnson Tory not from the Sunak-wing. The question is whether the Tories, who are trailing well behind Labour in the national polls, are still fighting. More important for Labour's fortunes may be by election in Scotland. The election is for seat a lawmaker whose constituency recalled him for violating Covid lockdown rules. To solidify its rejuvenation, Labour needs to rebuild its Scottish presence. Germany's Bavaria holds its election, and the CSU has a firm grip, and it will most likely return with its junior partner, the Free-Voters of Bavaria, a local center-right party. The center-left national government is unpopular and in the previous Bavarian election, the SPD drew less than 10% of the vote, coming in fifth place. It may slip further, while the right AfD could see its fortunes increase (10.2% in 2018).
Perhaps the most notable developments suggestive of the important changes coming to the global capital markets was JP Morgan's announcement that as of next June, it will include India in its emerging market bond index. It is among the benchmarks asset managers use. Other benchmark providers are likely to follow suit, even if with a lag. JP Morgan's announcement will build liquidity and could improve access, making it more tempting and attractive for others. At first, Indian bonds will have a maximum of 10% weighting in the index, and some asset managers will begin accumulating a position before next June. JP Morgan's decision is seen boosting capital inflows by $25-$40 bln. One of the implications is the as India is incorporated into the global capital markets, the liquidity in the assets and currency improves.
India occupies a unique space on the geopolitical chessboard. As in the non-aligned movement during the first cold war, India is seeking its own course. It is a member of the Quad, the security-sharing effort (with the US, Japan, and Australia), and it has agreed to give US navy access to port of call and repair privileges. At the same time, it is a big buyer of Russian oil and gas (and appears to have recycled it back to Europe) and buys munitions from Russia. Initially after the sanctions on Russia, Moscow accepted rupee but the limits of what it could do with India's currency given the capital controls made it refuse. Recent reports there was an agreement to pay in UAE dirham, which is pegged to the dollar. Reports suggest India may be developing a financial instrument that could appeal to Russian investors. India and China not only have a disputed border, but the sheer scale and proximity, coupled with ambition, makes them “natural” rivals. According to some accounts, Russia and China are blocking India's (and Brazil's) bid to join the UN Security Council.
India holds national elections early next year. The ban on the export of most types of rice appears to be inspired by politics more than economics. Reports indicate there are more than sufficient rice stocks, but the restrictions ensure lower domestic prices. India accounted for about 40% of world's traded rice and as a result of its actions, the price of rice, the staple of around half the world's population, has surged to 15-year highs. India is also caught up in a dispute with Canada, which claims to have credible evidence that Indian security killed a Sikh leader (and Canadian citizen) in British Columbia a few months ago. New Delhi has stopped granting visas to Canadians and have requested that Ottawa reduce its diplomatic presence in India.
The Bannockburn World Currency Index (BWCI), a GDP-weighted basket of the currencies of the largest dozen economies (EMU is counted as a single economy) has anticipated the greater role for India. Using World Bank GDP figures, the Indian rupee's weighting rose to 4.3% (from 3.8%) to move ahead of the UK into fifth place (behind the US, China, EMU, and Japan). Making some conservative assumptions, India's economy could surpass Germany's in a couple of years.
BWCI fell for the second consecutive month, bringing to almost the multiyear low set last November. The weakness of the index reflects the fact that component currencies fell against the dollar in September. Sterling and the Japanese yen were the weakest components of the basket, losing about 3.8% and 2.6%, respectively. The euro followed closely, falling by about 2.5%.
Among the
emerging market members, the Indian rupee was the strongest, with a 0.3%. The
Chinese yuan was close second. Despite the numerous formal and informal efforts
by Chinese officials, the yuan fell by about 0.55%. The Mexican
peso and South Korean won were the weakest among the emerging market members of
the index, falling by 2.1% and 2.0%, respectively.
Even though the BWCI has approached last year's lows, most of the components have not. The Australian dollar and Indian rupee have come the closest. And sterling (3.9% weighting), the Canadian dollar (2.7%), the Brazilian real (2.4%) and the Mexican peso (1.8%) have risen against the US dollar this year. Combined, they account for almost 11% of the BWCI. The Russian ruble has a small weighting (2.8%), but it is off nearly 24% this year and the yen, with a 5.3% weight in the index, is off more than 12% year to date. The drag on the index of the two are almost the same. Still, BWCI may be near an important low if our assessment of the gathering headwinds on the US is fair.
U.S. Dollar: Through its updated Summary of Economic Projections the Federal Reserve offered a full-throated endorsement of a soft-landing for the US economy. Surely, the US economy has proven more resilient than Fed and market economists expected, helped by a significantly higher federal deficit and a robust labor market and an increase in real wages. However, significant headwinds are accumulating, and this warns of the risk of a dramatic slowdown in Q4. The weak link remains the financial sector. Deposits are still leaving banks and credit conditions are tightening. The Fed's balance sheet unwind continues (average $117 bln over the past six months since the March bank stress flare up), which is extinguishing reserves. Bank share prices are falling and are near three-month lows. The UAW strike may continue to broaden. In addition, student loan servicing will resume for the first time in three years, and this is seen squeezing consumption, which already looks set to slow. Tightness in the labor market is easing. Higher oil and gasoline prices are also a headwind for consumers, even if the US is a net exporter of energy and businesses have long-term contracts. The Fed funds futures strip implies three rate cuts next year, while the FOMC's median forecast envisions two. The market has all but given up ideas of a November hike (less than a 20% chance). The Dollar Index rallied for eleven consecutive weeks into the end of Q3. This is the longest advance since 2014, driven chiefly by the stark divergence. We look for the divergence to moderate due to the slowing of the US economy rather than better economic news from Europe and Japan and expect this to cap the greenback after an incredible two-and-a-half month run.
Euro: The euro's decline since the mid-July peak near $1.1275 extended to within a few hundredths of a cent of the year's low set in January near $1.0485. While this partly reflects the broad strength of the US dollar, the news stream from Europe is poor. The economy remains weak, near stagnant, and there is no stimulus to be found. The swaps market sees the September rate hike as the last in the cycle and has the first cut fully discounted in Q3 24. Although the central bank meets on October 26, the focus will shift to fiscal policy in the coming weeks as the 2024 budgets need to be submitted to the EU. The Stability and Growth Pact fiscal targets were suspended during Covid and extended since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. They are intended to be restored in 2024, though given the near recessionary conditions in many members, some flexibility may be shown. Last year's natural gas shock has given way to an oil shock this year, compounded by the euro's weakness. At last month's meeting, the ECB shaved this year's growth projection to 0.7% from 0.9% and next year to 1.0% from 1.5%. It tweaked its inflation forecast to 5.6% this year and 3.2% next from 5.4% and 3.0%, respectively. The euro has fallen for 11 consecutive weeks through the end of September. It is the longest decline since 1996. It is extremely oversold, and the catalyst for a recovery may not be good news from the eurozone but negative news from the US. That said, the next important chart area is near $1.04. A correction could carry the single currency back toward $1.0660-$1.0700 without necessarily improving the outlook. For that the euro may need to resurface above $1.0770-$1.0800.
(As of September 29, indicative closing prices, previous in parentheses)
Spot: $1.0575 ($1.0780) Median Bloomberg One-month forecast: $1.0650 ($1.0840) One-month forward: $1.0585 ($1.0800) One-month implied vol: 6.8% (6.8%)
Spot: JPY149.35 (JPY146.20) Median Bloomberg One-month forecast: JPY146.85 (JPY144.10) One-month forward: JPY148.55 (JPY144.50) One-month implied vol: 8.7% (9.0%)
British Pound: Sterling was the weakest of the G10 currencies, losing almost 3.7% against the US dollar in September (~six cents) before stabilizing at the end of the month. That is the largest decline since the sterling crisis last September and August that saw the pound fall to record low near $1.0350. The softer than expected August CPI (September 20) and the Bank of England's decision to stand pat at the MPC meeting the following day, did sterling no favor. Though by that time, sterling was already fraying support around $1.2400, and by the end of September, it was trading at six-month lows near $1.2100. Initially, risk on the downside risk extends toward $1.20, though the $1.2075 area corresponds to a technical retracement target. Beyond that, the next target may be closer to $1.1750. On the upside, sterling needs to resurface above $1.2350-$1.2400 to lift the technical tone. The BOE cut its forecast for Q3 growth to 0.1% from 0.4% it projected in August. Also, the central bank announced that over the next 12 months starting in October, it will reduce its balance sheet from GBP100 bln to GBP658 bln. In the previous 12 months, it reduced its holdings by GBP80 bln. The central bank meets next on November 2. The swaps market has slightly less than a 50% chance of a hike discounted and around a 70% chance of a hike before the end of the year, making the employment and inflation reports on October 18-19 especially important.
Spot: $1.2200 ($1.2850) Median Bloomberg One-month forecast: $1.2305 ($1.2620) One-month forward: $1.2205 ($1.2590) One-month implied vol: 7.6% (7.6%)
Canadian Dollar:
Chinese Yuan: Chinese officials seemed to get more serious about supporting the economy in recent weeks. While stopping short of large-scale fiscal steps, the numerous measures, and the exercise of soft power to encourage desired behavior seems to have begun yielding constructive results. Similarly, officials have managed to limit the yuan's descent to a little more than 0.5% in September, less than most other currencies. A squeeze in liquidity in the offshore market was arranged and reserve requirements for currency deposits were adjusted. Orders to buy more than $25 mln came under closer official scrutiny. Banks were discouraged from selling the yuan in proprietary trading. The central bank's daily fix has consistently in favor of the yuan. At the same time, interest rates and bank reserves were cut, extending the policy divergence with the US. Judging from some portfolio flow reports, it does not appear that foreign investors have been persuaded to return to Chinese stocks or bonds. There is scope for additional adjustment of China's monetary policy before the end of the year, even if not in October. The Golden Week holidays will shut mainland markets the first week in October. Barring a new setback, the groundwork for a Biden-Xi meeting in November at the APEC gathering, appears to be falling into place.
October 2023 Monthly
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
September 30, 2023
Rating: