Overview: A less hawkish Reserve Bank of New Zealand and a
slightly softer than expected January CPI from Australia appears to have
sparked a broad US dollar rally. The Dollar Index is up almost 0.25%, which, if
sustained, would be its best day since the US CPI was reported on February 13. Most
of the greenback's strength was seen in the Asia Pacific region, and it has
steadied in the European morning. The dollar approached JPY150.80 and there are
large options at JPY151 that expire today. The yen is the strongest of the G10
currencies, off less than 0.15%. The Antipodeans have been hit the hardest. The
Australian dollar is off around 0.75% and the New Zealand dollar has been
tagged for 1.2%. The euro briefly traded below $1.08 for the first time in a
week. Emerging market currencies are also weaker, with the South African rand,
Thai baht leading the drop with 0.65%-0.85% declines. With herculean efforts
the dollar continues to hold slightly below CNY7.20.
Equities are under pressure. All the large markets in the Asia Pacific
region but South Korea, sold off. That included a 2% slide in the Chinese
shares that trade in Hong Kong and a 3.8% slump in the Shenzhen Composite. Europe's
Stoxx 600 is giving back yesterday's nearly 0.2% gain. US index futures are
modestly softer after a mixed performance yesterday. European 10-year yields
are mostly softer, but UK Gilts are flat. The 10-year US Treasury yield is a
basis point lower near 4.29%. The stronger dollar has weighed on gold. It had
poked above $2039 yesterday but settled lower on the day and follow-through
selling today has seen in slip below $2025 before finding support. April WTI
rallied more than $3 a barrel from Monday's low to $79 yesterday. An 8
mln-barrel build in US stocks according to API estimates seemed to blunt the
speculation that OPEC+ will extend its output cuts. April WTI is trading
softer, around $78, but within yesterday's range.
Asia Pacific
Japan's slightly firmer than expected January CPI (core rate at 2.0%
target instead of falling to 1.9% from 2.3% as economists expected) seemed to
renew speculation of a BOJ rate hikes after the unexpected economic contraction
in Q4 23 fanned doubts. Tomorrow, the pendulum may swing again on the back
of what is likely to be dismal data, fanning fears of another quarterly
contraction. The preliminary January industrial production is like to fall
sharply (nearly 7%), disrupted by the earthquake at the start of the year. Also,
Japanese housing starts, which rose 6.6% year-over-year last January may be
7.8% last month and will also be reported tomorrow. And even where there is an
uptick in activity, like January retail sales (median forecast in Bloomberg's
survey is for a 0.5% rise) seems lackluster after falling an average of 1.1% in
Q4 23, the weakest since the early days of the pandemic.
Different institutional arrangements product different response to
similar challenges. For more 35 years, people have been talking about a
"Fed put." If the stocks market slide threatens the Fed's third
mandate, financial stability, it will take action, such as lowering rates. Remember
the attention drawn to the so-called Plunge
Protection Team? As part of its qualitative and quantitative easing, the
Bank of Japan has bought stocks as well as bonds. Its preferred vehicle has
been ETFs, and the BOJ owns around 2/3 of the equity ETFs, which account for
about a quarter of the central bank's assets. The Swiss National Bank bought
foreign equities as a way to expand its balance sheet. How does China do it? Reports
suggest that state-owned funds, apparently similar to sovereign wealth funds,
have stepped into to support the market this year. One bank estimates these
funds have bought a little more than CNY400 bln (~$57 bln) of equities this
year. The bank estimates than around 3/4 of the inflows were for products that
track the CSI 300.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand kept rates steady as expected but were
less hawkish than previously. The central bank said that inflation
risks were more balanced, suggesting less of a risk of a rate hike this year. Yesterday,
the swaps market was pricing in around a 50% chance of a May hike. That has
been cut to near 10% today. The market had the implied target rate around 5.18%
at the end of November and now it is slightly above 5.0%. Australia's January
CPI was unchanged at 3.4%. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey was for
3.6%. The swaps curve hardly changed. Yesterday, it was pricing 40 bp of cuts
this year and now it is almost 42 bp. The first cut continues to be fully
discounted for September, with a slightly higher chance (80%) of a cut in
August. It was closed to 75% chance yesterday.
The dollar bottomed yesterday in early North American turnover near
JPY150 but recovered to almost JPY150.60 as US 10-year yields traded higher,
even though the seven-year auction saw solid even if not spectacular interest. It
returned to JPY150.80 in late Asia Pacific turnover and found sellers in early
Europe. For the past five sessions, the settlement has been gravitated around
JPY150.50. There are options for $1.8 bln at JPY151 that expire today. The
Australian dollar set a five-day low in the local session yesterday near
$0.6525. It recovered but stalled near $.06560. It has been sold to $0.6490
today, so far, its lowest level since February 15. Nearby support is seen near
$0.6470 and then the month's low near $0.6445. The break of $0.6500 weakens the
technical tone. Retail sales tomorrow should show a recovered from the dreadful
2.7% drop in December. The New Zealand dollar is also trading much lower. It
settled near $0.6170 and is pushing below $0.6100 in the European morning. Initial
support now is seen near $0.6075 and then $0.6040-$0.6050. The broad US
dollar gains today lifted it a bit closer to CNY7.20, which it continues to
hover near but remains below. Press reports says state banks sold
dollars and, of course, if the dollar meets resistance at CNY7.20, the largest
market participants are involved. The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate at
CNY7.1075 (CNY7.1057 yesterday). The average in Bloomberg's survey was
CNY7.2004 (CNY7.1966 yesterday).
Europe
There are two metrics of stress in Europe. The first is Italy's
premium over Germany. Italy's two-year yield was almost 95 bp above German
yields at the 2023 peak (in late October). It fell below 50 bp last month and
is slightly above there now. The 2022 and 2023 low was about 35 bp. Italy's
10-year premium peaked early last year near 215 bp. It narrowed by around 50 bp
in H1 23 but widened back above 200 bp last October and is now a little below
145 bp, near two-year lows.
The second metric is the euro-Swiss franc cross. The euro has
fallen for the past six years against the Swiss franc and in nine of the past
ten years. However, the euro has traded higher against the franc this year and
has risen for six of the past eight weeks. The euro rose almost 3.3% from the
end of last year through yesterday's nearly three-month highs near CHF0.9560. Perhaps, speculation that
the Swiss National Bank would cut rates ahead of the European Central Bank
weighed on the franc. That said, the momentum indicators are stretched and the
chart resistance near CHF0.9570 has been approached. The euro looks vulnerable
to near-term setback.
The euro made a marginal new three-day high in Asia Pacific on Tuesday
($1.0865) and was sold in Europe and North American to slightly through
$1.0835. It held barely above the five- and 200-day moving averages,
which converge near $1.0830. Follow-through selling today saw if dip below
$1.08 in early European turnover before finding bids, allowing it to recovery
toward $1.0820. The technical tone looks more fragile, though the intraday
momentum indicators are oversold. A break of the $1.0770-$1.0790 area would
weaken the outlook. Sterling recorded its third consecutive inside day yesterday
but broke down today. It saw nearly $1.2620 in early Europe. It has
recovered to almost $1.2650. Still, it remains within last Thursday's
range (~$1.2610-$1.2710). A move back above $1.2660 would help stabilize the
tone.
America
GDP revisions tend not to move the markets, and the second look at Q4 23
US GDP is not expected to be revised by much. Investors and businesses are
forward-looking and more interested in Q1 24 GDP. The Atlanta Fed's GDP tracker
was updated yesterday, and it is now at 3.2% from 2.9% on February 16. The
January trade and inventory data will be reported. The market is also looking
ahead to tomorrow's personal; income, consumption and deflators and the Atlanta
Fed's GDP tracker will be updated after the data. Income is expected to have
risen more than consumption and this will be consistent with a moderation in
consumption that is expected to unfold here in H1 24. A 0.3% rise in the
headline deflator will translate into a three-month annualized rate of 1.6% and
about 2.4% at a six-month annualized rate. The core rate is seen accelerating
by around 0.4%. That would be the most since the 0.5% increase in January 2023.
The three-month annualized pace would be about 2.5% and the six-month
annualized pace would be near 2.4%. Three Fed officials speak today, Atlanta's
Fed's Bostic, NY Fed's Williams, and the Boston Fed President Collins. The
former two vote at the FOMC. So far, officials seem to be on the same page as
Fed Chair Powell. They are encouraged by recent trends but need to see more to
be sufficiently confident to cut rates.
Canada runs a small current account deficit. It was 2% of GDP in
2019 and 2020 but has been below 1% more recently. Canada's Q4 23 current
account is due today and C$2 bln deficit is expected, which would be the
smallest in six quarters. That should keep the deficit below 1% of GDP. It is
not a market mover. Tomorrow, Canada reports December and Q4 23 GDP. Canada
contracted by almost 1.1% in Q3 23 but looks to have returned to growth in Q4.
It probably not enough to fully recoup the loss of output in Q3. True to form,
Mexico's trade balance deteriorated in January. It was the 14th consecutive
January that the seasonal pattern played out. Still, the shortfall was well
above expectations as exports fell and imports rose. Still, the seasonal
pattern points to a sharp improvement in February, which has been better than
January for 17 consecutive Februarys. Mexico's central bank's inflation report
will be released later today. It will help shape expectations for the March 21
central bank meeting. The statement after the last meeting suggested rate cuts
in the coming months.
The US dollar had gone nowhere against the Canadian dollar and remained
in the range set on February 13 when the US reported January CPI
(~CAD1.3440-CAD1.3585). Yesterday, the greenback dollar closed at its best
level in nearly two weeks and posted an outside up day. Follow-through buying
today lifted it to almost CAD1.3590. Nearby resistance is in the
CAD1.3600-CAD1.3620 area. The intraday momentum indicators are stretched. There
is scope back toward CAD1.3540 initially. The larger than expected Mexican
trade deficit did not prevent the peso for strengthening to its best level in
three days. The US dollar fell to almost MXN17.04 but remains in the range
set last Thursday (~MXN17.0120-MXN17.1570). The downtrend line from the January
23 high comes in near MXN17.10 today and is bumping against it. The trendline
has frayed on an intraday basis but has held at settlement.