The low volatility of the capital markets should not be confused
with high confidence by investors at the moment. The outlook for the US economy has been
clouded by the unexpectedly large drop in Q1GDP and weak real consumption in
April and May.
There is great uncertainty over the world's second largest
economy and the extent that the weakness in house prices the proverbial canary
in the coal mine.
At its peak, the housing sector, broadly understood to include
construction and furnishing, accounted for nearly a quarter of GDP.
Japan, the world's third largest economy, is
struggling after the retail sales tax increase. However, official still sound
confident--that the direct impact is not as bad as feared and the economy will
bounce back quickly.
The euro zone appears to be expanding, but enjoys no
momentum. France, with the second largest economy may be contracting
again. The impact of the ECB's negative deposit rate continues to be
studied by investors and policy makers alike. Neither the negative
deposit rate nor the other rate cuts and promise to expand the central bank's
balance sheet by another 400 bln euros before the end of the year has succeeded
in driving the euro lower, yet.
By the end of next week, there is likely to be
greater clarity of these issues and more. Here is our top ten.
1. US: A combination of robust auto sales and
another 200k+ increase in non-farm payrolls may go a long way toward easing
some creeping pessimism about the state of the economy. The June auto sales figure will
likely confirm the strongest quarter in seven years. Jobs growth of more
than 200k would extend the streak to five months, a feat not seen since the
Sept 99-June 00 period, just before the internet bubble burst. The
Market New International consensus is for a 208k rise; the Bloomberg consensus
is for 215k while the Reuters consensus is for 217k increase. The ISM/PMI
readings also give no reason to expect anything but a sharp rebound in the US
economy. The cynics may talk about a contraction in Q2, while the
pessimists talk about low-2% growth and the optimists are above 3%.
2. Targeted government efforts and renewed exports appear
to have helped the Chinese economy stabilize. This will likely be confirmed by the
June PMI data. The yuan appears poised to appreciate further in
the days ahead after finishing last week at a two-week high. Money market
rates are rising, and there appears to be heightened demand for yuan ahead of
quarter-end. In addition, there is a sense in some quarters that
officials will not encourage yuan depreciation ahead of the next round of
Strategic Economic Dialogue with the US.
3. The collapse in Japan's overall household spending
in May (-8.0% year-over-year vs. -2.3% expected after -4.6% in April) warns
that the tax may be taking a large toll on consumption than expected. However, output does not appear to
have been hit as hard. This may be the message from the Tankan survey and
May industrial output figures due out in the days ahead. That said, sentiment
among the large manufacturers is expected to have declined, snapping a five
quarter advance.
4. The euro zone highlight will be the ECB meeting. After significant steps in early
June, it is unreasonable to expected anything but a re-articulation of the
ECB's message. It needs to monitor the impact of the new measures, and
the TLTROS scheme is not launched until September. The ECB stands ready
to take additional measures if needed. Among these measures could be
purchasing asset-back securities, but more technical and regulatory work is
needed. As inputs into the ECB's decision will be the latest PMI prints,
M3 and credit expansion (or contraction, as has been the case, into its third
year), retail sales and the flash June inflation and unemployment report.
5. The UK's Cameron has suffered two stinging
defeats. The first was domestic when his parliament denied his will
in Syria (Would other British prime ministers have resigned?). The second
was last week, at the hands of the other EU heads of state (save Hungary) who
ceded authority to the 40% of the eligible voters who participated in the EU
Parliamentary election in order to rebuke the UK. If Cameron wanted to
strengthen the anti-EU sentiment in the UK, he might not have been able to
devise a better strategy. On the other hand, many officials immediately
had "buyers' remorse" and offered compromising statements (which do
not appear to have legal standing, yet). Nearly everyone agrees in the
abstract that there needs to be reform in the EU, but nearly everyone disagrees
with the particulars.
6. The March 2015 short-sterling futures contract has
recouped about half of the loss suffered in response to BOE Governor's volta
face at the Mansion House. The monthly series of PMI reports
are expected to suggest the UK economy continues to stabilize at a relatively
strong level of activity. The FPC minutes that will be released Tuesday may
generate insight into how prepared officials are to scale up their efforts and
the market's nonplus reaction to the initial tweaking of macro-prudential
measures.
7. The Reserve Bank of Australia meets on July 1. It will not change policy, but it
will update its forward guidance. It will likely further evolve, helping
investors realize that officials are somewhat less confident about the
transition away from mining. May retail sales will be reported on July 3
and will likely show the fragility of the consumer, especially following the
announcement of tighter fiscal policy. The Australian dollar appears to be
trading near its best level of the year on a trade-weighted basis. The
risk that the RBA dials up its rhetoric regarding the currency.
8. On July 3, the same day that the ECB meets and the
US reports the monthly employment data, Sweden's Riksbank meets. It is expected to announce a 25 bp
rate cut. Demand, reflected in the recent retail sales report and the
trade balance, is weaker than expected, and the country is still flirting with
deflation. Consumer prices have declined by 0.2% in the year through May,
though the core measure is still up 0.4%. Governor Ingves has been most
reluctant to cut rate rates, but finally has succumbed the weight of logic and
the preponderance of evidence. At his press conference, he is likely to
suggest that this is a one-cut. The ECB's rate cuts have signaled an end
to the euro's uptrend against the Swedish krona, which carried to its highest
level since late 2011. The euro faces initial resistance in the
SEK9.20-SEK9.22 and then SEK9.27-SEK9.30.
9. Canada appears to be moving in the opposite
direction. After a weak start to the year, the Canadian economy has
accelerated. An April print of 0.4%, due Monday, will put it on track for
3% growth in Q2. Markets are closed on Tuesday for Canada Day, but on
Thursday, Canada is likely to report a smaller trade deficit, with some risk of
a surplus after the Vancouver Port strike ended.
10. There are several geopolitical situations coming
to a head. The EU is threatening top levy a new rounds of sanctions
against Russia unless it begins cooperating with Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and respecting the ceasefire. Japan's Prime
Minister is likely to affirm a controversial new interpretation of its
Constitution that would permit it to come to the military assistance of its
allies. On July 1, the Iranian parliament is expected to formally
begin talks that will likely lead to a new government.
The Week Ahead is about Clarity
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 29, 2014
Rating: