The unwinding of the long bonds/long US dollar position is
continuing this week after it appeared to have reached climactic proportions
last week. eurozone benchmark 10-year
yields are 11-12 bp higher today. Gilt yields are up almost as much.
Despite some encouraging signs from the Eurogroup meeting yesterday, 10-year
Greek yields are up 15 bp. US 10-year Treasury yield is being
pushed a six basis points higher as well and
is now near 2.34%.
The sell-off in bonds is
taking a toll on equities. European equities are sharply lower, with the
Dow Jones Stoxx 600 off 1.6%, led by telecom and health care. The S&P 500 are called nearly 1.0% lower. MSCI Emerging Market equity index is off 0.8%, and
that is of course before Latam markets are
included. Asian equities fared better as the Shanghai
rallied more than 1.5%, and Japanese
markets eked out a small gain.
The news stream
is limited to largely two developments in Europe. First, the UK industrial output
figures were stronger than expected. Since
the surprising election results, the market has been inclined to buy
sterling and today's report provided a fundamental reason. Moreover,
there is some expectation that Bank of England Governor Carney may cast
tomorrow's Quarterly Inflation Report in somewhat less dovish terms.
Industrial
output rose 0.5% in March. The consensus was for a flat reading
after a 0.1% rise in February.
Manufacturing rose 0.4% after a 0.5% rise in February. The consensus
forecast was for a 0.3% rise. Recall that the March manufacturing PMI
rose to 54.0 from 53.9 but slipped back
to 51.9 in April.
Sterling
rallied through the 200-day moving average near $1.5625. The next target is the $1.5785 area from last
December. Beyond that lies $1.5880, the
50% retracement of the decline since last July when it was near $1.72.
The other
development is in Sweden. A soft inflation report and Riksbank
minutes were released at the same time.
The take-away is the Riksbank could expand its bond purchases
intra-meeting as it does not have a policy meeting scheduled until July 2. The Riksbank seems more
comfortable with buying more bonds than necessarily pushing yields further into
negative territory (repo rate is -25 bp).
Sweden reported
April CPI was unchanged for a -0.2% year-over-year rate. The consensus forecast a 0.4% increase that would
have kept the year-over-year rate unchanged at 0.2%. The underlying rate, which is calculated using fixed
mortgage interest rates (and hence is not a core rate that excludes some
volatile items like food and/or energy) rose 0.7% rather than the 1.0% the
consensus expected.
The euro formed
a based near SEK9.21-SEK9.22 in recent days. From that area has advanced to the
SEK9.33-SEK9.34 area. There is
potential toward SEK9.40-SEK9.42. Sweden's 10-year benchmark yield is up
five basis points and is among the better performers today.
Against
the dollar, the euro repeatedly tested the $1.1130 area. It is from that base that the euro has
recovered to $1.1275. The $1.1300 area is
a minor retracement area and last week’s
high was set near $1.1400. It is also
striking that the euro is keeping pace with sterling today.
We
note that the speculative positioning in the futures market has hardly adjusted
in the euro, especially when compared with the other major currency
futures. Although it is not been our preferred scenario, we
recognize that the double bottom in the euro
(March and April $1.0450-$1.0500) projects toward $1.1600-50.
The yen is being pulled in both directions. On one hand, the
backing up of US (and European) yields should be a negative for the yen. On the other hand, the sharp sell-off in equities
is usually a yen supportive factor.
Dollar-yen is little changed, straddling the JPY120 area while the euro
and sterling are gaining on the yen.
The North American session features the JOLTS report, which typically
is not a market-mover. The more important US data this week is tomorrow’s
retail sales report. Although the
headline may be subdued by the serial decline in auto sales, the GDP components
are expected to fare better.
US Dollar Falls as Bond Sell-Off Continues
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
May 12, 2015
Rating: