The only way to explain the largest swing in the euro in six years
yesterday is to appreciate the disconnect between what was expected and what was delivered by the ECB. Draghi's urgency and commitment to
do "what it must" fanned expectations, and more importantly, substantial positions, in various asset
classes--short euros, long European debt, and equities. The washout was
dramatic.
Even though
there was no promise by Draghi, there is nearly universal agreement that he over-promised and under-delivered. There was great suspicion that the Draghi was
outflanked by the hawkish members, but subsequent reports make this seem
less true. One report noted that ECB approved with a wide majority Draghi's proposals. That is
Draghi himself did not propose stronger actions. A second report claimed
there were five dissents from the 25
officials who voted. These were the two Germans (Lautenschlaeger and
Weidmann) and the central bank presidents from the Netherlands, Estonia, and
Latvia.
Draghi promised
a complete review of the monetary stance. The minor adjustment to the staff's
forecasts showed that there was little change since September in the economic
assessment. Perhaps Mersch had it right. The ECB was as
"innovative as necessary and as conservative as possible." Or
perhaps, it was Bernanke who's insight into US monetary policy is applicable to the ECB: It is 98%
communication and 2% action. Ultimately,
the failure to communicate mixed with the extreme market positioning and
unleashed powerful forces.
Some see in the
ECB's reluctance to taking bolder measures evidence that this is the end
monetary easing. Just like many see the Federal
Reserve about to raise rates in a dovish fashion, the ECB signaled a hawkish cut. However, unlike in September
2014, when the deposit rate was brought down to minus 20 bp, Draghi gave no assurances
that the 10 bp cut exhausts scope on
interest rates. Nevertheless, the ECB is out of the picture; it appears until closer to the middle
of next year. One of the implications is that ti takes pressure off of
some of the small countries in the euro's orbit to ease policy further, like
Switzerland, Denmark, and arguably Sweden and Norway.
Our contacts
and our own analysis indicate that ECB officials, including Draghi,
were surprised by the dramatic market response. Draghi likely feels misunderstood. He will be
speaking at the NY Economic Club later today.
First, though
is the US employment data. The market is going into the jobs
report with a general conviction that barring a significant negative surprise; the FOMC will hike rates in the
middle of the month. Yellen's speeches this week have encouraged these
expectations, even though the purchasing managers surveys were disappointing.
The strength of the ADP estimate also appears to have tempered the risks
of a downside surprise. The consensus is for a 200k increase, which would
be above the three-month average (~187k) and almost equidistant from the
six-month average (~215k).
It will be difficult to match the strength was seen in October report that saw 271k net new
jobs and a 0.4% increase in average hourly earnings and a dip in the
unemployment and under-employment rates. Even
some residual strength in the details coupled with a reasonable close to
consensus job growth would boost confidence
of a move. A sub-5% unemployment rate would be particularly constructive. It is
difficult to envisage a repeat of the 0.4% increase in hourly earnings,
but even an average (Six-month and
24-month) increase of 0.2%, would keep the year-over-year pace at 2.3%, would
still be a favorable development even if off the 2.5% pace seen previously.
For many
participants, the issue was not if there was going to be a bout of
profit-taking, but when would it occur. That it occurred yesterday after the
ECB meeting, and so dramatically, removes the risk of a repeat today.
Weak and many not so weak dollar longs were forced out of the market
yesterday. The euro stopped (~$1.0980) spitting distance from the
50% retracement objective ($1.1010) of the slide that began in mid-October near
$1.15. On the downside, the $1.08 area is important. It is the
summer lows, and once broken in early November, it has served as resistance.
Now it is also the 38.2% retracement of yesterday's jump.
We note too there
are very large option positions set to
roll off today. They appear mostly struck at half-cent intervals. Between $1.08 and
$1.10, for example, it appears there to
be roughly 11 bln euros of options expiring at 10:00 am ET today.
Canada also reports November
employment figures today. After an outsized 44k increase in jobs in
October, Canada is expected to lose 10k jobs in November. The unemployment
is expected to be steady at 7.0% while the risk is that the participation rate slips to 65.9% from 66.0.%. The Canadian data often gets overshadowed by
the US report. Both countries will also
report October trade figures, which feed into GDP expectations, but the focus will
on jobs and particularly US jobs.
The OPEC meeting has begun.
The consensus is that no agreement to cut output will be
forthcoming. However, the timing of the
next meeting may be indicative of the
flexibility of the stance. The sooner
the next meeting, the more some will conclude that a change is possible.
Making room of Indonesia is
not a big deal. It is really
more of an accounting function--shift
output (~800k barrels a day) from the non-OPEC ledger to the OPEC column. Considerably more problematic is Iranian output. It is larger; the Iranians feel more entitled given
the years of sanctions (which are expected to be lifted in early 2016), and the
rivalry with Saudi Arabia more intense.
From the ECB's Failure to Communicate to US Jobs to Confirm Fed Signals
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
December 04, 2015
Rating: