Many of the capital markets are enjoying reversals today.
Equity markets are mostly higher. The MSCI Emerging Market equity index is up
more than 1%. Several key commodities, like oil and copper, are firmer.
Bond markets, outside the US, are firmer,
with the Japan's 10-year yield slipping to new record lows slightly below 20
bp. The dollar is mixed, as the dollar-bloc currencies firm, as are
most of the freely traded emerging market currencies, with the beleaguered
South African rand leading the pack
(~1.1%), with the Russian ruble a close second (~0.9%). The European complex, including sterling, and the yen
are heavier.
The most important economic news that appears to have helped foster the "risk-on" activity was
China's trade figures. We suspect that are sharp and persistent moves
to start the year, the market was vulnerable to a counter-trend move and almost
any spark may have been sufficient.
China reported a considerably larger than expected trade surplus.
How this was achieved depends on how the
data is denominated. Specifically, China reports its trade figures in
yuan and dollars. In yuan terms, the surplus jumped to CNY382.05 from
CNY343.10. The consensus had expected a small decline. The record
large trade surplus was recorded in
October at CNY393.20 bln.
The larger trade surplus in December was
driven by stronger than expected exports. Exports, in yuan
terms, rose 2.3%. The consensus was for a 4.1% decline after a 3.7% fall
in November. It is the first year-over-year increase since June and only
the second positive reading for all of last
year. Imports fell 4.0% year-over-year, which is about half
of the pace the market expected.
A somewhat different picture emerges if the figures are in US
dollars. The trade surplus widened to $60.09 bln from $54.1
bln. It was the fifth largest for 2015. In dollar terms, exports
did not rise but fell 1.4%, which was
still considerably better than the Bloomberg consensus (-8%). Imports
fell 7.6% in dollar terms. This compares
with an
8.7% fall in November and expectations for an 11% decline in December.
From an economic point of view, it is difficult to construct a persuasive
argument that the improved trade figures are due an almost 4% yuan depreciation
last August against the dollar. More than half was recouped in September and October.
The BIS nominal and real effective yuan made record highs in November.
Instead, we take the Chinese government officials guidance at face value when
he cited seasonal patterns.
There does seem to be something else taking place. China
insists on considering trade with its Special Administrative Region, Hong Kong as
part of its foreign trade. This is
really internal trade, like goods shipped
from Bavaria to Berlin, or from New York
to New Jersey. China's exports to HK last month surpassed its exports to
the US and Europe. The 10.8% jump was the highest in three years.
Seasonal influences? Perhaps, but it was the most exports for December in
more than a decade.
There are two broad explanations. The first is a rekindling of
the fictitious invoicing problem that
skewed the data a few years ago. The second explanation, which may not be
completely separate, has to do some of the trade being a way to capitalize on
the wide gap between the onshore and offshore yuan. The role
of trade or trade invoices as a way to conduct currency arbitrage needs to be explored.
Details in the report suggest that oil imports last year were a
record. Iron ore imports also rose in December. The increase in
steel exports may be a proverbial canary in a coal mine. What many fear
about the weaker yuan is that China, which is
plagued with over-capacity in numerous industries (the origin of which
predates the 2008-2009 investment surge, which served to exacerbate the
situation) may choose to export its
surplus. If this materializes in
significant scale, it would weigh on prices, aggravate the lowflation
challenge, and undermine other producers, weakening their growth.
After joining the WTO in 2001, and being included in the next iteration
of the SDR, China's other goal is to be given market economy status.
Europe is to debate the issue next month, with a decision expected near
mid-year. China's line is that this should be an automatic designation
after being in the WTO for 15 years. The US weighs in against giving
China such a designation for fear that it would be more difficult to counter
unfair trade practices, such as dumping goods.
The North American calendar is light. Two Fed officials
(Rosengren and Evans) and the Beige Book later in the session. The euro
has approached the lower end of its $1.08-$1.10 range that have largely
confined the single currency since the ECB meeting early last month.
There have been a few breaks of the range
that have proven to be unsustainable. The greenback rose to almost
JPY118.40, a three-day high, but it has run out of steam, and the intraday technical readings warn of the risk of a
pullback. Sterling bounced off of multi-year lows seen
yesterday but also ran out of steam. A
move above $1.45 is needed to continue to correction. The dollar-bloc gains also seem vulnerable as
if market participants do not quite trust the counter-trend moves yet.
Disclaimer
Hump Day's Bump
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
January 13, 2016
Rating: