A subdued Chinese session, with the yuan,
little changed and local equities securing minor gains, let market participants
look elsewhere for directional cues. The new lows in oil, near
$30 a barrel, and the bankruptcy filing of Glencore's US subsidiary Sherwin
Alumina seemed to weigh on the
dollar-bloc currencies.
However, it is sterling today that has the distinction of being the
weakest of the majors. It is off
about 0.4% near midday in London following disappointing BRC sales (0.1 vs.
0.5% expectations) and then a dreadful industrial production report.
Like Germany and France, the UK
reported an unexpected drop in November industrial output. The 0.7%
drop compares with a flat consensus expectation and is the largest fall since January 2013. Adding insult to injury, the October gain of
0.1% was revised away. This means that the year-over-year pace is half
of what it was (0.9% vs.
1.7%).
Ironically, and this may be picked up in the US industrial report for
December due later this week, the unseasonably warm weather weighed on energy
output. Electricity, gas and steam output fell 2.1%. This is not to minimize the negative impulse
emanating from the manufacturing sector. Manufacturing output fell
0.4% for the second consecutive month. UK
manufacturing on a year-over-year basis has been contracting since July (-1.2% vs. -0.2% in October). We note that
there appeared little in the manufacturing PMI that prepared investors for the
disappointment. The November reading of 52.5 matched the six-month
average.
The Bank of England meets later this week. No change in policy
or guidance is expected, even if
McCafferty, the lone advocate of an immediate rate hike, abandons his dissent
and rejoins the fold. The economy is slowing, and inflation has yet to show upward
pressure. The pendulum of market expectations continues to swing away from a rate hike this year.
The December short-sterling futures (3-month deposit) has rallied to new
contract highs, implying 78 bp three-month yields
in 11.5 months time. This
is a 26 bp decline since the end of last year. Sterling has lost
1.8% this year, only outdone by the dollar-bloc among the majors. It is
trading at a new 5.5 year low near $1.4465. The next chart point of note
is another cent lower though the 2010 low
is found near $1.4230.
The US dollar is trading slightly firmer against the other major
currencies. Emerging market currencies are enjoying a firmer tone, perhaps
encouraged by the lack of disturbance from China, where officials have denied
seeking a large devaluation. Both Fed officials that spoke yesterday
(Kaplan and Lockhart) explained that while the labor market enjoys favorable
momentum, the four rate hikes of the dot plot are not a promise or commitment. Yesterday, the implied
yield on the December Eurodollar futures contract fell to 101.5 bp, the lowest
since early November.
Many reports cite the not very hidden hand of Chinese officials behind
the powerful short-squeeze in CNH (offshore yuan) today that following a
similar move yesterday. This has
succeeded in nearly closing the gap between the onshore and offshore markets.
It is not clear that this can be sustain in a stronger US dollar environment.
Disclaimer
Sterling's Slide Extended on Dismal Industrial Output Figures
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
January 12, 2016
Rating: