The markets are trying to catch their collective breath after
yesterday's dramatic moves. The sharp slide in US equities may
have weighed on Asian markets, but losses are mild. Still, the MSCI
Asia-Pacific Index was off 0.8%, the fifth consecutive losing session. European bourses slightly firmer, but appear to be awaiting the US open for
stronger directional cues.
Debt markets
are stable to slightly higher but are hardly recouping yesterday's slide. Yields are 1-2 bp lower, though
Portuguese bonds continue to underperform. The US 10-year is holding above
1.70%.
The US dollar
advanced yesterday and is in narrow ranges with a mostly softer bias today. The exception is the Japanese yen. Japanese
press have reported that more negative rates are under consideration may have
contributed to the weakness of the yen. Note that today may be the
fourth session of the past five that the greenback advances against the yen.
Broadly speaking, it appears the backing up of interest rates offsets the
weakness in equities as driving the yen.
We suspect the
kernel of truth behind the reports of negative rates is that officials do not
want to rule any action out. Also, recall that the negative rates
apply to a small part of deposits at the BOJ. They could widen the
coverage of negative rate, which is
broaden its applicability rather than deepen the cut.
A Bloomberg
poll found a little over half the economists expect the BOJ will expand
monetary stimulus next week. Of those that do see a move 53%
anticipate a deeper cut in the negative rate and a little more than a third
(35%) think the BOJ will buy more government bonds.
The dollar is
rose to a six-day high against the yen near JPY103.35. Above here, resistance is seen in
the JPY103.85 area and then August high in the JPY104.00-JPY104.30 area.
Intraday technicals and the easing of the upside momentum on yields warns that
the dollar may struggle to extend its gains without new news. On the
downside, initial support is pegged
around JPY102.70.
Chinese
equities finished near one-month lows ahead of a holiday that will shut the
local markets until Monday. There are two talking points today
about China. The first is the continued squeeze in HIBOR, which is seen as induced by the PBOC ostensibly to
ward off speculative pressure. Some link the PBOC action to the inclusion
of the yuan into the SDR. However, since the decision has already been made, it is not clear that the level or
yuan stability is important.
Instead, an alternative hypothesis links the PBOC action to the backing
up of rates and the prospect of the Fed lifting rates. The idea being
that officials want to slow its yuan's descent. The CNY6.7 level has
taken on psychological significance.
The second
talking point is the Chinese data. Aggregate financing jumped by nearly
a trillion yuan. In July it was CNY488 bln and in August it was CNY1.47
trillion. The increase was roughly evenly
divided between the banking system (yuan loans) and shadow banking.
Money supply growth (M0 and M2) accelerated. China appears to
be purchasing a semblance of economic stability at the cost of continued debt
accumulation.
European news
is largely limited to the UK employment
data ahead of the summit in Bratislava, where the European project will be the
focus. The details of Brexit is not the
issue. It is widely recognized that
the battle for the hearts and minds needs to be reinvigorated. This also speaks to realization that the
democratic deficit may be undermining the project. Reports suggest
officials are keen to take up issues that are more important and relevant to
the people of Europe, like terrorism, migration, and the challenges of
globalization.
UK employment
data was largely in line with expectations. The unemployment rate (ILO) was
unchanged at 4.9%. The claimant count increased by 2.4k, a few hundred
more than expected, while the July series was revised to show a 3.6k decline
rather than an 8.6k fall. Average earnings continued their softening
trend, though not as much as the median forecast. Average weekly earnings
in the three months through July was 2.3% higher than a year ago, compared with
2.5% in June and expectations of a decline to 2.1%. Excluding bonus,
earnings growth was 2.1% down from 2.3%.
Sterling
initially ticked up on the news but
stalled in the $1.3230 area. The intraday technicals allow for
additional upticks in sterling. Only a move above $1.3330 would signal
anything important.
The dollar-bloc
currencies, which saw steep losses yesterday, are trading quietly, holding on
to small gains in the European morning. The tone is one of consolidation more than
a correction. Initial support for the greenback is seen near CAD1.3120. The Australian dollar fell to $0.7440
yesterday, its lowest level since late-July. Previous support around
$0.7500-$0.7520 may now act as resistance.
The North
American session features US import prices, which could offer insight into the
PPI data on Thursday. However, the August retail sales
data released at the same time tomorrow is more important for the market.
For the third consecutive session, the euro remains within last Friday's range of roughly $1.1200 to about $1.1285. Intraday technicals give little hope that the range is broken today.
Disclaimer
Precarious Stabilization
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
September 14, 2016
Rating: