The US dollar is finishing the week on a steady to firmer note
against the major currencies but the Japanese yen. The softer yields and weaker equity
markets often are associated with a
stronger yen. For the week as a whole, the dollar is mostly lower,
though net-net it has held its own against sterling, the euro and Canadian
dollar.
An important takeaway from this week is the combination of mostly firmer
US data (including February Fed surveys, and January CPI, industrial output and
retail sales) coupled with clear indications from the Fed's leadership (Yellen,
Fischer and Dudley) that normalization process is likely to accelerate this
year (from 2015 and 2016) but remain gradual. The implied yield of the March Fed
funds futures rose a single basis point to 69 bp, while the implied yield on
the June contract rose 3.5 bp to 85.5. The implied yield on the December
contract rose five bp to 115.5.
Bloomberg
calculates the odds that the Fed funds target range at the end of this year is
1.25%-1.50% (three hikes) is 26.5% up from 23.9% at the end of last week. One implication is that there is
more scope to discount a third hike, which ostensibly would be supportive for
the dollar.
Two more pieces
of the European macro picture have emerged. First, the record of the ECB meeting
suggested an internal compromise or trade-off is possible. On the one hand, the Eurosystem is authorized
to buy instruments yielding less than the minus 40 bp deposit rate. There does, in fact, seem to be a few purchases along
those lines. However, it apparently does not set right with some members.
The meeting's
record confirmed what many have suspected, that "limited and
temporary" deviations from the capital key in the asset purchases. In effect, either Germany buys instruments below the
deposit rate, or the Eurosystem does not
stick strictly to the capital key. The implication was good for the bonds
of France, Spain, and Italy. They
advanced smartly yesterday, with spreads over Germany narrowing. Today
the move has been pared.
The second
development involves the IMF participating in the Greek aid program, which was seen as a condition demanded especially by
Germany and the Netherlands. However, there is an impasse. The
non-European members of the IMF board argue that Greece's debt is not
sustainable, and therefore the IMF should not contribute funds. The
European board members argue that the IMF is
too pessimistic. Simply put, the question is who blinks first. It
seems that it will not be the IMF. Rather,
virtue will be attempted to be made from necessity and ahead of the
spate of elections, European officials can claim that it doesn't need the IMF's
funds; that Europe can take care of European problems.
This is not yet
the official stance, but there are some signals of this direction. The European finance ministers meet
at the start of next week, and a Greek deal is expected to remain elusive.
It is seen as the last window until May because the Dutch parliament,
which needs to approve an agreement, will be dissolved shortly ahead of next
month's election, and then the French election in April-May.
Greece does not need the funds until July.
There have been
two economic reports today of note. The first is Sweden's inflation. This is important because the Riksbank has been
engaged in QE and has negative deposit rates. At this week's meeting, the
Riksbank left policy on hold and expressed concern that the currency's strength
would counter the progress made to reverse the deflation. January
consumer prices fell 0.7%, which was in line with expectations, but the
year--over-year pace eased to 1.4% from 1.7%. The median forecast was for
1.5%.
The underlying
rate, which used fixed rate mortgages for the calculation also fell 0.7%, but
the year-over-year pace slipped to 1.6% from 1.9%. This spurred a rally in Swedish government bonds, where the 10-year
yield fell 6-7 bp. The rally offset the weakness earlier this week, and the
benchmark 10-year yield eased four bp on
the week to 65 bp
The second
economic report was also disappointing. After sizable declines in December
retail sales (-1.9% including gasoline and -2.0% excluding it), economists had
expected a recovery in January. Instead,
UK consumers stayed at home. Retail sales fell 0.3% including gasoline
and -0.2% without it. And, adding insult to injury, the December series
was revised lower to show a 2.1% and 2.2% decline respectively. The
year-over-year pace fell to 1.5% from 4.1% at the headline level and 2.6% from
4.7% excluding petrol.
Gilt yields
fell, with the 10-year slipping six basis points to 1.2%. The yield is off nine basis points
on the week, easily the most among the high income countries. Sterling
had been trading near $1.25 in Asia and slipped a little in early European
turnover. The news pounded sterling below $1.24, though the initial
thrust held the week's low set on Wednesday near $1.2380. With today's
losses, sterling is set to be the weakest
performer among the major currencies, losing about 0.8% on the week (at ~$1.24).
The North
American session features the US Leading Economic Indicators and Canada's
international securities transactions. The market does not appear
particularly sensitive to either report. There are no Fed officials
scheduled to speak. The US is on holiday on Monday, and this means liquidity may drop off more than usual what
Europe closes. Of note, there are several chunky option maturities struck near current spot levels that could
impact activity today. In the euro, these are stuck at $1.06 (1.6 bln
euros), $1.0625 (425 mln euros), $1.0685 (1.2 bln euros) and $1.07 (734 mln
euros). In the yen, the relevant strikes are JPY112.50 ($385 mln),
JPY112.90 ($310 mln), JPY113.00 ($1.2 bln) and JPY113.45 ($595 mln). In
sterling, there is a $1.2390 strike for GBP425 mln). In the Australian
dollar, there is a $0.7700 strike for A$260 mln. Lastly, in the Canadian dollar, there are strikes between CAD1.3050 and
CAD1.3070 for a little more than $1 bln.
Yesterday's
decline in the S&P 500 was only the second decline this month. It was the first loss in eight sessions, and the loss was minor (less than
0.1%). Still, it set the tone for Asia, where the MSCI Asia Pacific Index
slipped 0.25%, but finished 0.7% higher on the week, for the fourth successive
weekly advance. Chinese shares that trade in Hong Kong lost 0.9% to pare
this week's gains to 2.3% after last week's 4.5% advance. European shares
are also heavy, nursing a 0.6% loss to shave this week's gain to a vulnerable
0.2%.
The dollar's
pullback since mid-week has tested retracement objectives of the recent run. The $1.0675 level in the euro represents the 50%
retracement target of the decline from
February 2. The similar level of
the Dollar Index is found near 100.50.
The dollar is heavier against the yen. It has retraced a little
more than 61.8% of its gains from the February 7 low near JPY111.60 to nearly
JPY115 on February 15. That retracment is about JPY112.90.
Elsewhere, the Australian dollar finished above the $0.7700 cap on
February 15 but the disappointing employment data yesterday saw it close back
within its range. It is trading heavier today
but is finding support near $0.7660.
Greenback Stabilizes Ahead of the Weekend
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
February 17, 2017
Rating: