The euro tested the lower of its range near $1.05 in Asia before short
covering in Europe lifted back toward yesterday's highs near $1.0575.
However, buoyed by the upside surprise in the ADP estimate of private sector
jobs growth, the dollar is firmer against most other currencies today.
The US 10-year yield is up 20 bp this week. Including today's move,
the US 10-year yield is up for the ninth consecutive session, and new 2.57% it had convincingly broken the downtrend in place
since the middle of last December when
the yield peaked near 2.64%.
Sandwiched in between the ADP estimate and the US government's
report, the ECB meets today. With the euro near the lower end
of its range, falling for four of the past five weeks, the pain trade is the
ECB to be somewhat less dovish. The signal could be a change in the
forward guidance about rates remain at current levels or lower. The
or lower could be dropped, some believe, in recognition of the solid growth
(above trend) and rising price pressures.
However, this does not appear to us to be the more likely scenario.
The fact that core inflation is stable in the
trough ( now 0.9%, after bottoming at 0.6%), the ECB cannot be confident
that energy prices, and to a lesser extent some weather-related increase in
some fresh vegetable prices, will fade in the coming months, leaving a return
to disinflation in its wake. This idea may deter the ECB's staff
from lifting their inflation forecasts very much.
Also, the ECB will be loath to take measures in the presently charged
environment that could be destabilizing. Comments from officials show
no strong urgency. The market is doing some of that work already in the
sense that outside of a few exceptions,
like Germany and the Netherlands, have seen short-term interest rates over the
past month.
Moreover, it seems that the pressures spurred by higher commodity prices
may be peaking. It is true that
China's PPI jumped to 7.8% year-over-year, which is the fastest pace since 2008 and is seen reflecting commodity
prices. However, this is partly a base effect as in the month of February
producer prices actually fell (by
0.6%). Oil prices have fallen, and
today, the US WTI is below $50 a barrel for the first time this year.
Copper prices are lower for the sixth session and iron ore prices, off over 1%
today, also appear to have rolled over. Gold is falling as its down draft
enters its fourth session (it has fallen in seven of the past nine
sessions).
Falling commodity prices and rising US rates have helped take the shine
off the Australian dollar, which is the strongest of the major currencies so
far this year (up 4% even after this week's 1% drop). The Australian dollar
broke out of the $0.7600-$0.7700 range last week. It whipsawed back to into the
range on Tuesday, but the slide resumed yesterday,
and further losses are seen today.
The objective of the range breakout was $0.7500, and that has been taken out
today.
Speculators in the futures market had shifted and taken a net long Aussie
position, and the loss of $0.7500-$0.7520
warns that not only will longs have to be
cut but momentum players may look to establish shorts. The next
target is near $0.7450, and then $0.7380. The note of caution is that the
Aussie is through the lower Bollinger
Band (~$0.7525 today)
Falling oil prices and rising US yields has taken a toll on the Canadian
dollar. Recall the US dollar was testing support near CAD1.30 last
month and is above CAD1.35 now, and looks poised to test the nemesis from the
end of last year near CAD1.3600.
While Chinese producer prices jumped, consumer price inflation slowed
markedly. Economists had expected a slowing from the 2.5%
year-over-year pace seen in January, but the 0.8% pace what they
anticipated. It is the slowest pace since January 2015. It appears
to be skewed by an early spring and good vegetable crop. The Lunar New Year
may have also distorted. Separately, China reported stronger bank lending
in February than expected, but still a market slowing from January. The
broader measures of aggregate financing, which also picks up the shadow banking
activity, rose less than expected. The CNY1.15 trillion increased
compares with a median expectation of CNY1.45 trillion and the CNY3.737
trillion rise in January.
The yuan was weaker, falling to its lowest level since mid-January but
recovered late. The offshore yuan (CNH) fell below the onshore yuan (CNY), and the PBOC might have helped spur the
recovery of both. The offshore yuan has been stronger than the onshore
yuan most of the year so far. It was seen
as a sign that the PBOC was trying to
break the bearish speculation that helped create a troubling cycle of a weaker currency and capital outflows.
Rising yields appeared to have forced the Bank of Japan's hands as well.
The 10-year yield almost reached the BOJ 10 bp threshold after a poor
reception to the MOF's five-year bond auction. The US 10-year yield
premium over Japan reached 2.48% yesterday, the most in nearly three
months. This helped the greenback
to test the JPY115 level that has largely capped the dollar since
mid-January.
We note that the BOJ tweaked its negative deposit rate regime today.
It made a small change in the portion of
the current account balances at the BOJ to which are exempt from negative rates
("macro add-on balances") to 17% from 13%.
The softer yen helped Japanese equities edge higher and buck the regional
trend that saw the MSCI Asia Pacific Index fall 0.5%, which is now at its
lowest level in a month. European stocks are also heavy. The
Dow Jones Stoxx 600 rose yesterday and snapped a four-day losing streak, but it
is back on the downside today. A close today below 371.80 would be the
first below the 20-day moving average since February 7. As one might
expect, energy and materials are leading the push lower. On the other
hand, rising interest rates is seen as
favorable for financials, which coupled with the real estate sector are leading
the winners.
Sterling's downside momentum appears to be stalling in front of $1.21.
Sterling is marginally lower today, for the fourth consecutive session.
It fell in the first four sessions of last week as well. It has had only
one advancing session in the past 10. The Brexit drama over
amendments to the bill allowing May to
trigger Article 50 has weighed on sentiment, but it is likely a short-lived
factor. Interest rate differentials are also taking a toll.
The main focus is on the ECB and Draghi's press conference.
Tomorrow's US jobs data may deter aggressive profit-taking on the dollar
today. The US reports import/export prices, and weekly jobless
claims. Claims may bounce after falling to new cyclical lows.
Disclaimer
Pre-ECB Squaring Lifts Euro in a Strong USD Context
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
March 09, 2017
Rating: