The light economic calendar has cleared
the field to allow officials to clarify their positions. Yesterday it was NY Fed President Dudley and Chicago
Fed Evans who argued that economic conditions continued to require a gradual
removal of accommodation. The Fed's Vice Chairman Fischer did not
address US monetary policy directly but
did note that housing prices were elevated and that low interest rates
contributed.
The comments (and more Fed
officials are speaking today--Rosengren and Kaplan--and four more over the next
three days) come as many market participants have been critical of the Fed's
decision to hike rates. The overwhelming majority of the FOMC (except for one dissent)
last week's hike. In essence, the Fed argues that the recent lower
inflation readings are transitory. The decline in energy accounts for a
large part of the decline in headline CPI.
The decline in the core rate
is a bit more complicated and do not appear related to the business cycle or
monetary policy per se. The cut in the price of wireless
plans, for example, is about competition. There are also some quirks the in
data that cannot be accepted at face
value. The decline in homeowner
equivalent rents is falling while actual rents are increasing raises questions,
as does the decline in doctor fees. In any event, the June Empire and
Philly Fed survey showed prices received rose to five-month
highs (and are strongly correlated with headline CPI).
Bank of England Carney faces a similar but different challenge. Last week's decision to keep rates on hold was based on a 5-3
vote. Many observers think since this is two more dissents than
previously, which a rate hike is getting
closer. Carney set the record straight earlier today, and sterling fell half a cent in response.
The Bank of England Governor
was clear. As he was a year ago, Carney remains
concerned about the economic consequences of Brexit. Domestic inflation,
he argues, is subdued, and wage growth is anemic. He signaled it would take the next several months to see if
there are offsets to the weaker consumption, whether wages recover, and the
economic response to the tighter financial conditions. He noted the great
degree of uncertainty as Brexit negotiations begin.
The takeaway is that the Bank of England is most likely not going to
raise rates anytime soon. The market responded immediately and began unwinding the
tightening bets. The implied interest rate on the December short-sterling
futures contract fell six basis points. This
is the largest decline in four months. The 10-year Gilt yield is off more
than three basis points, which pushes the yield again below 1.0%.
Sterling had poked above
$1.28 briefly yesterday but stopped a
couple of ticks shy of last week's high. It finished the North American
session poorly yesterday and is at one-week lows today (a little below
$1.2670). We peg resistance now near $1.2720. There is a modest
option (~GBP335 mln) struck at $1.27 that expires today.
The minutes from the Reserve
Bank of Australia's recent meeting were released today. There were not
surprises. It
recognizes the risk combination of high levels of household debt and weak wage
growth. The RBA stance remains neutral. Moreover, since the RBA met
on June 6, the country reported constructive--even if overstated due to sample
changes--employment report. The unemployment rate fell to 5.5% from 5.7%. Four-times more jobs were created than the median in the Bloomberg
survey forecast and 52k full-time jobs were
created
The Australian dollar
remains firm. Even Moody's decision to downgrade
the four large Australian banks failed to push the Aussie out of its recent
range. Potentially it appears to be like a spring coiling. In
recent sessions, it has built a base in the $0.7570-$0.7580 area and has been
making slightly lower highs for the past few sessions near $0.7630.
Beginning on June 9, the
Aussie has been moving in a saw-tooth fashion alternating between advancing and
declining sessions, though it has appreciated about a cent over this period. We suspect it has been carving out a
continuation pattern, meaning that the consolidation may resolve itself with a
push higher. However, this will likely further extend the stretched
technical indicators, suggesting that participants ought to be careful, and the next leg up could represent
the end of the move that began last month
near $0.7330.
The US dollar rose to its
best level against the Japanese yen a few weeks (since May 26). The rise in US yields yesterday (in response to
Dudley) helped lift the greenback. There was some follow-through buying but the additional gains on top of JPY111.60
yesterday were limited. US 10-year yields are easing a little after
rising four basis points yesterday. We note that the five-day moving
average is crossing above the 20-day average for the first time in a month.
Other technical indicators are constructive. However, the
JPY112.00-JPY112.15 may offer a formidable challenge unless US rates continue
to recover.
Between the Asian session
and the European morning, the euro has been
confined to less than a quarter cent range against the dollar; pinned,
as it were, in the lower end of yesterday's range. It is the fourth session;
the euro has put in a low in the $1.1130-$1.1140 area. The
five-day moving average fell below the 20-day moving average last week for the
first time in two months. Technical indicators still warn that the
downside is not exhausted.
MSCI is expected to make its
announcement in early Wednesday in Asia about changes to its emerging market
equity index. The focus is mostly on whether
China's A shares will be included. Other
Chinese equities, such as H-shares that trade in Hong Kong and ADRs that trade
in the US is already included.
Ahead of the decision, Chinese shares slipped, a did the H-shares.
Three other elements of the
MSCI decision are awaited. Will Korea be upgraded into the
development world equity index? Will Saudi Arabia be included in the
emerging market equity index? Will Argentina? Korea's Kospi edged
fractionally lower today. Saudi share is also trading with a slight downside bias today.
Yesterday's Argentina's bourse advanced roughly 1.8%.
Overall, the MSCI Asia
Pacific Index eked out a minor gain but
extended the advance for a third session and five of the past six. Of note, the Topix and Nikkei rose to its
best level since August 2015. However, they gapped higher, following the
NASDAQ's biggest jump since last November as the large-cap technology shares continued to recovery, and both settled on their lows. If it is a
"normal" gap, should be filled in the near-term.
The Dow Jones Stoxx 600
rallied nearly six percent over the past two sessions and appeared tired. It is up marginally today. Its
0.2% advance in the European morning is being led by consumer names, with
energy and real estate the drags.
Recall it gapped higher yesterday, and has not looked back. The
index peaked May 15 a little more than one percent higher. There is some
thought that window dressing ahead of the half-year
end next week is prompted some new buying
of European shares.
The S&P 500 and NASDAQ
also gapped higher yesterday. The former closed at new record highs. The latter reached
its best level since the sharp drop on June 9
and closed near its highs. The key level to monitor is about
6252.5. It represents the 61.8% retracement of the decline, and
overcoming it would boost ideas that it is on its way to new highs.
Disclaimer
Officials Fill Vacuum of Data to Drive FX Market
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 20, 2017
Rating: