The US dollar is narrowly mixed against the major currencies after being confined
to tight ranges through the Asian session and European morning. Equities are nursing small losses, and interest rates are pushing higher. The yield on the 10-year German Bund reached 50 bp for the first time
since early 2016. Oil prices have steadied after yesterday's slide.
The FOMC minutes from last month's meeting
failed to shed fresh light onto the timing of the beginning of gradually
reducing its balance sheet. However, it seems as if an agreement
on it could be achieved before the next
move on the Fed funds target. That said, the minutes were explicit:
"most" thought that the recent softening
of prices was due to "idiosyncratic" developments.
In terms of Fed policy, the market's attention now
turns to Yellen's semi-annual testimony to Congress next week, followed by the
July 25-26 FOMC meeting. The Fed has yet to adopt the
tactics under the otherwise plain-spoken Chair that would maximize the degrees
of freedom in terms of meetings.
Specifically, the Fed seems only comfortable to announce policy changes
at meetings followed by press conferences. It could hold press
conferences after every meeting, which is what the Bank of Japan and the
European Central Bank do, for example.
Although the minutes do not clarify the
situation, we expect the Fed to be content monitoring the economy until the
September FOMC meeting. It will have a better sense of the
trajectory of prices, including wages. It can have a better sense of the
true signal being generated by the broader financial conditions.
We expect the economy to evolve to allow
the Fed, which has put the market on notice that it will "relatively
soon" begin not reinvesting all the maturing Treasuries and MBS, to carry
through with this commitment at the September FOMC meeting. This
will allow the balance sheet to shrink by what seems like an inconsequential
$30 bln before the end of the year.
US 10-year inflation expectations crept
higher (breakeven) despite the 4.1% drop in August light sweet crude oil
prices, which ended an eight-day, nearly 13% rally with an exclamation point. The ostensible trigger was a report suggesting Russia
had no appetite to increase its efforts with OPEC to bolster the prices, while
Libyan and Nigerian output, which is excluded
from the output cuts, have boosted OPEC's output.
News that API estimates that US oil stocks
fell a sizable 5.8 mln barrels is helping prices stabilize today ahead of the
DOE's estimate later in the US morning. Support is
seen near $44 a barrel and a break would re-target the low from late
June near $42.
Germany reported a smaller than expected
recovery in factory orders. After a 2.2% slide in April,
economists had expected nearly a full recovery in May. The actual
increase of 1.0% was about half of the gain forecasts. Orders for basic
and consumer goods fell, while foreign orders for investment goods rose 6.0%.
Despite the disappointment with today's
report, the strong manufacturing PMI for June blunts any negativity. Germany reports May industrial output
figures tomorrow. The median guesstimate of a 0.2% rise, following a 0.8%
increase in April, will suffice to lift
the year-over-year, workday adjustment rate to 4%, the highest in three years.
The EU and Japan reportedly have reached a political agreement on a
free-trade pact ahead of the G20 meeting. It is important not just as a trade agreement between
the two that account for a quarter of the world's GDP. It is important
because even though negotiations began several years ago (2013) that the
potential defection of the US from the liberal trade regime that it was instrumental
in creating, will not necessarily mean the end of that regime.
The trade agreement will eventually
eliminate 99% of the tariff barriers to trade, according to reports. At the heart of the agreement is a phasing out of the
EU's 10% duty on auto imports while Japan opens up its agricultural market.
Japan's Prime Minister Abe had seen in the TPP an opportunity to the
agriculture coops which remain resistant to his reform agenda, and this
agreement with the EU achieves perhaps on a smaller scale the same effect.
The theme of the G20 summit in Hamburg is
a free and fair trade. North Korea's test of an intercontinental ballistic
missile threatens to overtake the agenda.
The US strategic goal of denying North Korea nuclear capability and a
delivery mechanism appears to have largely failed. None of the key
stakeholders have much an appetite for military action to remove that
capability. Effectively tightening and enforcing sanctions requires
cooperation for which the US does not appear inclined to offer fresh
inducements.
Separately, and looming over the G20
meeting is the US threat of imposing tariffs (and possibly quotas) on steel
import on the grounds that they pose a
national security risk. The investigation has reportedly been completed, and the debate has shifted to
the precise policy response. There appears to be a small window of
opportunity to persuade US President Trump to use the WTO's conflict resolution
mechanisms. It may take a bit longer, but the US does win the lion's share
of cases it brings.
With around 200 countervailing tariffs or
anti-dumping duties already "protecting" the US steel industry,
domestic prices above world prices, and defense needs absorbing a small part of
US capacity; additional unilateral action
will likely be contested. In some ways, the US appears to be trying to decide
if this is a good test case for its trade initiative.
There can be two outcomes. The WTO finds against the US, and the US chooses to ignore the ruling, which it has
threatened to do. This could
potentially spur a crisis of the multilateral institution. Alternatively,
the WTO could grant a liberal interpretation to its national security
exemptions, which would likely spur copycat behavior elsewhere, creating a new
loophole for protectionism.
The market awaits the record from the ECB
meeting. It is keen for insight into the timing of the next policy step. We expect
that at the September meeting, the ECB will announce it is extending its asset
purchases into next year but at a slower pace than the current 60 bln euros a
month. To make these purchases, the
ECB appears to be deviating from the capital key, which is supposed to be one
of the controlling rules shaping the sovereign bonds/agencies being purchased. Although some deviations
have been sustained for several months
(Finland and the Netherlands, for example), we are reluctant to read too much
into it, and instead, view at as a minor
technicality. The ECB can change and modify its rules as it sees fit, and
although it is not likely, it can boost its purchases if needed.
Private sector data in the
US in the form of the ADP private sector jobs estimate and the ISM/PMI service
sector readings dominate the US economic reports today. The ADP may catch the large trend of the BLS estimate, but on a month-to-month basis, large gaps do arise. The
employment and price components of the ISM/PMI will likely garner the most
attention. Separately, the market will also get official data (the May
trade balance and the DoE energy report).
Canada reports building permits and trade ahead of tomorrow's employment
report, which will be the last important data ahead of next week BoC meeting
where a 25 bp rate hike is now widely anticipated.
Disclaimer
Stocks and Bonds Mostly Heavier, while Dollar Hovers Little Changed
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 06, 2017
Rating: