Overview: After the National Guard were called to put down an insurrection in Washington, DC, the dollar is having its best day in around a week. The euro's three-day rally has been halted even though German factory orders surprised on the upside. The greenback is firmer against all the major and most of the emerging market currencies today. Equities are moving higher. All the markets in the Asia Pacific but Hong Kong rallied today after the 8-day advance stalled yesterday. Hong Kong appeared to have been dragged lower by concern that the US would delist Alibaba and Tencent. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 gapped up to new highs but has moved to close the gap. US shares are trading around 0.5% higher. Pressure remains in the debt markets. The MSCI Emerging Market equity index is at its best level since 2007. The US 10-year benchmark is firm near 1.05%, while most sovereign 10-year bonds are up to 3-4 bp higher today. Gold held $1900 in yesterday's slump. It now meets resistance near previous support around $1930. Oil prices are firm, and the February WTI contract has pushed above $51. In early November, it was below $40.
Asia Pacific
Japan's Prime Minister Suga has declared Tokyo and the three surrounding prefectures to be in a state of emergency that will last at least until February 7. The emergency does not mean a stringent lockdown. The restrictions appear less than what was imposed last year. Still, Suga's public support has waned. His personal conduct has been criticized. Hopes for an early election to secure his own mandate after Abe's resignation looks to be pushed back, though an election must be held by late October. Meanwhile, the high-frequency data showed labor cash earnings dropped 2.2% in the year through November. This was considerably worse than the 0.9% median forecast in the Bloomberg survey and the fastest drop since last May. It is the eighth consecutive year-over-year drop and casts a pall over the consumption outlook. Household spending will be reported tomorrow. It rose in October (year-over-year) for the first time since September 2019 but likely fell in November.
China reported a slightly larger than expected rise in December reserves. Its reserves rose by $38 bln in December, following a $50.5 bln increase in November, to stand at $3.22 trillion. Bloomberg's survey median forecast was for $3.20 trillion. The other major reserve currencies appreciated so valuation may have helped lift the reserve holdings. The challenge is that between the trade surplus and capital inflows, many economists would expect greater yuan appreciation (less than 1% in December) or stronger growth in reserves. The PBOC appears to have various levers that can be used, including policy banks and sovereign wealth fund. The US Treasury's recent report was mostly critical of China for the lack of transparency in currency matters.
Objecting to Australia's alliance with the US, Beijing has blocked a wide variety of its imports. However, Australia's trade figures have been fairly resilient. Earlier today, it reported that November exports rose 3%. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected a 2% decline. Exports to China fell by about A$300 mln in November, but this was more than offset by the nearly A$1.3 bln increase in exports to the US and A$150 bln increase of shipments to Japan. Exports to Singapore also rose by around A$1 bln. Iron ore exports fell 7.9% from a record-high in October. Coal exports were off by nearly as much. Gold exports surged by almost 40% in the month (to A$2.6 bln). Australia's imports jumped 10% in November, more than three times greater than expected. The trade balance was a A$5.02 bln surplus down from a revised A$6.58 bln in October.
The dollar bounced sharply yesterday after reaching a new 10-month low yesterday near JPY102.60. It managed to settle just above JPY103.00, and today reached almost JPY103.60 in the European morning. The jump in Treasury yields and the yen's relative strength may be encouraging insurance companies and investors to step up their foreign bond buys. The dollar has not traded above JPY104 since mid-December. The Australian dollar poked above $0.7800 yesterday and tried again today, but the market looks a bit stretched after rallying by about two cents in a little more than a week. Initial support is seen near $0.7730, and a break could signal a leg lower toward $0.7640. The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate at CNY6.4608. It is a little weaker than the models, but closer than it was yesterday. The dollar reached a low near CNY6.643 on Tuesday and has been consolidating in a narrow range since (~CNY6.4515-CNY6.4665) as officials are believed to have signaled a desire to temper or slow the yuan's gains.
Europe
Although German retail sales had surprised on the upside (1.9% instead of a 2% decline as the median forecast in the Bloomberg survey implied), the aggregate figures for the region were depressing. Specifically, retail sales in November crashed by 6.1%. Here the median forecast was for a 3.4% decline. October's 1.5% gain was shaved to 1.4%. Separately, the eurozone's December CPI was in line with expectations. Headline prices are 0.3% below year-ago levels, where it has been stuck since September. Year-over-year inflation has not been positive since last July. The core rate has similarly been stuck at 0.2% for the fourth month in December.
Germany surprised again on the upside. Factory orders in November rose by 2.3%. Economists had been expected a modest decline. Adding to the upbeat message was the upward revision to the October series to 3.3% from 2.9%. Notable strength (6.1%) was seen in orders from within the eurozone, while domestic orders rose by a more modest but solid 1.6%. This comes not only on the heels of stronger retail sales but also an employment report that showed a decline in the unemployed queues. Some economists are beginning to talk about Germany possibly escaping a contraction in Q4. Tomorrow it reports industrial output figures. There is not always a tight fit, but rising orders are often associated with increased output.
The euro reached almost $1.2350 yesterday before stalling, and today it is nearly a cent lower in Europe. Support is seen in the $1.2200-$1.2220 area. The fact that it stalled after the wide miss of the ADP jobs estimate fits into the scenario we had suggested that the greenback was stretched by the recent sell-off, and much bad news was discounted. We had anticipated that resilience to a poor national jobs figure on Friday would signal the onset of the correction. Still, the intraday technicals suggest limited additional euro losses today. It closed last year near $1.2215. Sterling is quieter and within yesterday's range (~$1.3540-$1.3670) and remains within the range set Monday (~$1.3540-$1.3705). It finished 2020 near $1.3670.
America
President Trump appears to have signaled a "peaceful transition" after yesterday's chaos in the capital that shocked and dismayed (if not scared) the nation and world. Nevertheless, order has been restored, and there are reports of numerous staff resignations. Although there is talk of impeachment or invoking the 25th amendment to replace Trump with Pence, don't expect much to come from it. At most, Congress may censure the President for seemingly encouraging yesterday's actions and continues to press with the "election was stolen" rhetoric. Net-net, the economic consequences of the political theater are likely very limited.
The US reports weekly jobless claims. A small rise is expected, but the holiday-period may have distort, and the national employment report tomorrow trumps today's report. The US also reports November trade figures. The average monthly shortfall through October was $53.67 bln in 2020. This is roughly 10% larger than the average in the first 10-months of 2020 (~-$49 bln). Lastly, the US also sees the December ISM services index. A decline from November's 55.9 reading is expected.
Canada reports its November trade figures today too. Through October, its monthly trade deficit has averaged C$2.96 bln in 2020. It is almost double what it had averaged in the first ten months of 2019 (~-C$1.49 bln). Unlike its southern neighbor, it does not blame current account surplus countries for its deficit. Canada's IVEY survey is also on tap, but it tends not to be a market-mover. Tomorrow, it reports December jobs, which are expected to have fallen by around 30k after rising 62k in November. Mexico reports December CPI figures, and the year-over-year pace is expected to have slipped for the second month after peaking near 4.10% in October.
The US dollar is recovering from a new low since April 2018, recorded yesterday near CAD1.2630. In Europe, it is trading above yesterday's high (~CAD1.2725). A move above CAD1.2800 would suggest the anticipated greenback correction may be at hand. Similarly, the US dollar is recovering against the Mexican peso after falling to its lowest level since last March (~MXN19.60). The week's high is around MXN20.10. Consolidation may be on tap, and the intraday technicals suggest the MXN19.90 area maybe a sufficient cap today.
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