Overview: Rising rates continue to spur a rotation and retreat in stocks. Yesterday the NASDAQ sold-off by nearly 2.5% while the Dow Industrials eked out a minor gain. Equities are mostly higher in the Asia Pacific region while Japanese markets were on holiday. Hong Kong led the advancers, but China and South Korea extended losses. The early attempt to rally in Europe failed and the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 has fallen through the 20-day moving average for the first time in nearly three weeks. Energy and real estate are higher, while information technology and utilities are under the most pressure. US shares are extending yesterday's losses. The US 10-year yield is steady, around 1.36%. European yields are 3-4 bp higher after staging a sharp recovery following comments yesterday from ECB President Lagarde warning in effect, the central bank stands ready to resist premature tightening. The dollar is firm against all the majors, though sterling is holding on to minor gains. Among emerging markets, East Asian currencies are doing better, while central European currencies are weaker. The JP Morgan Emerging Market Currency Index is lower for the second consecutive session. Gold extended yesterday's rally. However, sellers emerged near $1816, and the yellow metal looks poised to test the $1800 area. The damage to Texas's oil infrastructure is exacerbating the tightness in the crude market, and April WTI rose to $63 before consolidating. There is increasing talk of $70.
Asia Pacific
China is reviewing its rare earths policy. The latest reports indicate that its focus may not be on rare earths themselves but the technology to refine and purify the materials. This may be a more powerful chokepoint. It could ban or limit the technology sales, but it would seem to only encourage development abroad. The US moved against companies that service the Chinese military. The US gets about 80% of its rare earths from China. There are obviously military applications. China's first move may be to ban sales to a US defense contractor, such as Lockheed Martin, who incurs Beijing's wrath for arms sales to Taiwan.
Taiwan will report January export orders tomorrow. Officials have recently doubled their 2021 export outlook to almost 9.6% from about 4.6%, encouraged apparently by the demand for semiconductor chips. This feeds into a growing trade surplus (expected to be around $64 bln after a little less than $59 bln last year) and a stronger GDP (~4.7% after 3.1% in 2020). Officials warned of the upward pressure on the Taiwanese dollar, which has risen by about 8.2% over the past 12-months. The central bank often engages in "smoothing operations" in the foreign exchange market late in the local session and was put on the US Treasury's watch list in December.
Facebook and Canberra appear to have resolved the dispute, which had seen the platform eliminate news and news sharing features last week in Australia. The service will be reengaged in the coming days. The Australian legislation will be modified to give the platforms time to strike a deal with publishers before being forced into arbitration. This is an important skirmish in the larger effort to establish the rules of engagement with the powerful internet companies. Many other countries are wrestling with similar issues.
The dollar posted a big outside down day against the yen. It traded on both sides of the pre-weekend range and settled below last Friday's lows. Without Tokyo traders, follow-through selling was limited to almost JPY104.90. Resistance is seen around JPY105.40-JPY105.50. The dollar's recovery has stretched the intraday momentum indicators. Follow-through buying of the Australian dollar also proved limited. Yesterday's nearly half a cent advanced saw a few ticks more today for some profit-taking kicked in. Still, losses below $0.7900 were limited, and buyers were emerging in the European morning. The New Zealand dollar is in a narrow trading range just below yesterday's high. The central bank meets the first thing tomorrow in Wellington, and although no change in policy is expected, officials will likely feel more confident that the recovery is gaining traction. The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate at CNY6.4516, which was slightly weaker than the bank models Bloomberg surveyed. To ease the pressure on the currency, Beijing is considering to again relax the constraint (quota) on domestic investors to acquire foreign assets. Since re-opening from the New Year holiday, the dollar has traded in the range set last Thursday (~CNY6.4460-CNY6.4900).
Europe
UK Prime Minister Johnson laid out a four-step process that could lead to the full reopening across England by the first day of summer. From March 8, all students can return to school, and late next month, outdoor gatherings of six people or two households will be allowed. Non-essential businesses, barbers and hair salons, gyms, and outdoor attractions and hospitality could open April 12, with May 17 the earliest target to re-open indoor hospitality, including hotels and cinemas. It is hoped then that June 21 could see the lifting of the final restrictions and reopening of the remaining businesses, including nightclubs.
The UK employment report was weaker than expected and likely gives the Chancellor of the Exchequer Sunak little choice but to extend the furlough program in next week's budget. It is estimated the program covers about 20% of the UK's labor force, and it is currently planned to terminate at the end of April. Employment tumbled by 114k in the three months through December. The Bloomberg survey found a median forecast of -30k. The unemployment rate ticked up to 5.1% from 5.0%, which matches the high since October 2015.
The backing up of European rates is jeopardizing the ECB's ability to preserve favorable financing conditions. The ECB appears to have stepped up its bond-buying last week to about 17.2 bln euros, the most in a month. European bonds staged an impressive recovery after ECB President Lagarde affirmed the commitment and indicated that yields were "closely monitored." Weak equities and the stabilization of the US 10-year yield after approached 1.40% may have helped European bonds recover. However, the problem is that the UK (due to the vaccine rollout) and the US (due to the fiscal stimulus) will be earlier in the recovery process than most of continental Europe. The optimism that lifts US and UK (and Australia and New Zealand) yields will likely push up European yields before the recovery takes hold. The ECB has around half of its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program so-called envelop of 1.85 trillion euros left.
The euro reached $1.2180, its highest level in nearly a month, as it approached the $1.2200 level, which capped the single currency back in the second half of January. It also marks the (61.8%) retracement objective of the euro's pullback from the $1.2350 high set on January 6. There is an option struck at $1.22 for almost 810 mln euros that expires today. Initial support is seen in the $1.2120-$1.2130 area today. Sterling's ascent continues. It approached $1.41 in late Asian turnover but stalled in the European morning. A break of $1.4060 could signal a deeper pullback, but the market looks to be in the mood to buy shallow dips. It is the fourth consecutive advancing session, and it has fallen in only four sessions this month. Important chart resistance is not seen until the double high from H1 18 around $1.4345-$1.4375.
America
There are two highlights of today's North American session. First, Federal Reserve Chairman Powell testifies before the Senate Banking Committee. His prepared remarks have already been made available. The market-sensitive aspect will be the answer to questions by the Senators. There will be much focus on inflation and why Fed officials continue to play down the risks. Powell will talk about the slack in the labor market, and dare one say, a jobless recovery. The argument is that the real level of unemployment may be closer to 10%, and more people are filing for initial jobless claims than did so at the peak of the Great Financial Crisis. Without going into specifics, Powell will endorse the need for more fiscal stimulus. The $1.9 trillion package passed a House committee yesterday without a single Republican vote. Meanwhile, the Treasury's effort to reduce its cash balance at the Fed already appears to be having an impact on some money market rates. Last week's 4 and 8-week bill auctions had no yield for the first time since last March, and yesterday's 3-month bill auction also generated the lowest rate in 11 months. The yield on the new six-month bill was the lowest since October 2014.
The second highlight is in Canada. Bank of Canada Governor Macklem delivers a speech on the labor market and the sectoral impact of the virus. More broadly, Macklem may seem more upbeat than the central bank's forecast for a nearly 3% contraction here in Q1 suggests. Around the same time, Biden will meet Trudeau, the first foreign leader meeting with the US president. They will likely emphasize common interests like addressing the virus, climate change, and the North American economy. Other issues, like the XL pipeline that Biden canceled and the "buy American" program of government procurement, are more controversial and likely will not be dwelled up. Yesterday's the Canadian parliament passed a non-binding resolution with no dissenting votes, calling China's treatment of the Uighur Muslim minority a "genocide" and trying to force Trudeau into a deeper confrontation with Beijing.
The Biden administration maintains Trump's position at the World Trade Organization after supporting Okonjo-Iweala as the next director. The Trump administration had blocked her appointment in the face of literally unanimous global support. There are two substantive issues. First, the US claims that it is a question of national security that Hong Kong goods are treated as made in China and hence outside of the WTO's jurisdiction. The WTO is not convinced and will investigate the matter further, though it could take years to resolve. Second, the US will continue to block judges to the appellate body, without which the WTO's conflict-resolution and adjudication of disputes are paralyzed. The US argued that it has systematic concerns about its functioning, as have the past three presidents.
Brazilian President Bolsonaro replaced the University of Chicago-trained economist at the head of Petrobras with General Silva e Luna, who has been running the Itaipu hydroelectric dam for the last two years, pending confirmation by the Petrobras board. Emerging markets more broadly were under pressure, but Brazil was especially punished. It was not so much about the general per se. Investors fear that as Bolsonaro's support wanes, he will retreat further from its pro-business stance. The government's cash distribution ended in December. Economic Minister Guedes is trying to avoid being entangled and is seeking a constitutional amendment to allow another round of aid to the poor, apparently paid for by cuts in public spending in the future. Petrobras shares fell by over 20% to three-month lows. Brazil's real lost 1.3% yesterday after staging a bit of a recovery spurred by the central bank offering dollar swaps. Year-to-date, the real is off about 4.8% after falling by around 22.5% in 2020. Brazil's central bank meets on March 17 (the same day as the FOMC meeting concludes), and the swap market is pricing in the likelihood of a 50 bp rate hike.
The US dollar made a marginal new low (since April 2018) against the Canadian dollar yesterday at almost CAD1.2580. However, it closed back above CAD1.2600 and is straddling the level today. In recent weeks, the greenback has traded below CAD1.26 but has failed to close below it once. Initial resistance is seen near CAD1.2660 now. The greenback rose to around MXN20.8335 yesterday, its highest level since early last November. It is about a 4.75% dollar gain since the low on February 15 near MXN19.8925. It is consolidating now in a narrow range. The MXN20.76 area corresponds to the (50%) retracement of the US dollar's decline from the election night spike to almost MXN22.00. The next retracement (61.8%) is a little above MXN21.00. Look for a break of the MXN20.60-MXN20.80 range to signal the near-term direction.
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