Overview: The tech sell-off in the US yesterday,
ostensibly driven by higher rates, carried over into trading today. South
Korea, China, and Hong Kong led the regional sell-off. News that China's
zero Covid tolerance led to a lockdown of the city of Xian with a population of
around 13 mln played on fears of more supply chain disruptions. A second
city, Yuzhou, considerably smaller, has also been locked down. Japan, India,
and several smaller markets gain. European bourses, where tech is less prominent
have edged higher and the Stoxx 600 is extending its gain for the third
consecutive session. US futures are softer. Asia and most European
bonds yields have risen today, while the US 10-year is steady around
1.64%. Of note, with Italian politics rising as an issue ahead of the
presidential contest later this month, maybe helping lift the 10-year BTP to
new six-month highs near 1.22%. The US dollar is seeing its recent gains
trimmed against the major currencies. The Japanese yen is recovering a
little after falling to five-year lows yesterday. The Canadian dollar is the laggard today, amid a sell-off in its bonds. The emerging market currency
complex is mixed, and the JP Morgan EM FX index is recouping about half of yesterday's 0.35%
loss. Gold is firm but remains within Monday's range (~$1798.50-$1832).
Among the industrial metals we monitor, iron ore bounced back after
yesterday's minor loss and is at its best level since Xmas eve. Copper is
being turned back after yesterday's rally stalled near the $448 cap.
Crude oil is consolidating yesterday's gain and February WTI is near
$77.00. US LNG firm but within the $3.50-$4.00 range, while European
(Dutch) is extending yesterday's dramatic gain (31.6%).
Asia Pacific
While China has moved
quickly to impose lockdowns where cases of the virus appear, the tech sector is
off to a poor start. The Heng Seng Tech Index fell 4.6% today, the most since July, and
the third consecutive drop. Tencent is reducing its investments, and this
took a toll on companies it backed. Some link Tencent decision to
Beijing's push against anti-competitive practices. The NASDAQ Golden
Dragon Index, which tracks Chinese lists companies fell 4.3% yesterday.
The tech sell-off was also clear in the US where the NASDAQ shed 1.3%.
Japan's "Mothers" gauge weighted toward small and medium-sized
software and technology companies fell 5% to its lowest level since May
2020. In the last hours of trading, after HK tightened social restrictions,
the equity loss intensified.
Japan reported that December
auto sales were 10.2% lower than a year ago. Yesterday, the US reported disappointing December
auto sales. Auto sales were expected to have risen to their best level
since August but instead fell to a 12.44 mln unit annual pace. It was the
lowest since September and reflects a 23.6% decline from December 2020.
Last year, US auto sales averaged 14.93 mln a month compared with 14.41 mln in
2020 and 16.91 mln in 2019. Although supply is argued to be a bigger problem
than demand, some producers, like GM, have reported a substantial rebuilding of
inventories.
The dollar closed above
JPY116.00 yesterday but has failed to sustain the upside momentum. It peaked near JPY116.35 and is
approaching support at the previous resistance around JPY115.50. A break
of JPY115.00, which seems unlikely ahead of the US jobs data on Friday, would
lend credence to the idea that it was a false breakout. The
Australian dollar is firm near $0.7250 after recovering from the dip below
$0.7200. Still, it needs to resurface above $0.7275-$0.7280 to be
notable. We suspect the Aussie will pullback in North America and see
initial support around $0.7220. Outside of the dramatic year-end
session, the Chinese yuan continues to trade quietly in a well-worn range.
The dollar continues to trade mostly between CNY6.3660 and CNY6.3830. The
PBOC set the dollar's reference rate at CNY6.3779. The (Bloomberg) survey
found a median expectation for CNY6.3773. Note that offshore yuan (CNH) swaps/forward
points are at their lowest level since April 2020 amid reports that overseas
branches of state-owned banks are continuing to lend out CNH. Lastly, we
note that the China Securities Journal plays up the possibility that the PBOC
eases policy ahead of the Spring Festival holiday (January 31).
Europe
The main economic news from
the eurozone today is the final reading of the December service and composite
PMI. The
takeaway is that it is a little softer than the preliminary estimate. On
the aggregate level, the service PMI eased to 53.1 from 53.3 flash estimate and
55.9 in November. The composite eased from 55.4 in November to 53.4
preliminary estimate and 53.3 final. It is the lowest since March and is
the fourth decline in five months. While the German services PMI was
revised higher, it remains below 50 boom/bust (48.7) and this coupled with the
weakness in manufacturing saw the composite revised to 49.9 from 50.0 initially
and 52.2 in November. It is the weakest composite reading since June 2020.
France's service PMI slipped
to 57.0 from the 57.1 flash reading and 57.4 in November. The composite was revised higher to
55.8 from 55.6. It stood at 56.1 previously. Italy and Spain
disappointed with readings of both the service and composite below
expectations. The Italian composite stands at 54.7 down from 57.6.
Spain's composite is at 55.4 from 57.6 in November.
Intervention by the Swiss
National Bank draws attention as the euro traded at six-year lows at the end of
last year. Sight
deposits rose by CHF3.37 bln in December after CHF2.27 bln and CHF2.57 bln in
November and October, respectively. Overall, sight deposits rose by
CHF18.85 bln in 2021 after surging CHF119.3 bln in 2020. Denmark also
anchors its monetary policy in the exchange rate peg to the euro. Its
central bank sold DKK47 bln (~$7.1 bln) in December to defend the peg. It
was the largest intervention in seven years. Although inflation is
running a little below 4%, there is some speculation that the Danish central
bank may have to cut rates as its next defense of the peg.
The euro is trading inside
yesterday's (~$1.1270-$1.1320) range. It is difficult for bulls or bears to find much to
like with it hovering around the middle of the two-cent range that has confined
it for nearly two months. The 480 mln euro option at $1.1290 that expires
today has likely been neutralized, but there are options at $1.1275 for 1.3 bln
euros that expires tomorrow that may be in play still. Sterling
is steady at the upper end of yesterday's range when it briefly poked above
$1.3555. It is the highest it has been since November 10. An
option for GBP375 mln at $1.3505 expires tomorrow. Initial support is
seen near $1.3520, and a break could test support in the $1.3480-$1.3500
area.
America
ADP 's private sector jobs
estimate is the early feature in the US today. The median estimate (Bloomberg survey) is
for an increase of 410k after 534k in November. The final PMI will likely
draw little attention. The FOMC minutes from last month's meeting, at
which officials announced the acceleration of tapering will be looked upon for
insight into the Fed's balance sheet and any signal that it may allow maturing issues
to roll-off soon. Besides the rate hikes, for which the market has priced
in three this year, the balance sheet is quickly emerging as the new
focus. Also, on tap today is the EIA inventory data. The API
reportedly showed a large rise in gasoline inventories but another drop (6.4
mln barrels) in crude stocks.
Canada's build permits are
not typically a market mover. Tomorrow it reports the November trade balance, and the
highlight is Friday's jobs data. It is difficult to envision a report as
strong as November’s nearly 154k increase. Proportionately, it would be
as if the US nonfarm payrolls rose by around 1.7 mln. Mexico reports
December domestic auto sales. In November, its auto sales were off about
13.5% year-over-year. The highlight of the week is Friday's CPI
figures. The year-over-year pace is expected to have edged up from 7.37%
in November.
The US dollar is trading inside yesterday's range against the Canadian dollar (~CAD1.2665-CAD1.2765), which was inside Monday's range (~CAD1.2630-CAD1.2780). It is trading around CAD1.2720 near midday in London. The intraday technical indicators seem to favor a retest of the greenback's highs. The US dollar's performance against the Mexican peso is similar. It is inside yesterday's range, which was inside Monday's range (~MXN20.41-MXN20.65). The US dollar looks soft and could test the December 31 low near MXN20.33. The 200-day moving average is near MXN20.27 and the greenback has not traded below it in a little more than two months.
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