Overview: The US dollar is trading heavily against all the major currencies, led by the Norwegian krone and euro. Emerging market currencies are also firmer. However, risk-appetites seem subdued. Even though most large bourses in Asia Pacific advanced but Japan and Hong Kong, European markets are nursing small losses and US futures are little changed. Benchmark 10-year yields are firmer with European yields 3 bp firmer and Italy’s premium over Germany slightly narrower. The 10-year Treasury yield is up three basis points to 2.78%. Gold is firm, knocking on the recent cap below $1800. September WTI settled near $90.75 yesterday and is struggling to hold above $90 today ahead of the EIA short-term outlook later today (OPEC and IEA on Thursday). US natgas, which has fallen around 9% in the past three sessions is a little more than 1.5% higher today. The European benchmark is flat with a four-day drop in tow. Iron ore was up around 5.5% over the past two sessions but slumped 1.75% today. Copper, on the other hand, is extending its advance for the fourth consecutive session. It is testing its best level since early July. A poorer Dept. of Agriculture report is lifting grain prices today. Wheat and corn are up around 2.4%, and soybeans are up about 1.7%.
Asia Pacific
China's ability to punish Taiwan via trade
embargo is limited. China announced it was curbing fish, fruits,
and sand shipments, but this symbolic. Yes, sand is needed for
semiconductor fabrication and construction, but China's exports were about $1
mln a month. Taiwan is the PRC's biggest supplier of integrated circuits, a part of global division of labor (supply chains). Covid, the
lockdowns, the hard stop to the real estate wealth engine have disrupted China
and Hong Kong imports from Taiwan. Taiwan's exports to them rose 3%
year-over-year in July. It followed a 4.5% decline in June and only a
0.8% increase in May. In comparison, Taiwan's exports to the US rose
24.8% year-over-year in July after a 27.9% pace in June and 15.5% in May.
However, don't be mistaken. China and Hong Kong bought around $16 bln of
Taiwanese goods compared with about $7 bln by the US. Recall that the $52
bln semiconductor bill that will become law in the US requires recipients not
to build advanced fabrication capacity in China. In both dollar value and
percentage growth Europe is not a very significant importer of Taiwan's
products. Australia is the fastest growth market for Taiwan. Exports in
July were 156.5% above year ago levels, but the base was low. Consider
that in dollar terms, Taiwan shipped $940 mln of goods to Australia last month.
Taiwan's exports to Vietnam were almost $1.4 bln and more than $1.6 bln to
Malaysia.
Japan's Prime Minister Kishida will announce a
cabinet reshuffle tomorrow but appears be driven by domestic political
considerations than policy per se. Still, a redistribution among the
key factions may give Kishida a freer hand. The dollar is trading in a
about a half of a yen range today below JPY135.15, well within yesterday's
range (~JPY134.35-JPY135.60). The JPY136.00 is the (61.8%) retracement of
the dollar's pullback from the 24-year high in mid-July near JPY139.40. A
move above there would likely coincide with a rise in US yields. The
Australian dollar briefly poked above $0.7000 yesterday but has held below it
in a consolidative session so far. The Aussie has held above a
third of a cent range below that cap today. Support is seen in the
$0.6940-60 area. The greenback has also traded quietly against
the Chinese yuan today. It has been confined to a CNY6.7500-CNY6.7585
range. Apparently, a month ago, Chinese auditors turned their attention
to the trust industry and in particular, their exposure to the property
developers and how they plan to dispose of bad loans. The PBOC set the
dollar's reference rate at CNY6.7584, a little firmer than the expected
(Bloomberg survey) of CNY6.7567).
Europe
Germany is on fire. It is the
hottest summer on record. The Rhine River is so low that barges must
lighten their lows to make passage. The Green economic minister has been
forced by circumstances to boost coal use to generate electricity and may have
to backtrack from a long principled stance against nuclear energy. Some
rationing is taking place and more could follow. The country is
experiencing the highest inflation in a generation. And what is that many
seem to want to talk about? Former Chancellor Merkel wearing clothes to
the opera she had worn before. Huh? It is not just that a man
wearing the same tux is not subject to scorn. It is not just that in our
age of waste beyond imagination, rejecting the acquisitive drive of more and
moar by example instead of preaching, is admirable. The point is that
there more important reasons to be critical of the former chancellor, including
contributing to Germany's dependence on Moscow, even after Putin invaded
Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014. At the same time, she under-invested
in the German military. History may have a difficult choice between
Merkel and her predecessor Schroeder, who was associated with Russia's energy
giants Rosneft and Gazprom, who aided Russia more.
Yesterday, the Swiss National Bank reported a
CHF6.8 bln increase in sight deposits. It was the first increase
in three weeks and only the third since the end of April. It was the largest
increase since July 2020. By hiking rates before the ECB, signaling the
currency is no longer extremely overvalued, and turning its attention to
restraining price pressures, the SNB seemed to welcome a stronger franc.
However, with the euro falling to its lowest level since early 2015, it looks
like the SNB may have intervened. The euro recovered from CHF0.9700 to
CHF0.9800 yesterday. However, it proceeded to reverse lower and settled
below the pre-weekend low (~CHF0.9760). There has been no follow-through
euro selling today but the cross remains in its trough.
The euro remains strikingly resilient in the
face of the heightened expectation for a 75 bp Fed hike next month. The
ECB is expected to deliver another 50 bp hike. After rising to new
three-year highs, the 2-year US-German spread narrowed a little yesterday and
fell further today to a one-week low. The euro has approached
$1.0250. Last week's high was a little shy of $1.03. After a quiet Asian
session, the euro caught a strong bid in thin European turnover, which has
stretched the intraday momentum indicators that is unlikely to be sustained in
the North American session. Initial support is seen in the $1.0200-20
band. Sterling is firm but quiet. It is inside
yesterday's range, which was inside last Friday's range (~$1.2000-$1.2170). Sterling's
gains in the European morning are also stretching the intraday momentum
indicators. Without fresh developments, sterling could pull back into
support now initially seen in the $1.2080-$1.2100 area.
America
It is not about the bond vigilantes, but their
opposites that have the upper hand now. Fed officials have
pushed back against the easing of financial conditions but is resisting even
though it has moved to discount the likelihood of another 75 bp hike next
month. Since the middle of June, the 10-year yield has traded between
2.50% to 3.50% and now, the posted employment report that saw a new cyclical low in
the unemployment rate, the yield is slightly above 2.75%. In fact, it has
not been above 2.90% for almost two-and-a-half weeks. Short-term term
rates are firm; underpinned by the expectations that the Fed will continue to
lift rates. The S&P 500 rose by more than 9% last month, its best
month since November 2020, and is edging up early this month. The NASDAQ
was up 12.3% last month and is up almost 2.0% here in August. The
dollar's appreciation was cited by Fed Chair Powell as a channel through which
financial conditions were tightening. The greenback has stopped
rising. The euro has stopped falling (low recorded July 14, ~$0.9950) and
is in a trading range roughly $1.01-$1.03. The greenback peaked against
the Canadian dollar on the same day and weakened by more than 2.5%. The
US dollar has also depreciated by around 3.8% against the Mexican peso.
Among the top trade partners, China stands out. The greenback appreciated
by slightly more than 0.65% against the Chinese yuan last month, the fifth
consecutive month. It has gained less than 0.1% so far this
month.
The Fed's Consumer Expectations Survey picked
up a decline in inflation expectations over the one, three, and five-year
timeframes. The one-year fell to 6.2% from 6.8%. The
three-year to 3.2% from 3.6%, and the five-year inflation expectation fell to
2.3% from 2.8%. These survey results were lower than the market
expectations expressed in the breakeven rates. The three-year breakeven
is around 2.85% and the five-year breakeven is about 2.7%.
The US reports Q2 nonfarm productivity and
unit labor costs. They are not directly measured but deduced
from the Q2 GDP data. Productivity is expected to have fallen as more
people were working but output fell. This also means that unit labor
costs rose. Markets tend to react much to these data points. Perhaps on
this summer day, the 52-week bill auction and the beginning of the quarterly
refunding auctions with $42 bln three-year note sale today will attract
attention. Note that the last 52-week bill was sold with a 2.96% yield, and
it is currently yielding almost 3.25%. It is well above the 10-year yield
(a little below 2.80%). Yesterday, corporations issued $22 bln investment
grade dollar bonds to bring this month's total to over $78
bln.
While Canada's economic calendar is light,
Mexico reports July CPI. As expected, acceleration to above 8.0%
may strengthen the market's conviction that Banxico will hike its overnight
target rate 75 bp on Thursday. There seems to be greater risk of a 100 bp
move than a 50 bp step. The core rate is expected to tick up to 7.61%
from 7.49%. Brazil reports the IPCA measure of inflation, and the
year-over-year rate is expected to fall toward 10% from almost 11.9%. If
so, it would be the slowest pace this year and would bolster ideas that the
central bank's tightening cycle is complete or nearly so. This could
encourage flows into Brazilian bonds. The real is off to a good start
this month. It is up about 1.2% coming into today, making it one of the
strongest among the emerging market currencies so far in August.
After approaching CAD1.30 before the weekend
in response to the diverging job reports, the greenback fell to about CAD1.2840 yesterday. It has not been above CAD1.2875 today, where
options for almost $500 mln expire today. Nearby support may be near
CAD1.2820. The greenback is extending its losses against the Mexican
peso. It is trading near MXN20.20-21, its lowest level since
July 1. The next area of support is about MXN20.11. Resistance is
seen around MXN20.29.
Disclaimer