Overview: Benchmark 10-year yields are off 6-8 basis points in Europe and the United States. The panic seen at the start of the week in the UK has subsided considerably, as sterling recovered to almost where it was a week ago, while BOE’s hand has help steady the Gilt market. Equities in Asia Pacific suffered after the losses in the US yesterday. Hong Kong and India were notable exceptions. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is recouping around half of yesterday 1.65% fall, while US futures are trading higher. The dollar is mixed, though mostly a little firmer. Among emerging market currencies, central Europe is underperforming. The Chinese yuan rose for a second session. Gold reversed higher in the middle of the week and has continued to recovery. It reached nearly $1675, a new high for the week today. December WTI is holding mostly above $80 today but is below yesterday’s high near $82. US natgas is up 1.3% after rising about 3.3% over the past two sessions. Europe’s benchmark is off almost 5%. It has been a volatile week, but it is down almost 4% this week, which is the fifth week Europe’s natgas benchmark has fallen. Iron ore slipped 0.2% after rising 0.6% yesterday. This is the third consecutive week of falling prices. December copper is faring better. It is up 1.4% today after climbing nearly 4% over the past two sessions. December wheat is also up almost 1.4% today. It is up about 3.1% this week, which would be the fourth week in the past five that prices have risen.
Asia Pacific
China's PMI was mixed, but
shows the economy continues to struggle. The improvement unexpected came from the
manufacturing PMI, which edged back above the 50 boom/bust level to 50.1 from
49.4. The non-manufacturing PMI disappointed, slipping to 50.6 from 52.6. This
resulted in the composite reading easing to 50.9 from 51.7. The Caixin
manufacturing PMI slumped to 48.1 from 49.5. Note that China's mainland markets
are closed next week the national holiday.
Japan's data mostly
surprised on the upside. August retail sales rose 1.4%. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey
was for a 0.2% gain. Industrial output surged 2.7%. The median projection was
also for a 0.2% gain. On a year-over-year basis, housing starts were expected
to fall 4.0% in August. Instead, they rose 4.6%. The unemployment rate slipped
to 2.5% from 2.6%, as expected, while the job-to-applicant ratio rose more than
anticipated to 1.32 from 1.29. Next week begins with the Tankan Survey, in
which large businesses are seen doing better than small businesses. Tokyo' CPI
(October 4) is a good indicator of the national reading. The headline rate may
ease slightly from the 2.9% seen in August, while the core rate, which excludes
fresh food, by have risen a little. The strength of today's retail sales report
likely reflects an overall rise in household spending, while case earnings
probably slowed.
South Korea reported a
larger than expected drop in industrial output. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey
called for a 0.8% decline in August after the 1.3% decline in July. Instead, it
fell by 1.8%. The reason this is particularly noteworthy is that for the first-time
semiconductor output fell on a year-over-year basis (-1.7%) for the first time
in four years. Separately, but related, chip inventories swelled (67.3%), while
factory shipments fell for the second consecutive month. This is seen
reflecting a slowing of world demand. Lastly, we also note that South Korea
sold $15.4 bln in Q2 to support the won. That is the most since it began
disclosing the intervention in 2019. The won fell to 13-year lows this week.
The US dollar is slightly
more than a quarter-yen range around JPY144.50. It has spent most of the last three
sessions in this range as well. The market seems reluctant to push the
greenback above JPY145, thinking it risks another round of intervention. After
posting a potential key upside reversal in the middle of the week, the
Australian dollar has traded sideways below $0.6530, the midweek high. Initial
support is seen ahead of $0.6450. Recall, it settled slightly below $0.6530 last
week. The PBOC's threat of intervention and positioning ahead of next week's
holiday, saw the yuan strengthen for the second consecutive session and
snapping an eight-session slump. The reference rate was set at CNY7.0998. The
median projection (Bloomberg's survey) was CNY7.1556. Officials were said to
have told banks that it wanted to see more activity closer to the reference
rate. The dollar fell to about CNY7.0835, a new low for the week. We note that
India delivered the 50 bp hike that was widely expected.
Europe
The preliminary eurozone
September CPI was a little firmer than expected. The headline rose to 10.0% from 9.1%, with
the month-over-month rate up 1.2%. The core rate accelerated from 4.3% to 4.8%.
The swaps market has about a 75% chance of another 75 bp hike when the ECB
meets again on October 27. It has 130 bp increase before the end of the year,
which suggests at least a 50 bp hike at the last 2022 meeting in December.
There are two UK
developments to note. First,
in terms of economic data, the final look at Q2 GDP was better than the first. Rather
than contract by 0.1%, the economy expanded by 0.2%. Consumption edged higher,
instead of slipping, and the drag from government spending was not as great as
initially thought. Exports were stronger, and there was a smaller current
account deficit, but investment was weaker. It is nice to know, but events have
superseded the economic data to drive policy. And the is the other development.
The government is not backing down, but it is meeting with the Office of Budget
Responsibility (OBR), for which it seemed to have wanted to side-step with the mini
budget. The 10-year Gilt yield is off 10 bp today to about 4.04%. It finished
last week 3.83%. The 30-year yield is off about 14 bp to 3.82%. It was at 4.04%
a week ago.
The euro posted a key upside
reversal on Wednesday. It
had made a new 20-year low (~$0;9535) before reversing higher and closing above
the previous session high. There was follow-through buying yesterday and more
today as the single currency rose to almost $0.9855. This might be all there is
ahead of the weekend and the high corresponds with a (61.8%) retracement of the
leg down since the September 20 high near $1.0050. It settled last week
slightly below $0.9690. Sterling bottomed on Monday near $1.0350. It has
risen and settled by session highs for the last couple of session and reached
about $1.1235 today. Recall that it finished around $1.1260 on the eve before
the mini budget. The intraday momentum indicator warns that maybe it for the
week. Initial support now may be seen near $1.1120 and then $1.1070.
America
The decline in the weekly
jobless claims to five months is one of the dimensions of the labor market that
will underpin the Fed's argument that the labor market can absorb further
tightening of financial conditions. The Fed's median dot projects 125 bp increase in Q4. The Fed funds
futures are pricing in only a 2/3 chance that 75 bp hike will
be delivered next month. Today's data is unlikely to spark an important shift. The
personal income and consumption reports will help fine-tune forecasts for Q3
GDP, which with the help of inventory build and smaller trade deficit, the
first positive reading of the year seems likely. The deflators are expected to
echo the CPI. Softer headline rate (year-over-year) while the core rate is
sticky. The final reading of the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment in
inflation expectations will draw passing interest. Several Fed officials speak today:
Barkin, Brainard, Bowman, and Williams. There seems to be a convergence of view
among officials, which partly means there may be little fresh news.
Slightly better than
expected Canadian July GDP (0.1% for a 4.3% year-over-year pace) was unable to
do two things. First, it
was not strong enough to shake ideas that the economy is slowing dramatically
after the first half and aggressive rate hikes. Second, it was not able to
Canadian dollar sales. The drop in US stocks seemed to be a more significant driver.
The 30-day rolling correlation between the changes in the Canadian dollar's
exchange rate and the S&P 500 is at its highest in more than two years
(~0.82). The correlation between the exchange rate and WTI is less stable, but
around 0.55, it is the strongest in almost two months. The swaps market thinks the Bank of Canada is almost finished with its tightening. Its confident of a
50 bp hike on October 26 to bring the target rate to 3.75%. It sees the
terminal rate around 4%.
Mexico's central bank hiked
its target rate 75 bp as widely expected to 9.25%. This was the third such move, and they
followed three half-point moves earlier this year. The first hike was delivered
in June 2021, nine months before the Fed's first hike. The swaps market sees
the terminal rate near 10.5% in Q1 22. However, if Banxico is going to match
the Fed, it would see the target rate at 10.5% at the end of this year. The
central bank says it will continue to raise rates while inflation is
accelerating. Next week (October 7) will report the second half and whole month
of September CPI. Price pressure momentum appears stalling.
The US dollar has swung
between roughly CAD1.36 and CAD1.38 this week. The greenback found support in North
America yesterday and in Europe today near CAD1.3650. The upper end of the
immediate range is around CAD1.3750. The Canadian dollar has fallen out of
favor (as risk appetites have dried up). Barring a sharp setback today, this
will be the third week of USD gains, and seventh week in the past nine. The
Mexican peso, in contrast, continues to show an impressive resilience. After
spiking to almost MXN20.60 in the middle of the week, the US dollar is now at
new lows for the week below MXN20.10. It settled at near MXN20.2080 last
week. With today's gains, the peso is slightly higher on the month, making it
the best emerging market performer after the rouble. Brazil goes to the polls
this weekend and projections that Lula could win in the first round seemed to
weigh on sentiment. The dollar closed at two-month highs yesterday against the
real near BRL5.40. The six-month high set in July was closer to BRL5.5150.
Disclaimer