Overview: The softer than expected US inflation figures unleashed significant market adjustment that continue to ripple through the capital markets. The modification of some of China’s Covid stance may have also fanned some optimism, but we suggest that measures are modest tweaks, and the surge in infections will prevent the end of disruptive restrictions. Although we have been arguing that a significant dollar top was being forged, the move is stretched from a technical perspective and immediate caution is advised. The strong rally seen in equities yesterday is continuing today. Hong Kong led the rally in the Asia Pacific region with a 7.75% surge. China’s equities advanced but were laggards among the large regional markets. The Stoxx 600 is adding another 0.3% to yesterday’s 2.75% rally. US futures are also trading with a firmer bias. US and Canadian bond markets are closed today, and European bonds are paring yesterday’s huge rally. Benchmark 10-year yields are up mostly 4-8 bp. While the greenback is softer across the board, the yen’s rise is the most impressive. It is up 1.25% as the dollar punched through JPY140 and short-yen funding positions were squeezed out. Gold has soared on the back of the weaker dollar and on rate-peak ideas. It finished last week slightly below $1682 and is now trading above $1760. December WTI has recovered smartly from yesterday’s low near $85 to approach $90 today. US natgas recovered 6.4% yesterday after sliding 16% over the previous two sessions. It is firm today. Europe’s natgas benchmark is off for the third consecutive session. The 3.85% drop brings the three-day decline to more than 10%. Iron ore jumped 5.6% to bring this week’s advance to nearly 6.6% after last week’s 8.25% rally. December copper is up nearly 3%. It is the fourth consecutive advance and the longest streak since July. It is up about 4.85% this week on top of last week’s 7.5% surge. December wheat is snapping a four-day slide and is up nearly 1%.
Asia Pacific
The Bank of Japan has defied
the odds. Its
intervention in September and October was not very surprising after several
warnings. It was unilateral. It did not signal an underlying change in policy. What
it did do was buy time. for around $63 bln (size of intervention in September
and October). If the US 10-year yield did not peak on October 21 slightly below
4.35%, it likely came awfully close. It fell to about 3.82% yesterday. It will
not trade today as the US bond market is closed for Veterans Day. The US
two-year yield may have peaked last week around 4.80%. It was 50 bp lower
yesterday. When the BOJ intervened in on September 22 the greenback was
approaching JPY146.00. It settled that day near JPY142.40. Yesterday it moved
there for the first time as the US dollar fell to JPY140.20. The drop in US
yields will also take the pressure off the 0.25% Yield Curve Control cap which
is also part of the BOJ's monetary policy stance. It had been bumping against
for several weeks. It will likely have more breathing space now.
China announced some
adjustments to its quarantine policy that had been anticipated last week. It reduced the time inbound travelers and
those that have come into close contact with the Covid infection need to be
quarantined. Inbound travelers now will be required to spend five days in a
government quarantine facility and three days at home, instead of ten days in
the past. Also, Beijing has reiterated that it wants more targeted approaches
to social restrictions. This appears to already be in the process of being
implemented. Some are calling this a significant change. It might not be. Meanwhile,
note that the number of Covid cases are above 10k for the first time since
April. Optimists may point to the rally in Chinese shares, where the Shanghai
and Shenzhen markets rallied about 1.7% and 1.3% respectively, but most other
bourses rallied more including Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and Australia.
The dollar is trading
heavily against the Japanese yen, and trading below yesterday's low
(~JPY140.20) in the European morning to trade below JPY140 for first time
in two months. Stops
appear to have been triggered and the dollar quickly dropped to nearly
JPY139.10, as the dam broke. The intraday momentum indicators are stretched,
and the greenback is trading below its lower Bollinger Band (two standard
deviations below the 20-day moving average). Indeed, it briefly was three
standard deviations below the 20-day moving average. We caution against chasing
it and suspect if the near-term low is not in place, it has been approached. The
high set in the Asia Pacific session was near JPY142.50. The Australian
dollar is building on its outside up day recorded yesterday. It pushed to
almost $0.6680. The next key chart point is around $0.6740. The high was
recorded in the European morning and the intraday momentum indicators have
turned down. The Aussie is also above its upper Bollinger Band, seen near
$0.6620 today. A rising tide lifts all boat, and the Chinese yuan has risen
for a second consecutive session for the first time since the end of September.
The yuan's gains over the two sessions are almost equal to the surge last
Friday amid rumors of the imminent end of the zero-Covid policy (~1.6%). At one
point, the greenback traded below CNY7.0750, for the first time since September
22. It has recovered to almost CNY7.13. In an unusual move, the PBOC set the
dollar's reference rate stronger than the expected (CNY7.1907
vs. CNY7.1756). Given the 2% band around the fix, it allowed for a
CNY7.0469-CNY7.3345 range today.
Europe
The US CPI figures saw the
US 2-year yield fell by more than 25 bp and helped push down European rates too.
US rates fell further and
the US premium over Germany fell nearly 10 bp, which pushed it well below the
200-day moving average (~2.35%). As we
noted earlier this week, the US premium has not broken this moving
average since June 2021. The US premium over Germany typically peaks before the
dollar does and the peak was likely recorded in early August near 2.77%. The
next key level is round 2.20%.
The UK reported that the
economy contracted by 0.6% in September, a larger contraction than what was
expected. Still, the
contraction in Q3 as a whole was not as bad as expected as the July and August
figures were revised up. The 0.2% fall in output in Q3 (rather than the 0.5%
expected) is seen as the start of a several quarter recession. Consumption and
business investment fell by 0.5% each, while government spending jumped 1.3%,
and trade improved. Nevertheless, output is about 0.4% below pre-Covid levels. Separately,
the Bank of England announced that starting November 29, it plans to begin to
sell the GBP19 bln (~$22 bln) of long-dated and inflation-linked bonds it
bought during the market turmoil in late September/early October. More
operational details will be announced in the week of November 21.
The euro recorded a big
outside up day yesterday and closed above $1.02. Follow-through buying lifted it to $1.0280
today. It closed above its upper Bollinger Band yesterday, which comes in today
near $1.0210. We suspect the near-term high is in place, and some of the buying
today may have been related to the 2.24 bln of options struck at $1.0240 that
expire today. We peg initial support in the $1.0200-20 area. Sterling, which
we have seen as our high conviction of the first to G10 to bottom against the
dollar, extended yesterday's gains to nearly $1.1775 today. Our next target
is $1.20, but not immediately. It too is stretched. The upper Bollinger Band is
near $1.1765. Initial support may be seen in the $1.1700-20 band.
America
The softer than expected US
October CPI has dramatically shifted market expectations for Fed policy in
several ways. First, it
has reinforced ideas that the Fed is done with 75 bp moves, and that it will
hike 50 bp next month. Second, the terminal rate expectation has been brought
back to 4.75%-5.00% from 5.00%-5.25%. Third, the market sees the peak likely in
Q1 23 rather than Q2. Fourth, the market is the most confident it has been that
the Fed cuts rates in Q4 23. Of course, this is simply a snapshot of market
expectations, and the market has we have seen can be quite fickle. The day
before the next FOMC meeting concludes (December 14), this month's CPI will be
reported.
Any one inflation report can
be noisy, so it does not make sense to annualize it. However, quarterly figures may be more
meaningful, and as we have noted the annualized pace of Q1, and Q2 CPI were a
little above 10%. It dropped to 2% in Q3. That may of overstate the
improvement, but the direction is clearer, barring new shocks. The core rate is
a somewhat different story. First, contrary to what has been often repeated,
the reason food and energy are excluded is not because they are volatile, or
because they are mostly driven by supply considerations. They are excluded
because over time, it provides the signal, which is to say that headline
inflation converges to core inflation, and not the other way around. At an
annualized rate, core inflation rose a bit faster than 5.6% in Q1 and 7.6% in Q2
before slipping back to 6.0% in Q3.
The US dollar fell to its
lowest level since March 2020 against the Mexican peso shortly after the softer
than expected US CPI figures. The dollar's low was near MXN19.3380. A bounce near midday took it
to slightly above MXN19.47 ahead of Banxico's decision. As expected, it
delivered a 75 bp increase, lifting the overnight target rate to 10%, and the
dollar made a low near MXN19.3350. Brazil moved in the opposite direction. The
Brazilian real slump by nearly 3%, the biggest single day loss since April. Mexico's
Bolsa advanced 1.8% while the Bovespa sank 3.25%. Newly elected Brazilian
Lula's fiscal plans spooked investors and Moody's seemed to warn that it could
pose a risk to Brazil's credit rating. Moody's sees Brazil as a Ba2 credit
(=BB), while Fitch and S&P are one notch lower. To fulfill his campaign
promises, it may cost Brazil BRL160-BRL200 bln (~$30-$37 bln). There reportedly
has been some discussion of exempting social aid expenditures from the spending
cap rules. The budget bill for next year, which was drafted before the
election, anticipated a primary deficit (excludes debt servicing) or 0.6% of GDP.
Lula's extra spending could lift it to closer to 1%. Lastly, Peru hiked 25 bp
yesterday, lifting its target rate to 7.25%. It is the 16th consecutive hike. Like
Brazil and Chile, Peru may have finished its tightening cycle.
The US dollar recorded a big
outside down day against the Canadian dollar yesterday and follow-through
selling pushed the greenback below CAD1.3300. It has not been here since late September.
The objective of the head and shoulders pattern that broke last week is CAD1.30.
The lower Bollinger Band is around CAD1.3325. Canadian markets are closed today
for Remembrance Day. The greenback's intraday momentum has stalled near
CAD1.3285. Initial resistance is seen near CAD1.3350. At first, the US
dollar continued to fall against the Mexican peso today, reached MXN19.2655,
its lowest level since March 2020. The unwinding of some long peso carry
trades (e.g., vs Japan) were unwound, the dollar jumped to almost MXN19.38. Nearby
resistance is seen in the MXN19.40-45 band.
Disclaimer