Overview: There are two themes today. First, there has been a modest bout of profit-taking on Chinese stocks (and yuan) after last week’s surge. Second, the ahead of the five G10 central bank meeting this week a series of market-sensitive economic reports, a consolidative tone is seen in most of the capital markets. Most of the large bourses in the Asia Pacific region fell, led by a 2.2% loss in Hong Kong and 3% loss in its index of mainland shares. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is giving back half of the pre-weekend 0.85% gain, while US futures are posting minor upticks after their slide at the end of last week. Benchmark 10-year bond yield are mostly 2-4 bp lower in Europe though the Gilt yields is off seven bp. Near 3.52%, the 10-year Treasury yield is off five basis points. It rose nine basis points last week. The US dollar is mostly softer, but the yen, Australian and Canadian dollars are struggling. Emerging market currencies are mixed. The South African rand, Philippine peso, and South Korean won are the underperformers, while the central European currencies and Mexican peso enjoy a modicum of strength. Gold is softer and is hovering around its 200-day moving average ($1791). January WTI is pinned near $70. The cold spell is seeing US gas jumped 11%, the most since the end of October and the fourth consecutive daily gain. Europe’s benchmark is moving in the opposite direction. It is off about 1.8%, its third consecutive decline. After rallying nearly 5% in the past two session, iron ore nearly 1.8% today. March copper is giving back last week’s 0.7% gain in full. On the other hand, March wheat has erased last Friday’s 1.6% decline.
Asia Pacific
The capital market is so
much larger than the market for physical commodities that it can confuse
observers. Last week,
with the reserve data, China reported it bought 32 tons of gold. It sounds
likely boat load, but the dollar value, we quickly estimated was around $1.65
bln. Does this really count as diversification out of the dollar, as some
suggested, when the US Treasury data shows the PBOC owning $933.6 bln of US
Treasuries at the end of September. Then, at the end of last week, after
China's Xi visited Saudi Arabia the prospect of oil sales in yuan captured the
imagination of some market participants as it does occasionally. Some trumpet
this as the end of the so-called petrodollar. Many observers, in a rush to
declare the dollar era over, thought when China launched domestic yuan oil contract that
would signal the end of the greenback's reign. It did not. China is the biggest
buyer of Saudi oil. On one level, it makes sense that it caters to its biggest
buyer. Last year, China bought around $44 bln of oil from the Saudi's according
to reports, which is less than $1 bln a week. If it were denominated in yuan,
would it have impacted the dollar? Most likely not. It is relatively
modest amount of money in the capital markets and for the dollar in particular.
Consider that later today, the US Treasury will a sell a total of $171 bln of
bills and notes.
Moreover, what seems to be
lost on many observers, but businesses know full well, what is ultimately
involved is shifting the currency risk. China, as a big buyer, want to shift the currency risk to
the seller (Saudi Arabia). Yet, the dollar is the benchmark, and the Saudi
riyal is pegged to the dollar. One implication is that when the Fed hikes later
this week, the Saudi Monetary Authority will too. Yes, some oil producers have
explored how tightly they need to follow the Fed to maintain their pegs but
follow the Fed they will. In 2021, according to UN data, Saudi Arabia imported
$30.2 bln of goods from China. Assuming all of that was conducted in yuan,
which it most likely wasn't, it would still leave the Saudis accumulating yuan
balances to what end? Over time, of course they could by more Chinese goods or
financial assets. Since the end of last year, it would have cost Saudi Arabia
about 8.6% to have accepted yuan of for its oil on an unhedged basis.
The dollar is trading with a
firmer bias against the Japanese yen, even though US Treasury yields are a
little softer. Nearby
resistance is seen around JPY137.25, and even then, it would take a move above
last week's high (~JPY137.85) to signal anything important. The Australian
dollar is trading inside Friday's range (~$0.6745-$0.6815) is quiet dealings to
start the week. It looks comfortable in a $0.6760-$0.6800 range. China
reported slower lending figures for November, but the easing of vaccine and
quarantine protocols made the data before it was released. China will stop
using a mobile app starting tomorrow that has been used to track people's
travel history. Profit-taking on Chinese shares (on the mainland and Hong Kong)
was seen, and foreign investor selling was reported. The dollar gapped higher
against the Chinese yuan after its rallying nearly 1.4% last week but remained
below CN7.0. The gap is between Friday's high(~CNY6.9625) and today's low
(~CNY6.9720). The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate ate CNY6.9565, the
strongest since September 1. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey was for
CNY6.9553.
Europe
The UK is bracing itself for
numerous public sector strikes in the coming days and weeks. The government will redeploy military and
civil servants to cover for striking workers at air and seaports. Nurses,
ambulance staff, railroad workers, postal workers and border officials are
demanding higher pay.
Separately, the UK reported
the economy bounced back after contracting by 0.6% in September with slightly
faster than expected growth of 0.5% in October. The recovery was led by a 0.6% gain in
services (the largest gain of the year) and a 0.8% rise in construction output
(the best since May). There was also a strong improvement in trade (GBP1.785
bln deficit was the smallest since last December). Recall that September's
economic activity has been weakened by the extra public holiday and period of
national mourning after the Queen's passing. However, the data ought not to
distract from the underlying weakness of the UK economy and the prospects that
a protracted recession has begun.
The base case is for the
ECB, BOE, and SNB to deliver 50 bp hikes this week. At the ECB, the market also wants to hear
about the plans to unwind the balance sheet but last week's indication that
banks will pay back 447.5 bln euros of TLTROs (long-term loans) on top of 296.6
bln last month, removes some of the sense of urgency. In addition, another
nearly 52 bln euros of loans mature this month. Together these considerations
will shrink the ECB's balance sheet by almost 800 bln euros. The ECB's balance
sheet peaked in June around 8.835 trillion euros. Although much has been made
in the press of the divergence between the hawks and doves at the Fed, which we
think is exaggerated as we see no dissents, at the BOE the decision may be more
fragmented. With economists projecting Swiss inflation to fall back below the
2% ceiling by the middle of next year, after this week's move, the SNB may be
one more hike from its peak.
The euro is consolidating
largely within the pre-weekend range (~$1.0505-$1.0590). A break of $1.06 or $1.0440 is needed to
signal a breakout. The intraday momentum indicators are stretched, warning
early North American operators not to chase it higher. Sterling is also
trading inside last Friday's range (~$1.2210-$1.2325). Here, too, the
intraday momentum indicators are stretched and there is risk to the downside in
the North American morning. Initial support may be seen around $1.2250.
America
Ahead of this week's data
and FOMC meeting, we share the following four observations. First, neither the data nor comments have
had much impact on expectations for a 50 bp hike this week. For over a month,
the implied yield of the Fed funds futures has traded in a five-basis point
range (~4.345%-4.395%). It settled last week at 4.35%. Second, since the end of
October, the expected terminal rate has fluctuated between about 4.85% and
5.14%. It settled at 4.96% before the weekend. Third, the market leans toward a
peak in Q2 23. The implied yield of the June Fed funds futures continues to
trade above the implied yield of the March contract. Since the end of October,
the premium has traded between 10 and 24.5 bp. It finished settled last week at
18 bp. Fourth, the market continues to price in a cut in the target rate toward
the end of next year. The implied yield of the December Fed funds futures
contract has been consistently lower than the September contract. The implied
December 23 yield has not been less than 25 bp below the September yield for
over a month (since the October CPI release).
A busy week of data and the
FOMC meeting begins off slowly with only the budget statement on tap today
ahead of tomorrow's CPI report. The tightening of monetary policy is well known, but the extent to
the fiscal tightening still seems under appreciated. Consider that in the first
seven months of the fiscal year, the US recorded a federal deficit of about
$795 bln. During the same period last year, the deficit was $1.234 trillion. Meanwhile,
note that the government's spending authorization expires at the end of the and
Congressional action is needed to avoid a partial government shutdown.
Canada has a light calendar
this week. The Bank of
Canada hiked rates 50 bp last week and signaled that its tightening cycle may
be over. This week's data includes housing starts, existing home sales, and its
monthly portfolio flow report. Mexico reports October industrial production
figures today. Output may have slipped for the third consecutive month.
Nevertheless, Banxico is widely expected to match the Fed's 50 bp hike the
following day. Last week's inflation report showed the headline rate falling
for the second consecutive month in November (7.80% vs. 8.41%). Although the
core rate ticked up (8.51% vs. 8.42%), the biweekly report suggested it lost
momentum in the second half of last month. Brazil left its Selic rate at
13.75%, where it has been since August. Separately, it saw IPCA inflation slow
to 5.9% from 6.47%, its slowest since February 2021. Separately, Lula's cabinet
is taking form, and former Sao Paulo mayor Haddad, as expected was named
finance minister.
The US dollar is trading in
the upper end of the pre-weekend range against the Canadian dollar and is
nearly the middle of the session's range (CAD1.3625-CAD1.3675) in late morning
dealings in Europe. There
are options for about $310 mln at CAD1.3615 that expire today but may have been
neutralized last week. Last week, the greenback reached a high of CAD1.3700 and
a low around CAD1.3560. Choppy consolidative trading may continue. The
greenback surged at the start of the last week to around MXN19.8640 and
consolidated within the range set last Monday for the entire week. The low was
carved Thursday and Friday in the MXN19.6060-MXN19.6135 area. Broad sideways
trading is most likely near-term scenario. Similarly, look the for the
BRL5.20-BRL5.30 to largely confine the dollar against the Brazilian real
today.
Disclaimer