Investor Anxiety Continues to Run High even If More Comfortable ECB 50 BP Tomorrow and 25 bp Next Week by the Fed
Overview: The capital markets remain unsettled. Asia-Pacific
bourses rose, but European markets are sharply lower, with the Stoxx 600 off
1.3%, giving back the lion's share of yesterday's gains and US equity futures
are lower. Benchmark 10-year yields are off 3-9 bp in Europe, with widening
core-periphery yields. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury is off a dozen
basis points to about 3.56%. Two-year yields are also sharply lower, led by the
15-16 bp decline in Germany and France (Italy's two-year yield off a couple
basis points). The two-year US yield is down seven basis points to 4.18%.
The US dollar is firmer against
all the G10 currencies but the Japanese yen. The Norwegian krone and euro are
under the most pressure, off about 0.5%. After the yen, the Canadian dollar is
off the least (~0.20%). Most emerging market currencies are under pressure, and
the Mexican peso is bearing the brunt after yesterday's recovery. The peso is
off a little more than 1.1%, and the Hungarian forint and South African rand
are close behind. Gold is recovering from a pullback to around $1886 and is
back above $1900. Demand concerns appear to be weighing on crude oil, and the
May WTI contract is pinned near the trough seen yesterday around $71.
Asia Pacific
As widely expected, China
left its key one-year medium lending facility rate steady at 2.75%, though
lending volume was stronger than expected, though slightly slower than
previously (CNY481 bln vs. CNY499 bln). The series of real sector data reported supports ideas that
the world's second-largest economy is on the mend after the initial disruption
as Covid policies were reversed. Retail sales rose 3.5% year-over-year in the
Jan-Feb period from -1.8% in December, in line with expectations. Industrial
output accelerated to 2.4% from 1.3%, just missing expectations. Fixed asset
investment was somewhat stronger than expected, rising 5.5% from 5.1% in
December. The slump in property investment continued but at a slower pace
(-5.7% year-over-year after contracting 10% in December). Surveyed unemployment
ticked up to 5.6% from 5.5%. Ironically, the Chinese economy is recovering as
the US economy is hit with a new shock. The financial stress is disruptive but
is also likely to tighten lending, which was already underway, according to the
recent survey of senior loan officers.
Australia reports its
February jobs figures first thing tomorrow. It has lost jobs over the past two months but is expected
to recoup them in February. It lost nearly 32k jobs in December-January, and
the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey calls for a 50k increase. Recall that
Australia reported a net loss of 43.3k full-time posts in January. The Reserve
Bank of Australia meets next on April 4 and the market has all but given up on
a rate hike. At the end of February, the futures market had about an 80% chance
of a hike discounted but is has been trending lower. The current cash target
rate is 3.60% and the swaps market sees it as the peak.
As US rates have stabilized,
the dollar reached a three-day high against the Japanese yen near JPY135.10. That is the halfway point of the
dollar's decline from last week's high near JPY138 to this week's low near
JPY132.30. The next retracement target is JPY135.75, while initial support is
now around JPY133.80-JPY134.00. The Australian dollar extended yesterday's
recovery but was turned back as it approached Monday's high a little shy of
$0.6720, where around A$925 mln of options will expire today. It made
new session lows in the European morning and a break of $0.6660 could see
$0.6600-20. The greenback rose for a second day against the Chinese yuan but
remained below Monday's high (~CNY6.9185). Still, the US dollar firm and
approaching the 200-day moving average (~CNY6.9045). The PBOC set the dollar's
reference rate a little lower than expected (CNY6.8680 vs. CNY6.8696).
Europe
The market is feeling more
confident that the ECB will stick to the 50 bp hike tomorrow that it had
signaled before the US financial crisis. In the middle of last week, the swaps market showed high
confidence of a half-point move. It fell to about 55% chance on Monday and
recovered to almost 74% yesterday and is closer to 83% today. A 50 bp hike
would bring the key rate to 3.0%. The terminal rate is seen near 3.50%, which
would allow for two additional quarter-point moves.
Barring a major surprise on
the Chancellor Hunt's spring budget, next week's Bank of England meeting looms
large (March 23) and ahead of is the February CPI (March 22). Press reports suggest the new efforts will
be focused to blunt the hit coming to businesses in the form of higher taxes
and a loss of investment incentives. Tax breaks for new capex, if successful,
brings forward investment but does not boost the long-term trajectory of
productive capacity. Falling energy prices and stronger tax revenues give the
Hunt some room to maneuver, though it could be constrained if the Office for
Budget Responsibility cuts its long-term growth forecast. Meanwhile, some half
a million teachers, junior doctors, civil servants, and commuter train
operators are striking today. Turning to BOE expectations, a week ago, the
swaps market had a quarter-point hike fully discounted. It is now closer a
little above 50%. The terminal rate was seen between 4.75% and 5.0%. It is now
seen between 4.25% and 4.50%.
The euro reached $1.0760
before sellers got an upper end and pushed the single currency through
yesterday's low (~$1.0660). The euro has met the (38.2%) retracement of its bounce from last
week's that was found near $1.0670. The next retracement (50%) is by $1.0640
and then (61.8%) is closer to $1.0615. The sharp selling pressure in the
European morning is stretching the intraday momentum indicators. There are 1.7
bln euros in options struck at $1.0700 and $1.0750 that expire today and the
positioning/hedging around them may be contributing to the euro's pressure
today. That said, the euro has traded on both sides of yesterday's range and a
close below yesterday's low is a bearish technical development and would warn
of the risk of a return to last week's lows near $1.0525. Sterling is
faring better, though it too has a heavier bias. It remains well within
Monday's range when it recorded a low near $1.2030, where there are options for
GBP325 mln that expire today. It is holding above $1.2100 today, but that looks
set to crack, which could spur a move toward $1.2050.
America
The US February CPI was in
line with expectations, with the headline rate rising by 0.4% and the core by
0.5%. The year-over-year
rates are at 6.0% and 5.5%, respectively. It is the lowest headline rate since
September 2021. In Q2 22, headline CPI rose at an annualized rate of more than
10%. Making, a conservative assumption of a 0.5% increase on average per month
in Q2 23, the year-over-year rate, and another percentage point will drop off
by the end of Q2. Moreover, somewhere around the middle of the year, shelter
costs will be falling (it is well appreciated now that the BLS does not use the
most current data available which show some softening of rents and
owner-equivalent measures). Still, price pressures remain strong outside the
base effect. The last three months at an annualized pace, CPI has risen by
about 4.0% and the core by around 5.2%. The CPI figures also mean that core PCE
deflator is unlikely to ease much from January's 4.7% pace.
Today's high-frequency
reports include producer prices and retail sales. Producers prices are expected to have
continued to slow. The headline pace peaked last March at 11.7%. The 12-month
increase stood at 6.0% in January and likely slowed to 5.4% in February, the
least since March 2021. The core measure topped at 9.7% in March 2022 and is
seen near 5.2% last month, which would be the lowest since May 2021. Retail
sales is the more important of the two reports. It covers a little more than
40% of personal consumption expenditures. The 3% jump in January was a bit of a
fluke, helped by unusually warm weather and, arguably, the Social Security
cost-of-living adjustment. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey forecast a
0.4% decline in February. The core measure, which excludes auto and gasoline
station sales, building materials and food services, used in some GDP models,
is also expected to fall after rising 1.7% in January. The Empire State
manufacturing survey is also on tap. It is among the first reports for March.
It tends not to elicit much of a market response, but it is expected to have
softened, with the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey looking for -7.8 after
-5.8 in February. The diffusion index has not been positive since last November,
which itself was the first positive reading since April.
Two days after the Fed,
FDIC, and Treasury acted to stem what they thought was a systemic risk, the
market still does not appear confident. However, since all depositors will be made whole at the two
failed banks, there is not a flight from deposits in general, but reports
suggest money-center banks are drawing deposits from others. Still, even
assuming one accepts the official moves, they seem to be incomplete. First, the
Federal Reserve had the discretion to apply more rigorous regulatory oversight
to banks below the $250 bln threshold. This discretion that was not exercised
should have led to an independent inquiry not led by Fed Governor Barr, the
Vice Chair of Supervision. Of course, there will be other investigations,
including congressional hearings. Second, when granting forbearance, the
government should insist on an equity stake in some fashion from those who
benefit, like they did in the large banks and auto companies, which ultimately
showed a profit. The KBW bank index plunged 15.75% last week. The government's
announcement was Sunday, and the index gapped lower on Monday. It traded
sideways yesterday and closed around 8.5% lower since the government's action.
The US dollar found support
near CAD1.3660 and is trading with a firmer bias today. The initial corrective target is around
CAD1.3730 and then CAD1.3760. There are options for about $890 mln at CAD1.3725
that expire today. The intraday momentum indicators are overbought. The
Mexican peso recovered smartly yesterday as market participants swooped to buy
what had been their favorite currency this year. After reaching almost
MXN19.18 on Monday, it approached MXN18.5560 yesterday. The US dollar has
steadied today and is approaching MXN18.78, meeting the minimum retracement
target. The next is closer to MXN18.8550.
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