Overview: The dollar remains under pressure
following the Federal Reserve's rate hike. The market thinks it heard that the
Fed was done hiking, even though Fed Chair Powell held out the possibility that
"some additional firming may be necessary." The Norwegian krone
is the strongest of the G10 currencies today, up more than 1%, spurred by a 25
bp hike and a commitment to do more. The Dollar Index briefly traded below
102.00 for the first time since February 3. A close below 102.35 today would be
the sixth decline in a row. The JP Morgan Emerging Market Currency Index is
edging higher and trying to extend its advance for the fourth consecutive
session.
Equities are mixed today.
Hong Kong rallied 2.3% and its index of mainland shares jumped nearly 3% but
most other large bourses outside of China and Taiwan fell. Europe's Stoxx 600
is snapping a three-day advance and is off nearly 0.75% in late morning
turnover. The bank index is off nearly 2%. After a poor showing yesterday, US
index futures are trading with a firmer bias. European bond yields are off
mostly 4-6 bp. UK Gilts again are underperforming. The 10-year US Treasury
yield is about four basis points firmer at 3.47%. Gold is firm and trading
above yesterday's high near $1979. Recall that the high from Monday was a
little shy of $2010. May WTI is consolidating near the upper end of yesterday's
range and is hovering around $70.
Asia Pacific
Even if the new team at the
Bank of Japan tweaks the monetary policy it is inheriting, there seems no
alternative to the easy monetary and easy fiscal policy, which is a hallmark of
LDP rule. Some of
the unspent funds (JPY2 trillion or ~$15 bln) from the fiscal year that end on
March 31 will be used to provide ease the squeeze from higher inflation. The
new measures are targeted to low-income households and their children (JPY500
bln) and aim to subsidize the cost of liquified petroleum gas (~JPY700 bln),
according to comments by the Economy Minister Goto. Additional spendings
(JPY800 bln) was not specified.
Unlike the earlier
subsidies, which went into effect last month and dampened price pressures, the
aim of the new measures is to placate voters ahead of next month's local
elections. The
earlier fiscal measures did not include liquified petroleum gas, which is more
commonly used in small cities and rural communities, and the government
expected the package to dampen inflation by about 1.2 percentage points. The
new measures may be worth a couple of tenths of a percentage point. Both
efforts illustrate ways in which fiscal policy can be used to temper price
pressures. Tomorrow, Japan report February CPI. It is expected to fall to
around 3.3% from 4.3% and the core is seen falling to 3.1% from 4.2%. The flash
March PMI will also be released. After dipping below the 50 boom/bust level in
November and December, Japan's composite PMI rose back above it in January
(50.7) and further in February (51.1).
The Chinese yuan is simply
not convertible, which is not a question of technology but policy. It is closely managed and purposefully
opaque. Its capital markets are developing but are not sufficiently
transparent. Including the yuan in the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (2015) was
supposed spark a growth in yuan reserves but as of the end of Q3 22, the yuan’s
share of international reserves was about 2.75%. This will be updated for Q4 22
at the end of the month. The yuan’s share of SWIFT transactions briefly rose
above 3% early last year, but last month, its share had stood at almost 2.2%.
Russia may become more reliant on the yuan, but the rest of the world has not.
If there is a yuan-bloc developing it is with Russia, North Korea, and Iran.
Note that when India buys Russian oil, and it is Moscow's biggest customer now,
it pays in UAE dirham (which is pegged to the dollar).
The dollar was sold to
almost JPY130.40, its lowest level since mid-February, and may have spurred
some position adjustment around the $980 mln of options expiring today at
JPY130.50. It recovered
to almost JPY131.25 in the European morning, stalling in front of chart
resistance around JPY131.50. A break of JPY130 would be important from a
technical perspective, but it seems unlikely in the very near-term. After
a weak close yesterday, the Australian dollar has bounce back toward
yesterday's high (almost $0.6760), where the 200-day moving average is found. The
pullback in early European turnover found is likely to find support in the
$0.6700-20 area. Despite the other G10 rate hikes over the past week, the
market remains unconvinced that the Reserve Bank of Australia will join the
latest round when it meets on April 4. Given the greenback's losses
against the other major currencies, it is not a surprise that it was also sold
against the Chinese yuan. The dollar gapped lower and traded to about
CNY6.8170, it low since mid-February. The greenback is nursing its largest loss
against the yuan in nearly two weeks. The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate
at CNY6.8709 compared with the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey of
CNY6.8714.
Europe
Three non-EU central banks
meet today, and two, Norway's Norges Bank, and the Swiss National Bank have
already hiked rates. Still
to come is the Bank of England. After the acceleration of inflation last month,
reported yesterday (10.4% vs. 10.1% in January and expectations for a small
decline), the market has cast off any doubt that about today's rate decision. It
has come around to accept a quarter-point hike. Norway hiked by 25 bp, lifting
its deposit rate to 3.0%. Previously, the central bank saw 3.1% at the peak and
now suggest the terminal rate will be closer to 3.6%. It raised its inflation forecast
and signals that, barring fresh surprises, will hike rates when it meets
against in May. The Swiss National Bank delivered a 50 bp hike, lifting its
policy rate to 1.50%. The swaps market sees the terminal rate around 2.0%. A 25
bp hike will raise the UK base rate to 4.25%. The market anticipates one more
hike with a modest risk (~33%) of another one after that.
The euro extended
yesterday's gains and rose to $1.0930 in the Asia Pacific session before
pulling back nearly half a cent in European morning. Support is seen near $1.0850, but the sold
intraday momentum indicators suggest it will likely hold above. Position
adjusting around the large expiring options (~955 mln euro today and 1.55 bln
euros tomorrow) at $1.08 may have helped lift the single currency. Sterling
is bid and has marginally taken out yesterday's high (~$1.2335) to edge up to
$1.2345. It has been climbing on its five-day moving average this
week, which is found today near $1.2250. The intraday momentum is flagging and
initial support around $1.2280 looks to be tested. Recall that highs made last
December and again in January were near $1.2450. While sterling may approach
it, the momentum indicators suggest it will likely be over-extended. Lastly, Turkey's rate decision is still awaited. The one-week repo is at 8.50% and most expect it to be held steady.
America
The Federal Reserve
delivered a quarter-point hike, indicated further additional tightening may be
necessary, and continued apace its quantitative tightening operations ($95 bln
a month). Yet the
market heard dovish sounds by dropping references to "ongoing
increases" and replacing it with "some additional policy firming may
be appropriate". The median dot (2023 year-end) was left at 5.1%. This
also signals that the Fed is done or nearly done hiking rates. Chair Powell
acknowledged that the tightening of financial conditions associated the banking
stress. The magnitude and duration after that drag is not known, but Powell
recognized that it may do some of the work for monetary policy. He did continue
to push back against ideas of a rate cut this year, but the market paid little
heed. The Fed funds futures imply a year end rate of about 4.20% compared with
4.37% at Tuesday's close. The Fed's decision was unanimous but the divergence
with market expectations is significant. The market is also sensitive to the
conflicting signals between Treasury Secretary Yellen who clearly told Congress
that the US is not considering a blanket guarantee for all depositors while
Powell said all depositors were safe.
Powell did not say it in so
many words but the key to monetary policy is not the incoming macroeconomic
data but an assessment of the impact of the banking stress. The Fed wants inflation to fall further,
and the issue is how much tightening is being done for it. This makes today's
high-frequency reports less interesting. Weekly jobless claims have been below
200k since early January with one exception. From the Fed's vantage point, the
labor market robust and through wages or demand is driving up core non-shelter
service prices that account for over half of the core PCE deflator. Weakness in
new home sales, especially after the 7.2% surge in January also would not be
surprising.
The Canadian dollar was an
underperformer yesterday, unable to benefit from the broad weakness in the US
dollar. However, after
closing firmly, the greenback has slipped back toward yesterday's lows
(~CAD1.3655). A push below CAD1.3640 could signal a test on CAD1.3600. The
five-day moving average looks poised to push below the 20-day moving average
today or tomorrow for the first time since mid-February. The US dollar
peaked on Monday near MXN19.2320 and traded as low as MXN18.38 yesterday. It
is consolidating today inside yesterday's range. Mexico reports January retail
sales today (expected 0.8%) and inflation for the first half of March (expected
to have accelerated slightly). The central bank meets next week and will likely
match the Fed's quarter-point move. Although sensitive to the growing friction
with the US and concerns about the domestic political situation, the recent
setback has likely cleared some positioning. Between the attractive carry and
the near-shoring/friend-shoring meme, we have a constructive near-term outlook.
The MXN18.40 area offers support, and a break could see MXN18.20. Recall that
the dollar's multi-year low was set in early March near MXN17.90.
Disclaimer