Overview: There is a nervousness that hangs over the capital markets.
Although US banks shares recovered at the end of last week, many continue to
see the sector’s challenges as the harbinger of a dramatic reversal in the Fed’s
stance. America’s debt ceiling looms large and could be a few weeks away. China
led Asia Pacific bourses higher, and, ironically, its bank shares extended their
rally. Japan, returning from last week’s holiday was notable exception. Relative
strength of the yen seemed to offset the modest regional gains, weighing on Japanese
equities. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is extended the gains from the end of last week,
helped by 1% gain in bank shares after a 3.1% rally before the weekend. US equity
futures are narrowly mixed. Follow-through gains among bank shares would help
lift sentiment. The 10-year US Treasury is a couple of basis points firmer near
3.46%, while European benchmark yields are 2-3 bp higher. UK markets are closed
for the coronation celebration.
The greenback continues to struggle to secure traction and is lower against all
the G10 currencies but the Japanese yen. Sterling has made a marginal new
11-month high. The Bank of England is widely expected to hike the base rate
later this week. Emerging market currencies are mostly firmer, and the JP
Morgan Emerging Market Currency Index is extending its advance for the fourth
consecutive session. Gold is firm but consolidating in a $5-range on either
side of $2019. June WTI continues to recover after last week’s climactic
sell-off to $63.65. It reached $71.80 before the weekend and is approaching $73.00
today. The $73.50 area is about the halfway point of the sell-off that began
from the April 12 high near $83.40.
Asia Pacific
Japan's market reopened for the first time since last Tuesday. When
it was on holiday, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose by about 0.7%. On the other
hand, the yen rose about 1.3% against the dollar amid falling US rates. The
Nikkei fell by about 0.7% today. Japanese bank shares fell by 1.25%. Earlier
today, the preliminary PMI services and composite were revised higher. The
services PMI was revised to 55.4, up from the flash reading of54.9 and 55.0 in
March. It revised away the first decline since last November. Similarly, the
composite PMI stands at 52.9 rather than 52.5 and is unchanged from March.
Tomorrow, Japan reports March labor cash earnings and household spending
figures. Despite wage increases in the spring negotiating round, in Q1 22, cash
earnings averaged 1.4% year-over-year. If the median forecast in Bloomberg's
survey is accurate, the average in Q1 23 is about 0.9%. Household consumption
tells a similar story. The year-over-year increase in Q1 22 was 1.9% and,
assuming the median forecast of 0.8% in March this year, the Q1 23 average is
about 0.7%. The Bank of Japan's next meeting is June 16. Many observers look
for an adjustment of monetary policy at the June-July meetings due to
underlying price pressures (excluding fresh food and energy), which are making
new cyclical highs.
China reported that the dollar value of its reserves rose by almost $21
bln last month (to $3.2 trillion), which the State Administration for Foreign
Exchange (SAFE) attributed to the decline in the dollar and the rise of global
assets. The dollar fell by about 1.65%-1.85% against the euro and sterling
but rose by 2.5% against the yen in April. It was also a bit stronger against
the Australian and Canada dollars (~1.2% and 0.3%, respectively). Benchmark
10-year yields were narrowly mixed last month. On the other hand, China's gold
holdings capture attention (and imagination). It acquired about 8.1 tons of
gold to extend its buying streak for the sixth consecutive month. During this
run, it has acquired around 130 tons, worth about $8.8 bln. This brings its
total gold holdings to about 2076 tons, with a value of about $140 bln. The
latest US Treasury data was for February, and it estimated China held a little
less than $850 bln of US Treasuries. In light of Russia's experience of having
its reserves and assets out of the country frozen or seized, some countries see
domestic holding of gold as an insurance policy against US sanctions. The World
Gold Council reports that Singapore, China, and Turkey have been among the
largest buyers of gold.
The dollar is steady to slightly firmer in a JPY134.65-JPY135.30
range. A push above the JPY135.65 area could help lift the technical
tone. It peaked last week slightly above JPY137.75. On the downside, support is
seen in the JPY134.30-50 area. The Australian dollar is nearing the upper
end of its two-month range near $0.6800. It had tested the lower end
of the range around $0.6600 at the end of April and was helped by the
unexpected rate hike last week. A convincing break of $0.6800 would initially
target the $0.6860 area. The intraday momentum indicators suggest a breakout
may not happen today, but the daily momentum indicators are constructive. The
dollar is little changed against the Chinese yuan. It remains in the range
set on April 25, roughly CNY6.89-CNY6.9340. The reference rate was set at
CNY6.9158, close to the market expectation based on the movement of the dollar
since the mainland session ended before the weekend of CNY6.9150.
Europe
The results of the local elections in the UK were among the worst-case
scenarios for the Tories, who lost over 1060 council seats (around the same as
in 2019). Labour picked up almost half of the Tories' losses and a
couple of municipalities that were also at stake. The Lib-Dems picked up more
than 400, and the Greens did well, garnering about 240 council seats. The
Tories are being squeezed as Brexit fades as a mobilizing force, but the
fissures remain. Parts of the north that has swung to the Tories are returning
to Labour, and in the south, some of the remainders have drifted to the
Lib-Dems. The Tories need something more than Sunak's competent technocratic
approach if it is going to avoid a rout in the next general election.
German's industrial production fell 3.4%, more than twice the decline
economist forecast. It comes after last Friday's surprisingly sharp
drop in factory orders (-10.7%). Last week, France reported a 1.1% decline in
industrial production. Coupled with the weakness in Germany's March retail
sales, one gets the impression of very weak momentum coming into Q2 and sets
the stage of another quarterly contraction in GDP (recession?). As with the
factory orders, the auto sector was especially weak. Still, it seems like there
may be a seasonal adjustment issue. Meanwhile, there is a diplomatic brouhaha
between France and Italy. President Macron's pension reforms are unpopular, and
the rare use of executive authority allowed him to side-step parliament. This
seems to be creating an opportunity for Le Pen. But rather than strike out at
it, France's Interior Minister was critical of Italy's Prime Minister Meloni
and claimed she lied to voters about solving the migration problem. Italy's
Foreign Minister and former head of the EU Parliament, Tajani, canceled his
planned trip to Paris. Ironically, on a recent trip, Meloni complimented UK
Prime Minister Sunak's immigration policies, which have clashed with the French
on Channel crossings. The British wanted to have their own forces to patrol
French beaches but agreed to fund a larger French presence.
The euro is firm but remains in well-worn ranges (~$1.1015-55) in quiet
turnover. Last week's high was around $1.1090. The intrasession lows frayed
the 20-day moving average (found just below $1.10 today) but dip-buying rather
than long liquidation greets the pullbacks. The intraday momentum indicators
warn of another attempt on the upside in the North American morning. Although
UK markets are closed today, sterling edged to a new high (since last June),
drawing close to $1.2660. The next important upside target is the
$1.2760 area, which corresponds to the (61.8%) retracement of sterling's
decline from the June 2021 high near $1.4250. The intrasession momentum
indicators favor another attempt at the highs later today provided support near
$1.2620 holds.
America
Many observers scoffed at Fed Chair Powell's comment last week that he
thought a soft landing was more likely that the shallow recession that the
Fed's staff had projected later this year and that many economists have been
anticipating for more than a year. He also opined that the banking
system was sound. To be sure, things may have looked bleak in the immediate
aftermath of Powell's press conference last Wednesday afternoon. KBW's large
bank index fell 3.8% the following day, and the small bank index fell 3.5%. Still,
Friday, for the thirteenth consecutive month, US jobs growth exceeded
expectations. The unemployment rate fell back to the cyclical low (3.4%) set in
January, and hourly earnings rose by 0.5% in April, matching the biggest
increase since March 2022. Bank share indices gapped higher and fully recouped
Thursday's decline. The regional bank index settled at a four-day high ahead of
the weekend, and the large bank index closed at a three-day high. The
"one-day island bottoms" is an encouraging technical sign.
To be sure, job growth is slowing, and the labor market is moderating,
but from the Fed's point of view, it remains strong. The US has created
1.14 mln jobs in the first four months of the year. In the Jan-Apr period in
2022, the US filled 1.94 mln positions. But that might not be the relevant
comparison. Consider the pre-Covid experience. In the first four months of 2018
and 2019, the US created 904k and 760k jobs, respectively. Prime age (25-54)
employment reached a 22-year high.
In March, the median Fed forecasts in the Summary of Economic Projections
saw the unemployment rate finishing the year at 4.5% and foresaw the economy
growing by 0.4% year-over-year. These projections increasing seem too
bleak, and we suspect they will be revised higher in next month's iteration of
the Fed's Summary of Economic Projections. The pricing in the Fed funds futures
strip implies a year-end effective rate of 4.32%, meaning three and possibly
four quarter-point cuts. It had finished April near 4.51%. While possible, it
seems improbable. We would subjectively see the odds of another rate hike as
greater than 75-100 bp of cuts this year.
The US dollar stalled near CAD1.3640 last week and fell sharply in the
last two sessions last week reaching CAD1.3370. While some in the press
played up Bank of Canada Governor Macklem's warnings about inflation, the swaps
market showed little reaction. We suspect the rally recovery in US equities and
oil help fuel the Canadian dollar's recovery. It has been extended today to
about CAD1.3340, leaving little in the way of a test on the two-month low set
in mid-April near CAD1.3300. Still, the intraday momentum indicators are
stretched. The greenback has slipped to a new low since 2017 against
the Mexican peso near MXN17.75. The low from 2017 were in the
MXN17.45-65 area and that represents the next target, even if not meaningful
support. Today will likely be the second consecutive session that the greenback
will not trade above MXN18.00. Separately, note the results of the election at
Chile's Constitutional Council looks like another set by for President Boric,
which may encourage investors. The Chilean peso rallied 1.5% last week.