Week Ahead: With the Markets Converging (Again) with Fed's Dots, Is the Interest Rate Adjustment Over?
The US
dollar and interest rates appear to be at an inflection point. Much of the past
several weeks have been about correcting the overshoot that took place in Q4 23, when the
derivatives markets were pricing in nearly seven quarter-point rate cuts by the
Federal Reserve this year. US two- and 10-year interest rates set new
three-month highs last week. With the help of economic data and comments by Fed
officials, the market, as it did a few times last year, has converged to the
Federal Reserve. That adjustment seems to have run its course. We look for softer US economic data in the coming weeks, which
may help cap US rates. At the same time, the technical condition of many of the
G10 currencies has improved and momentum indicators are turning higher. Growth
impulses from are still faint in most other high-income countries, but the key,
as seen in Q4 23, are the developments in the US.
Another developing story is in
China. Beijing has taken formal and informal steps to support equities. The CSI
300 rose every day last week, as the mainland markets re-opened from the
extended holiday. The last time it did that in five-day week was November 2020.
In fairness, the CSI 300 rose in the four sessions before the holiday commenced.
During the Great Financial Crisis and again during Covid, many high-income
countries moved to support their stock markets and limited short sales. Many
see the threat to financial stability posed by dramatic losses in the equity
market to be part of the so-called "Fed put." It may be even
more significant in China where the property market has shuttered a key savings
vehicle and central government bond yields are too low. Weak stocks encouraged
Chinese investors to export savings to the extent possible and purchase gold.
Foreign investors, using the Hong Kong Connect were also active buyers in
recent days, perhaps as the "fear of missing out" kicks-in.
Another theme that we think has already emerged with Canada's January CPI last week and will be extended to the
preliminary estimate of the eurozone's February CPI this week, is a sharp deceleration of
inflation. The eurozone, UK, and Canada saw dramatic jumps in consumer prices in
the Feb-May 2023 period. As these drop out of the year-over-year measure, headline
rates will fall more than many may appreciate. Eurozone and UK inflation likely to slow below 2%, assuming a conservative average monthly gain of 0.3%. With the same
assumption, Canada's headline CPI may hold slightly above 2%.
United States: The January CPI and PPI reports saw market
expectations again move closer to the Fed's December dot plot, which
anticipated that three rate cuts this year would be appropriate. Fed Chair
Powell has warned that as the quarter progresses, the snapshot of views offered
by the Summary of Economic Projections (dot plot) may become dated, but thus
far, most of the Fed officials who have spoken do not appear to have changed
their minds. At the end of last week, the Fed funds futures show three rates’
cuts are now discounted and less than a 30% chance of a fourth cut. This is
about half of the easing that was discounted late last year.
Among market participants,
there seems to be two key issues. The first is about the strength of the
economy here at the start of Q1 24. January jobs growth appeared solid, but
retail sales and industrial output were weaker than expected. While all
business cycles are unique, during this one, many standard metrics do not seem
to be working, including yield-curve inversion, the contraction in M2, and the
collapse of leading economic indicators, to name a few. On balance, with the
data in hand, we suspect the economy is growing faster than the Fed's long-term
non-inflationary pace of 1.8%. But is slowing and we expect this to be more
evident with this month's data. Weak Boeing orders will weigh on durable goods
orders and the early call for nonfarm payrolls is less than half of January's
353k increase (March 8). The second issue is inflation. The personal
consumption deflator, which the Fed targets, has a different methodology and
assigns different weights than the CPI. The PCE deflator rose at an annualized
rate of 2% in H2 23, while the core measure rose by 1.8%. A 0.3% increase in
January would allow the year-over-year rate to ease to 2.3% from 2.6%, given
the 0.6% rise in January 2023. The core rate may rise by 0.4%, which would see
the year-over-year rate slip to 2.8% from 2.9%.
The Dollar Index peaked with
the release of the January CPI on February 13 near 105.00, overshooting the
(61.8%) retracement of the losses from Q4 23 decline. It has fallen in seven of
the eight sessions since peak. A break now of the 103.30 area could signal a
test on 102.80 initially and then 102.30. The five-day moving average crossed
below the 20-day moving average at the end of last week for the first time
since early January. The momentum indicators have turned lower.
China: China reports February PMI and the
Caixin manufacturing PMI in the coming days. Many western economists argue that
the China's developmental model has failed. As we have noted before, Nobel
prize-winning economy Paul Krugman argued before Xi's claim to life-time rule,
Beijing's "wolf diplomacy, and harassment of its neighbors, and the
unwinding of economic and political reforms since the death of Mao, that Chinese
model hit a "great wall." Many of the architects of Trump's
tariffs, which have been continued and extended by the Biden administration,
cut their teeth on confronting Japan in the 1980s. We have suggested China was
on a path set into place by Deng Xiaoping and Xi has taken China off that path.
The idea of "peaceful rise" or "peaceful development,"
which minimized the friction with the US has been replaced by that notion that
"you can't hide an elephant behind a tree." What makes the current
situation exceptionally fraught with risk is that Beijing seems to think that
US is in some inexorable decline. In this sense both sides conclude the other
is in decline and that would seem to boost the risk of underestimating one's
adversary. Beijing is not content with the current pace and composition of
growth and regardless of the latest PMI print, we expect additional stimulus. Last
week, it moved to deter institutional investors from selling at the open or
close and put a stigma on selling short. In the Great Financial Crisis and
during Covid, some market economies banned short selling in some sectors. That
ought not be the issue. However, China's approach seems clumsier and less
transparent.
Through formal and informal
mechanisms, Beijing appears to have put a floor under Chinese stocks. The CSI
300 has strung together back-to-back weekly gains for the first time in three
months. It rose 3.7% last week after rallying 5.8% in the week before the Lunar
New Year holiday. It is now higher on the year. This may take some pressure off
the yuan. However, the continued weakness of the Japanese yen warns that the
CNY7.20 area that has capped the dollar last month and this month could come
under further pressure. Assuming the fix continues to be steady, the dollar
could rise toward CNY7.24, though we suspect it won't.
Eurozone: Starting with the preliminary CPI on March
1, headline inflation is set to fall sharply in the EMU. This will likely
encourage speculation that the ECB can cut rates sooner, especially in the
context of the recent cuts in the growth outlook. In February-April 2023,
eurozone CPI rose at an annualized rate of 9.2%. With a conservative assumption
of an average monthly increase of 0.3% in the February-April period this year,
the headline rate will fall below 2%. It will likely be near 2% by the time the
ECB meets on April 11. The core rate is firmer at 3.3% year-over-year in
January. It was at 5.5% as recently at the middle of last year. The swaps
market has about a 33% chance of a cut in April discounted. It had been
fully discounted as recently as the end of January. For the first two weeks of
the year, the US two-year rate rose less than Germany's and the US premium over
Germany narrowed to about 155 bp from about 190 bp at the end of 2023. It has
since recovered fully and approached 190 bp in mid-February. Eurostat will also
report the region's January unemployment rate. It seems like an
underappreciated story. The eurozone has withstood not only the ECB's
tightening but also a stagnant or worse economy without a pick-up in the
unemployment rate, which finished last year at 6.4%. Before the pandemic
struck, the unemployment rate was at 7.5%, which was lowest since 2008. It
reached the EMU-area low of 7.4% in late 2007. It has not been above there
since July 2021.
The euro spiked to three-week
high in Asia on February 22 near $1.0890 but European and North American
participants sold it back to almost $1.08. Still, the technical tone is
solidifying with the momentum indicators turning up and the five-day moving
average crossing above the 20-day moving average for the first time since early
January. The euro recorded its first weekly advance in six weeks. We suspect
the $1.0900-20 area needs to be surpassed to signify something more than broad
consolidation after falling by about 4.5-cents since late last year. A close
below the $1.0790-$1.0800 suggests that forging the low will take more time.
Japan: The signal from the January CPI has
already been given by the Tokyo estimate several weeks ago. That signal is of
disinflationary forces. Due primarily to different weights, the Tokyo CPI is
running a couple of tenths of a percent below the national figures. The January
Tokyo headline and core CPI tumbled to 1.6% from 2.4% and 2.1%, respectively. In
December, the national CPI was 2.6% and the core was 2.3%. Both may have
slipped below 2% last month. This, like recent news that showed the Japanese
economy unexpectedly contracted in Q4 23, could be seen as hampering what had
been expected to be the BOJ's exit from the negative policy rate. We have
argued that rather than an economic issue, the BOJ appears to be approaching it
as a technocratic issue. Negative interest rates making it more difficult to
conduct monetary policy. While the knee-jerk market reaction may disagree, we do not think the sharp drop in January industrial production will change the BOJ's drive either. The earthquake in early January was a significant disruption.
Japan also reports retail
sales. Japanese consumption on a GDP basis contracted for three consecutive
quarters through the end of last year. Consumer spending fell by 0.9% at an
annualized rate it Q4 23, which was the least of the three quarters, even
though retails fell by an average of 1.1% a month, the most in the early days
of Covid. Still, a poor retail sales report could contribute to the negative
sentiment after having been surprised by the Q4 23 economic contraction. While
consumption in Q4 23 was weak, production was strong. Industrial output rose by
an average of 0.6% in Q4 23, the strongest quarterly performance in two years.
The January report estimate is due on February 29. At the same time, Japan will
report January employment figures. The unemployment rate finished last year at
three-year low of 2.4%, despite the back-to-back quarterly contractions. Before
the pandemic, at the end of 2019, it was 2.2%.
US yields rose to new highs for
the year last week and the dollar closed higher last week, as it has done every week so far this year. As we have noted, implied three-month vol is near a
two-year low (~8%). Still, the market
looks orderly, and with negative policy rate, Japan probably does not get a
sympathetic hearing from its counterparts for material intervention. Nevertheless,
the market may turn cautious as the JPY152 area is approached. That capped the
greenback in 2022 and 2023. Not to lean too far ahead of our skis, but we look
for softer data, including US February jobs data that will help cap US
rates and take some pressure off the yen.
United Kingdom: February Nationwide house price index and
January consumer credit and mortgage lending is the not the stuff that
typically moves sterling. The UK holds its third by-election of the month in
Rochdale. The Labour MP passed and hence the byelection. However, what makes it
interesting is that both Labour and the Greens have distanced themselves from
their respective candidates for comments about the Middle East. Meanwhile a
former Labour MP (2010) who was suspended from the party in 2017 (explicit
emails to a 17-year-old girl) is running as the Reform Party candidate (led by
Nigel Farage). The UK holds local elections in May and a national election is
expected to be call later this year.
Sterling rose last week for the
first time since mid-January and its nearly 0.55% gain was the most since
mid-December. The weekly settlement was the highest since January 26. The
momentum indicators have turned up and the five-day moving average pushed
above the 20-day moving average for the first time since early January.
Sterling has recovered from the breakdown to around $1.2520 earlier this month
and it has returned to the middle of the $1.26-$1.28 trading range that
dominated from mid-December through early February. The $1.2750-$1.2800 area
offers what appears to be formidable resistance.
Australia: The Antipodeans are seen as among
the laggards in upcoming easing cycle, ex-Japan. Indeed, the swaps market
continues to price odds of another rate hike by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
with around a 60% chance by the end of May, the last meeting of H1
24. That said, the swap market has a cut fully discounted (-90%) by the end of
November. The futures market shows a clear easing bias for the Reserve Bank of Australia
but does not have the first cut fully discounted until September (though there
is around an 85% chance of a cut in August). Australia's month's CPI measure
(as opposed to the traditional quarterly report) has fallen from 8.4% at the
end of 2022 to 3.4% at the end of last year. The Q4 23 CPI fell to 4.1% from
5.4% in Q3 23. The RBA forecast CPI to fall to 3.2% this year. A faster than
expected decline in inflation could spur speculation of an earlier rate cut,
but the market, like policymakers, seem to put more stock on the quarterly
measures. Australia will also report January retail sales. They were dreadful
in January, falling 2.7% month-over-month. This overstates the weakness of the
Aussie consumer after the recent rate hikes (last one was in November
2023).
The Australian dollar has
strung together three consecutive weekly gains after falling for first five
weeks of the year. It posted its highest settlement since February 1 ahead of the
weekend. It will begin the week with an eight-day rally in tow. The five-day moving average crossed above the 20-day moving average
for the first time since early January and the momentum indicators are trending
higher. The $0.6600-$0.6625 area posted the next technical hurdle. On the
downside, a break of the $6520 area would be disappointing.
Canada: Canada is among the last of the G10
countries to estimate Q4 23 GDP. The December monthly and fourth-quarter GDP
will be reported on February 29. The economy contracted by 1.1% in Q3 23 but
likely returned to growth in Q4. The economy may have grown by around 0.2% in
December after expanding by 0.2% in November, which ended a three-month
stagnation. The median forecast in Blomberg's month survey is for 0.3% in each
of the first two quarters this year. The swaps market has about a 75% chance of
a June cut. It was completely discounted at the start of the month.
The US dollar traced a range on
February 13, the day the January CPI was reported, against the Canadian dollar
that has remained intact since then: roughly CAD1.3440-CAD1.3585. Another way to think of the range is that it is between the 50- and 100-day moving averages (~CAD1.3410-CAD1.3540).The 200-day moving is in the middle of the range The
Canadian dollar continues to be sensitive to the general risk environment. The
rolling 30-day correlation of changes in the exchange rate and the S&P 500
is around 0.56, the upper end of where is has been over the past year.
Mexico: The economic diary is jammed in the
coming days: January trade figures, the central bank's new inflation report,
unemployment, and worker remittances. Also manufacturing PMI and IMEF February
surveys are due. However, the data are unlikely to change the impression that
the Mexican economy is slowing down. The central bank has already signaled that
it is preparing the first rate cut. Even with a quarter-point cut that may be
delivered as soon as next month, Mexico's rates are attractive. Its external
account is solid. Last year, for example, Mexico recorded an average monthly
trade deficit of $455 mln (vs. an average monthly deficit of $2.2 bln in 2022).
Worker remittances averaged nearly $5.3 bln in 2023 (~$4.9 bln average in
2022).
Since mid-January, the US
dollar has recorded lower highs and found support near MXN17.00. We continue to
detect a change in sentiment toward the peso. A down trendline off the late
January high and early February high comes in near MXN17.1170 at the start of
the new week and falls to about MXN17.07 by the end of the week. This month,
the greenback has not closed outside of the MXN17.03-MXN17.20 range. Our bias
is toward an upside break as overweight positions are trimmed. In the futures
market, speculators have the largest net long peso since early 2020.
Three-month implied volatility has fallen below 9% for the first time since
before the pandemic.