Heightened Speculation of a BOJ Move Tomorrow did not Stop the Nikkei from Rallying or Yen from Slipping
Overview: The US dollar is trading with a mostly
softer bias against the G10 currencies. The notable exceptions are the Japanese
yen and Swiss franc. Ironically, speculation of a Bank of Japan rate hike
appears to have increased, while there is a risk that the Swiss National Bank
cuts rates this week. The Norwegian krone is the strongest of the major
currencies. The central bank meets later this week but is widely expected to
stand pat. The continued rise in oil prices may be buoying it. Most emerging
market currencies are softer.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index
snapped a seven-week advance last week but rebounded today. The Nikkei rallied
nearly 2.2%, its biggest rally in a month. Better industrial production data
from China may have helped the CSI 300 rally nearly 1%. Taiwan's Taiex also
rose 1%. Europe's Stoxx 600 is little changed after falling for the last two sessions. The
US index futures point to a stronger open after faltering at the end of last
week. The 10-year US Treasury yield is virtually unchanged at 4.30%, while
European benchmark yields are mostly slightly firmer in quiet turnover. Gold
slipped to a seven-day low near $2146 but has recovered to return to $2156. Nearby
resistance is seen near $2158 and intraday momentum indicators are stretched.
After rallying nearly 4% last week, May WTI is extend its advance today. It has
reached nearly $81.55, its highest level since last October. Chart resistance
is seen in the $82-$84 area.
Asia Pacific
This week's Bank of Japan
meeting is live in a way it has not been for years. A decision will be announced the first
thing tomorrow. There have been several local press reports saying
that the BOJ will in fact hike rates tomorrow and some bank economists have
changed their calls to tomorrow from April. Despite the uncertainty, a few
things seem clearer. First, lifting the target rate from below zero is not the
start of an extended normalization process. The swaps market sees the year-end
target rate around 0.25%. The effective rate is currently less than -0.01%. The
two-year note rose to around 0.20% from zero in mid-January and settled
slightly below there last week. Second, the prospect of a rate hike in Japan
has not deterred Japanese investors from buying foreign bonds. They have bought
slightly more than JPY2 trillion (~$13.5 bln) of foreign bonds as the
speculation of a BOJ hike has increased over the past two weeks. Third, the
upward revision to Q4 capex meant that the world's third-largest economy grew
slightly in Q4 23 rather than contract slightly. However, the economy appears
to be contracting here in Q1. Fourth, Prime Minister Kishida and his cabinet
continue to see weak public support. Talk now is a national election could
follow the LDP leadership contest late this year.
Like the eurozone, the
Chinese economy appears to be stabilizing. The February data popped, led by a 7% year-to-date,
year-over-year rise in industrial output, compared with the median forecast of
5.2% in Bloomberg's survey Meanwhile, retail sales continues to
rise much quicker than investment (fixed assets, excluding rural areas). Retail
sales rose 5.5%, slightly slower than anticipated while capex rose 4.2% (3.2%
expected). Separately, to argue that Beijing does not allow access to US
platforms such as Google, Facebook, Instagram, and X and therefore in the name
of reciprocity, the US will block access to Chinese platforms is one thing,
though few seem to understand that TikTok is banned in China. Instead, the US
wraps itself in an ever-expanding cloak of national security, and the former
Treasury Secretary who first sought to ban TikTok is now reportedly leading a
team of investors seeking to buy TikTok. The US House of Representatives, in
what may be a rare example of bipartisanship during the election year, passed
the bill handily 352-65 in the middle of last week. Beijing could block the
sale, but it is not clear that the US Senate is prepared to approve the
measure.
The outcome of Reserve Bank
of Australia will be
known early Tuesday in Australia. That said, there is practically no chance of
a change. The futures market has an 80% chance of a cut in June and the first
cut is not fully discounted until September. For the entire year, the market
has one cut priced in and around an 85% chance of a second cut. Australia
reports the February employment data on Thursday. Poor jobs growth will likely
weigh on the exchange rate. Australia loss 67k full-time positions over the
past six months. The unemployment rate bottomed at 3.4% in 2022 and was at 3.5%
as recently as June 2023. It rose to 4.1% in January.
Rising US rates trumped
speculation about the end of the Bank of Japan's negative-interest-rate policy.
Last week, the dollar
rose around 1.35% against the Japanese yen, its biggest weekly gain since mid-January.
It stalled ahead of the weekend near JPY149.20, the (61.8%) retracement of the
decline from the February 28 high near JPY150.85. It reached almost JPY149.35
today in Asia Pacific turnover and recorded the low there too near JPY148.90. Consolidation
appears to be the most likely scenario in the hours ahead of the BOJ's
announcement. The Australian dollar fell to six-day lows before the
weekend. It approached $0.6550 to meet the (61.8%) retracement objective of
the rally from the March 5 low near $0.6480. After the low was set, the Aussie
encountered sellers a little above $0.6570 but rose to almost $0.6775 today.
The 20- and 200-day moving averages converge around $0.6560. The dollar rose
to a seven-day high against the Chinese yuan, slightly above CNY7.1980. The
CNY7.20 cap remains intact, as it has since first being tested two months ago.
The PBOC fixed the dollar at CNY7.0943 (CNY7.0975 on Friday) compared the
average in the Bloomberg survey of CNY7.1993 (CNY7.2018 on Friday). Against the
offshore yuan, the dollar also rose to a seven-day high near CNH7.2080. The
high this quarter was in mid-February (~CNH7.2335).
Europe
Three G10 central banks in
Europe meet this week and they all meet on Thursday. Norway's Norges Bank and the Bank of
England are widely seen to be standing pat. We suspect that if there is a
surprise could come from the third, the Swiss National Bank. The economy has slowed,
and inflation is the envy of most other countries at 1.2% (EU harmonized
measure) and a 1.1% core rate. A cut would also be defensive on ideas that it
does not meet again until June 20, two weeks after the ECB meets and is not
expected to cut its key rates. If it waits and cuts after the ECB, the risk of
that the franc strengthens.
Kissinger once quipped,
"Who do I call when I call Europe?" Despite a European Commission, and
European Central Bank, and a European Parliament there is still more than
kernel of truth in the question. Given the numerous presidents and forums, it
is difficult to know which is key. Now that Sunak has ruled out national
elections with the local elections on May 2, the UK can set a date for the
European Political Community, which includes the EU and a few other countries,
including the UK and Turkey. Meanwhile, at the end of last week the Weimar
Triangle (Germany, France, and Poland) met to discuss Ukraine and show a solid
European front that seemed to be challenged recently by Macron's reluctance to
rule out French troops in Ukraine (in what seemed like a bid to preserve
strategic ambiguity). An agreement was reached for Germany and France to begin
producing weapons in Ukraine.
The euro was confined to
about a quarter-of-a-cent below $1.09 before the weekend. It is in a slightly tighter range so
far today. The euro's first weekly pullback in three weeks met the (38.2%)
retracement of its rally from mid-February low slightly below $1.07. It was
confined to a little more than a 15-tick range in North America last Friday. It
is within that range today and is knocking on $1.09 in the European morning. A
move above there may find fresh offers in the $1.0910-20 area. Sterling was
also confined in a narrow range at the end of last week, in a little more than
a third-of-a-cent range above $1.2725. That was a six-day low for sterling
too, and it was set in dull early afternoon dealings in North America. The
$1.2725 level held today but sterling is struggling ahead of $1.2750, and the
intraday momentum indicators have turned lower. Support near $1.2700 could be
tested in North America.
America
This week's FOMC meeting
illustrates a profound shift that has taken place under the Chair Powell's
watch. The dot plot has
been elevated from a simple calculation of the different officials' individual
views that was not emphasized by Bernanke or Yellen to a powerful communication
tool. In fact, with the acceptance that there will be not policy change, the
focus is almost exclusively on the dot plot. In particular, the issue is
whether the median dot changes from December when three cuts were thought to be
appropriate. It seems strange to hear the press and other observers talk about
a 0.1% miss on CPI and PPI to be called "hotter" but that reflects
current sentiment. For the first time since last October, the Fed funds futures
are no pricing in at least three rate cuts this year. We are concerned that the
pendulum of market sentiment swings too far in both directions. Pricing in
almost 170 bp of cuts this year, as the market did in mid-January was too much.
We do not think that the data has deviated much from what Fed officials
expected and therefore do not expect the median Fed forecast of 75 bp of cuts
this year to change. It seems clear that the labor market is gradually slowing.
The median dot in December was for the unemployment rate to be at 4.1% at the
end of this year. With a 3.9% rate in February, the median dot looks low. February
retail sales were weaker than expected and have fallen so far here in Q1. Retail
sales account for around half of personal consumption.
This week's Canadian data is
likely to tell a similar story as we saw in the US last week. Inflation is sticky while demand is
softening. Canada reports February CPI tomorrow. The headline rate may rise
back above 3% from 2.9% in January. The underlying core measures look unchanged,
while January retail sales likely gave back around half of December's 0.9%, and
even more when autos are excluded. There are three Latam central banks that
meet this week. Brazil and Colombia are likely to continue their easing cycles
with another half-point cut. Mexico is a closer call, and the swaps market
looks split, which warns of the risk of sharp price action regardless of
Thursday's decision. We look for the first rate cut, a quarter-point move, to
be delivered.
The US dollar reached a new
seven-day high against the Canadian dollar before the weekend slightly above
CAD1.3550. It settled
firmly as the risk-off move associated with the second consecutive weekly
decline in the Nasdaq (first back-to-back weekly loss since October). Friday's
high has held so far today. A move above it signals a retest on the CAD1.3600
that provided a cap in late February and earlier this month. The greenback
would need to break below CAD1.3460, last week's low, to be of technical
importance. The US dollar consolidated in its trough against the
Mexican peso. It set the low for the year last Thursday near MXN16.6470. It
has not risen above MXN16.74 since then and tested it earlier today. The dollar
has not closed above its five-day moving average this month, though it has been
frayed on an intraday basis. It comes in now near MXN16.7190. Perhaps, a
settlement above it would be among the first signs of the steep downtrend
losing momentum. The dollar fell last week for the third consecutive week and
the sixth week of the past seven. Meanwhile, note in another fissure in the
BRICS, Brazil has official launched anti-dumping investigations against China,
focusing on industrial goods, including metal sheets, pre-painted steel,
chemicals, and tires. Last year, Brazil had a $51 bln trade surplus with China.