October 14th, 2016 6:38 am
Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:
- Ahead of the US retail sales report, the main economic news has been Chinese prices, where the surprise was on the upside
- From the Fed, Yellen and Rosengren speak at a Boston Fed Conference
- Singapore reported advance Q3 GDP growth at 0.6% y/y; MAS also kept policy steady
- Colombia central bank releases its minutes
The dollar is mostly firmer against the majors ahead of US retail sales data. The dollar bloc is outperforming, while the yen and Norwegian krone are underperforming. EM currencies are mixed. THB and MYR are outperforming while SGD and the CEE currencies are underperforming. MSCI Asia Pacific was up 0.2%, as the Nikkei rose 0.5%. MSCI EM is up 0.7%, with Chinese markets up 0.1%. Euro Stoxx 600 is up 1.4% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a higher open. The 10-year UST yield is up 3 bp at 1.77%. Commodity prices are mixed, with oil up 1%, copper down 0.3%, and gold down 0.4%.
The US dollar is firm against most of the major currencies but remains within yesterday’s ranges, which seems somewhat fitting amid the light new stream. The high-yielding Australian and New Zealand dollars are resisting the stronger greenback, while on the week the Aussie and the Canadian dollar are the only majors to gain.
After recovering from $1.2130 to $1.2270, sterling ran out of steam. Near $1.22, it is off about 1.8% this week after last week’s 4.2% drop. It fell at the start of the week but has been consolidating within Tuesday’s range (~$1.2090-$1.2375). Today’s August construction figures were weaker than expected at 1.5% on the month. The median expectation was for a flat report for the second consecutive month. The fact that the July series was revised up to 0.5% offered sterling little consolation.
Sterling is not the weakest of the majors. The Swedish krona has the flag position. It is off a little more than 2% against the dollar this week, including about nearly a quarter percent slippage today. News this week has played on fears that the economic recovery will falter before the inflation cycle can catch up. CPI figures surprised on the downside this week after the previous week’s industrial and service production, and forward-looking industrial orders were all disappointments.
Ahead of the US retail sales report, the main economic news has been Chinese prices, where the surprise was on the upside. Consumer prices rose 1.9% in the year in September after a 1.3% rise in August. The Bloomberg median forecast was 1.6%. Food prices are still an important driver, rising 3.2%. Non-food consumer prices rose 1.6%.
More noteworthy was the fact that producer prices turned positive for the first time since 2012. The 0.1% year-over-year increase follows a 0.8% decline in August. The Bloomberg median forecast was for a 0.3% decline. This is important, especially after yesterday’s unexpectedly weak exports. Some fear increased risks that China will seek to export deflation. The higher than expected inflation readings may keep such anxiety at bay (for the moment).
That said, we note that as the onshore yuan played catch-up with the offshore yuan after last week-long holiday. Recognizing the US dollar’s strength, the yuan is recording its largest weekly loss since January. At the start of the year, it will be recalled that Chinese developments were still shaping the investment climate and risk appetite. Chinese stocks rose 2.0%-2.5% this week.
The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index fell 1.7% this week but snapped a five-day losing streak today with a 0.2% gain. The biggest move in the Asian markets today was the 4.5% rally in Thailand, the biggest in three years. Markets are pricing in a smooth transition following the death of the King, as the military assures stability. Today’s gains still leave the main index off 1.8% for the week.
European bourses are higher, led by the financials. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is up nearly 1.0%, poised to break a three-day slide. The financials are up 1.5%, and Deutsche Bank shares have recouped yesterday’s 2% drop. It has quietly strung together its third weekly advance.
The euro briefly dipped below $1.10 yesterday. Although there has been no follow-through selling today, it has not been able to distance itself from that threshold. There was no follow-through buying either after yesterday’s recovery. A nearby cap has been formed in the $1.1060-$1.1070 area, ahead of the prior support at $1.1080. The trendline that connects the January, June, and July lows was violated earlier in the week. It comes in near $1.1035, and a violation on the weekly charts is thought to have greater significance than only on the daily charts.
Benchmark yields are higher. European bond yields, except for Portugal, are 1-2 bp higher. Portugal’s yields have fallen 5 bp on the day and 12 bp on the week as comments from the finance ministry seemed to ease concern about DBRS review in a week’s time. It is the only one of the four rating agencies that the ECB accepts that regards the country as investment grade. There has been concern that it could lose it. We suspect that at most, DBRS will change the outlook from stable to negative.
UK 10-year gilts were flat coming into today, but the yield is up six basis points. It is the third weekly increase in the UK 10-year yield and sixth of the past seven weeks. During this seven-week run, the 10-year yield has risen from 56 bp to 1.08%.
The US 10-year yield is up three basis points on the day. At 1.78% it is still a couple of basis points below the multi-month high set in the middle of the week. Much rests on the US retail sales report. It is not good enough that more Americans are working a slightly longer week, and getting paid a little more. Households need to consume. Retail sales are around 40% of overall consumption.
After a poor August, Americans are believed to have gone shopping again in September. The headline may be flattered by stronger auto sales and higher gasoline prices. The key, however, is the GDP measure which excludes those two items and others goods, like building materials. After falling for two months, it is expected to rise around 0.4%.
The US reports PPI at the same time as retail sales. Markets are less sensitive to it. However, the takeaway, which will likely be underscored next week, is that US price pressures are building. This is not a “sky is falling” call, just simply point out a gradual trend. It may not yet be fully reflected in the University of Michigan’s inflation expectations measure. The August business inventories will also be incorporated into GDP trackers and forecasts.
From the Fed, Yellen and Rosengren speak at a Boston Fed Conference. Rosengren dissented in favor of an immediate hike. The market is more sensitive to the Chair’s remarks, but she may not address monetary policy in her opening remarks. But we’ll be watching.
Singapore reported advance Q3 GDP growth at 0.6% y/y vs. 1.7% expected. On a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, GDP contracted -4.1% vs. the flat reading that was expected. The MAS kept policy steady, as expected. It maintained its aim for no appreciation of its S$NEER trading band, and appears to be keeping its powder dry in case the economy slows further in 2017. Indeed, it noted that “Growth in the Singapore economy weakened and is not expected to pick up significantly in 2017.” Singapore also reported August retail sales, which came in at -1.0% y/y vs. +0.8% expected.
Colombia central bank releases its minutes. Minutes will be studied for clues about potential easing. CPI rose 7.3% y/y in September, lower than expected and the lowest since December 2015 but it remains well above the 2-4% target range and should preclude any easing near-term. The central bank has been on hold at 7.75% since its last 25 bp hike back in July. The next policy meeting is October 31, and no action is seen. We think the easing cycle will likely begin in Q2 2017.
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on FX