Deflation Protection in Europe Gets Cheaper

May 2nd, 2016 6:33 am

Via Bloomberg:

May  2, 2016 — 6:03 AM EDT

Signs that bond traders are becoming more confident that the European Central Bank’s unprecedented stimulus will boost inflation are gathering as derivatives which protect against deflation dropped to a 17-month low.

Even after euro-area price growth declined last month more than economists forecast, traders are betting on a rebound. Investors are now paying the least since December 2014 to protect against deflation over 10 years. This has been helped by Brent crude oil futures climbing to the highest level in almost six months last week. Speaking after officials maintained stimulus measures at last month’s policy meeting, ECB President Mario Draghi said he expected inflation to accelerate in the second half of 2016.

The ECB’s goal for price growth is just below 2 percent and policy makers have cut interest rates and expanded the asset-purchase program in an effort to revive economic growth and avert deflation. While market indicators rise, Draghi will have to keep options for more stimulus open to ensure expectations stay anchored, according to Hendrik Lodde, a fixed-income strategist at DZ Bank AG.

“We expect slowly rising inflation rates in the second part of 2016,” Frankfurt-based Lodde said. “The base effect of the oil price reduction will start to end in September. The market is not pricing in a rapid return of inflation to the ECB’s target rate. The central bank will probably try to pull out all the verbal stops in the coming weeks to raise inflation expectations.”

The cost of a derivative that pays out should the price of a basket of goods cost less in a decade than it does today has fallen to 27 basis points, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the lowest closing price since Dec. 3, 2014.

Other indicators on the outlook for inflation have also increased. The five-year, five-year forward inflation-swap rate climbed to a seven-week high of 1.47 percent Monday. Germany’s 10-year break-even rate, calculated from the yield difference between bunds and index-linked debt was at 1.09 percent, matching the highest closing level since Dec. 10.

The yield on benchmark German 10-year bunds fell two basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 0.25 percent as of 10:59 a.m. London time. Euro-area sovereign bonds fell 1.1 percent in April, their biggest monthly decline since August, according to Bloomberg World Bond Indexes, even as the ECB increased its asset-purchase program to 80 billion euros a month.

Deflation Protection in Europe Gets Cheaper

May 2nd, 2016 6:32 am

Via Bloomberg:

2, 2016 — 6:03 AM EDT

 

Signs that bond traders are becoming more confident that the European Central Bank’s unprecedented stimulus will boost inflation are gathering as derivatives which protect against deflation dropped to a 17-month low.

Even after euro-area price growth declined last month more than economists forecast, traders are betting on a rebound. Investors are now paying the least since December 2014 to protect against deflation over 10 years. This has been helped by Brent crude oil futures climbing to the highest level in almost six months last week. Speaking after officials maintained stimulus measures at last month’s policy meeting, ECB President Mario Draghi said he expected inflation to accelerate in the second half of 2016.

The ECB’s goal for price growth is just below 2 percent and policy makers have cut interest rates and expanded the asset-purchase program in an effort to revive economic growth and avert deflation. While market indicators rise, Draghi will have to keep options for more stimulus open to ensure expectations stay anchored, according to Hendrik Lodde, a fixed-income strategist at DZ Bank AG.

“We expect slowly rising inflation rates in the second part of 2016,” Frankfurt-based Lodde said. “The base effect of the oil price reduction will start to end in September. The market is not pricing in a rapid return of inflation to the ECB’s target rate. The central bank will probably try to pull out all the verbal stops in the coming weeks to raise inflation expectations.”

The cost of a derivative that pays out should the price of a basket of goods cost less in a decade than it does today has fallen to 27 basis points, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the lowest closing price since Dec. 3, 2014.

Other indicators on the outlook for inflation have also increased. The five-year, five-year forward inflation-swap rate climbed to a seven-week high of 1.47 percent Monday. Germany’s 10-year break-even rate, calculated from the yield difference between bunds and index-linked debt was at 1.09 percent, matching the highest closing level since Dec. 10.

The yield on benchmark German 10-year bunds fell two basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 0.25 percent as of 10:59 a.m. London time. Euro-area sovereign bonds fell 1.1 percent in April, their biggest monthly decline since August, according to Bloomberg World Bond Indexes, even as the ECB increased its asset-purchase program to 80 billion euros a month.

More FX

May 2nd, 2016 6:25 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Drivers for the Week Ahead

  • The US jobs data is typically the data highlight of the first week of a new month; it has lost its mojo
  • Another highlight at the start of a new month are the European PMIs, and so too this week
  • The UK will be very much in the limelight this week; economics and politics will command attention.
  • The Reserve Bank of Australia will make its policy announcement early on May 3 in Sydney
  • Before the weekend, the US Treasury released its assessment of the international economy and the FX market as is required by Congress (since 1988)
  • Over the weekend, China reported its official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs; the EM rally continues

The dollar is broadly weaker against the majors.  The Swedish krona and Kiwi are outperforming, while the Norwegian krone and sterling are underperforming.  EM currencies are mostly firmer.  The CEE currencies are outperforming while PHP and INR are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was down 1.2%, with the Nikkei falling 3.1%.  MSCI EM is down 0.2%, with Chinese markets closed for holiday.  Euro Stoxx 600 is down 0.1% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a lower open.  The 10-year UST yield is down 1 bp at 1.82%.  Commodity prices are mostly lower, with oil and copper down modestly.  

The die is cast.  The Federal Reserve is on an extended pause after the rate hike last December. The market remains convinced that the risks of a June hike are negligible (~ less than 12% chance).   The ECB has yet to implement the TLTRO and corporate bond purchase initiatives that were announced in March.  The impact of its programs has to be monitored before being evaluated.  It is unreasonable to expect any new initiative in the coming months.  

The Bank of Japan did not take advantage of the opportunity to ease policy as it cut both growth and inflation forecasts.  The focus ahead of the G7 meeting in late May, being hosted by Japan, will likely be on fiscal policy, where the Abe government is reportedly trying to cobble together a front-loaded spending bill for earthquake relief and economic support.  There have been some calls for a JPY20 trillion (~$185 bln) package, in part funded by a new bond issuance that would be included in the BOJ asset purchase program.  (Note that Japanese markets are close for a couple of days this week for Golden Week celebrations).

The US jobs data is typically the data highlight of the first week of a new month.  It has lost its mojo.  This is more because of the Federal Reserve’s reaction function than the ADP estimate that comes out a couple of days earlier.  The Fed accepts that the labor market continues to strengthen.  The nearest real-time reading of the labor market, the weekly jobless claims, has recently falling to its lowest level since 1973, and continuing claims are at 16-year lows.  It is clearly not sufficient for the FOMC to lift rates.  

The March core PCE deflator stands at 1.6%, which is a little higher than prevailed when the Fed met last December.  Similarly, the 10-year breakeven (10-year conventional yield minus the 10-year inflation-linked note) is also around 30 bp from where it was when the FOMC hiked.  

Another 200k increase in nonfarm payrolls is not a game-changer.  Even modest earnings growth is unlikely to do much to help the dollar.  The FOMC has already taken this on board.  The issue is not jobs or income; it is consumption and investment.  We suspect that the dollar risk is asymmetrical.  It is more likely to be sold on disappointment than to rally on a stronger report.  

Another highlight at the start of a new month are the European PMIs, and so too this week.  The eurozone manufacturing PMI showed a small improvement from the flash reading.  The tick up to 517 from the preliminary reading of 51.5 (and 51.6 in March) reflects Italian and Spanish upticks, even as the German and French results were shaved.

Given the seeming urgency of the ECB and the doom-and-gloom commentary that continues to write eulogies for EMU, one would hardly know that growth in the eurozone in Q1 reached 0.6%.  This outpaced the UK, which slowed to a 0.4% pace.  Rather than report the quarter-over-quarter pace, America reports an annualized figure.  The world’s largest economy grew at an annualized pace of 0.5%.  Incidentally, the Atlanta Fed’s GDP tracker projected 0.6% and the NY Fed’s version, 0.7%.  The point is that eurozone growth looks fairly stable near levels that economists estimate is near trend growth (despite unemployment being above 10% in the region).  

The UK will be very much in the limelight this week.  Economics and politics will command attention.  The UK reports three PMIs; manufacturing, construction, and services.  The gradual slowdown is set to continue.  The composite PMI, which provides an overall reading, is expected to slip to 53.2 from 53.6.  It averaged 54.2 in Q1 and 55.5 over the past year.    

Many observers are attributing the slowdown to next month’s referendum.  We are not convinced, as the moderation began in the middle of last year.  Moreover, at 2.1%, the Q1 year-over-year pace matches the five-year average.  An exogenous factor (referendum anxiety? in this case) is not needed to explain the quarter-to-quarter vagaries in a GDP estimate, which like all GDP estimates may give a greater sense of precision than justified by the methodology.  

The referendum has dominated political discussions.  It was exposing fissures in the coalition that makes up the Tory Party.  It seems to be an open question whether the relationship can heal after the referendum.  A vote to leave the EU over the government’s wishes is a vote of no-confidence.  A political crisis would ensue, and either national elections are called, or the Brexit-wing of the Tory Party replaces Cameron as party leader.  Under such a scenario, many suggest the current London Mayor Boris Johnson would be a top contender.  

However, in the week ahead it is the Labour Party’s difficulties that come to the fore.  Labour Party leader Corbyn is from the left-wing of the party while many of the large donors are considerably more moderate.  This fissure has seen donations to the Labour Party as such dry up, with a few moderate candidates who can challenge Corbyn have been favored.  

Corbyn’s critics have found a new front of attack in recent days.  The former mayor of London, Ken Livingstone made some injudicious and controversial remarks that brought fresh attention to an undercurrent of anti-Semitism hidden by anti-Zionist rhetoric that is thought to percolate in parts of the Labour Party.  

The timing is awkward, to say the least.  One of the key races is for Johnson’s replacement as London Mayor.  Sadiq Khan is running for Labour, while Zac Goldsmith, from a prominent Jewish family, is the Conservative candidate.  The polls indicate Khan is a 20 percentage point favorite.  

Typically, the opposition party picks up several hundred local council seats.  If Labour does worse than average, Corbyn’s critics will blame him, and efforts to replace him may intensify.   The most recent polls show a drift toward “Brexit” unwinding part of the previous tilt toward “Remain” in mid-April.  Given the margin of error, many of polls are a virtual dead heat.  The outcome may be determined by how the undecided voters break, for which it may be too early to see a clear pattern.

Sterling’s gains have lifted it to four-month highs against the dollar but may reflect the broadly weaker US dollar tone more than UK positive developments.  Many observers focus on the benchmark three-month tenor in the options market.  Seeing lower implied volatility and a smaller premium for puts over calls, some conclude the market angst about Brexit have eased.  However, the referendum is within two months, and two-month options are telling a different story.  Implied volatility is at six-year highs, and the skew in the options market has never been larger.  

The Reserve Bank of Australia will make its policy announcement early on May 3 in Sydney.  A weaker than expected Q1 CPI report (1.3% vs. 1.7% in Q4 15) spurred speculation of a rate cut.   We are less convinced but see risk of a rate cut later this year.  In recent months, the RBA has recognized that subdued price pressures give it scope to ease policy should it be necessary to provide greater monetary accommodation.  

The Q1 CPI creates more scope but not necessarily a greater need.  The RBA may not have a sense of urgency.  Like other central banks who have met recently, watch-and-wait stance may be infectious.  Several hours before the RBA’s decision, March retail sales will be reported, and the median estimate is for a 0.3% rise after a flat reading in February.  The 0.3% increase would match the six, 12, and 24-month averages.  

Canada also will report its April employment data at the end of the week ahead.  The risk is that the March surge is corrected.  Recall that in March, StatsCan estimated that 35.3k full-time job created and 40.6k jobs overall.  The median guesstimate on Bloomberg is for a 5k increase in jobs in April.  The interest rate on June BA futures (three-month banker acceptances) have continued to trend higher, reaching 1% at the end of last week.  It reflects a 50 bp backing up in yields, as US rates have drifted lower.  

Before the weekend, the US Treasury released its assessment of the international economy and the foreign exchange market as is required by Congress (since 1988).  A change was necessitated by recent legislation in the direction of forcing the executive branch (Treasury) to be more forceful.  Under the previous framework, no country was cited for manipulation in the currency market since China in 1994.  

Treasury evaluated countries by three criteria:  The size of its bilateral trade surplus with the US, the country’s current account surplus and repeated efforts depreciate its currency.  There are three numbers here to note:  20, 3 and 2.  

Bilateral trade imbalances of $20 bln of more will draw attention, which may mean smaller countries are vulnerable to this criteria.  Also, it is not clear if the US Treasury will take into account the new OECD database that looks at trade flows in terms of value-added.  Another problem with a bilateral trade balance criteria is the importance of inter-firm trade.  US multinationals are not only large exporters, for example, they are also larger importers and often from their affiliates.

A current account surplus more than 3% will also draw US attention.  In contrast, the EC rules on imbalances, which it does not appear to be enforcing, are for a 6% imbalance.

The US Treasury is wary of countries intervening in the foreign exchange market, even if countries invest the proceeds of intervention in US bonds.  If a country is engaged in intervention that leads to a rise of foreign assets of 2% of GDP, it meets the third criteria.  

If the three criteria are met, it would force the President to initiate discussions.  Possible actions could include cutting US development assistance and exclude companies from the violating country from government contracts.  

In the report, the US Treasury indicated that no country met all three criteria, but said that three countries, China, Japan, and Germany would be monitored closely.  It cited their trade and current account positions (along with South Korea).  Taiwan was cited for its large current account surplus and its persistent intervention.  

South Korea also intervenes more than US thinks is justified.  The US Treasury encouraged South Korea to limit its intervention to only disorderly markets.  It judged the yen market to be orderly, which means it would lobby against MOF intervention.  The report sought more clarity over China’s goals and looked for additional real yuan appreciation over the medium term.  It argued that Germany had scope for to implement measures to boost demand.  

In many ways outside of a new framework, there is little in the report that seems surprising. Therefore, we would not expect much of a market reaction.  

These five countries have been discussed in recent US Treasury reports.  The advantage of the criteria is that it offers a quantitative framework, which may be helpful, especially to avoid by stringent legislation, even if they are subjective.  On the other hand, there still a network of obligations and responsibilities under treaties, such as the WTO, that takes precedent over national action.  The IMF may be in a better position to issue an authoritative report that would not be rebuffed on grounds that it is simply an expression of national interest.  China may try to dilute the significance of the US Treasury report by issuing its own.

Over the weekend, China reported its official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs.  Many had expected a small improvement but instead the manufacturing PMI was essentially unchanged.  It slipped 0.1 to 50.1.  The details seem somewhat worse than the headline.  Although production slipped to 52.2 from 52.3, employment continued to contract (47.4 vs. 48.2), new orders and new export orders slipped, the order backlog continued to dry up, falling to 44.8.  

The non-manufacturing sector, which includes services, is faring better as Chinese officials try to facilitate a structural shift in the economy away from manufacturing.  The non-manufacturing PMI stood at 53.5 in April, down from 53.8 in March.  The contraction in new orders (48.7 from 50.8) is worrisome.  The increase in construction (59.4 vs 58.0) is consistent with a recovery in property and real estate that has recently been reported.  

Chinese markets will be closed for a few days this week for an extended May Day celebration (whose origins are to be found in an anarchist confrontation with police in Chicago).  Nevertheless, the government is set to introduce a VAT for services (instead of the current tax on income). It will generate around CNY500 bln in savings, worth an estimated 0.7% of GDP.  Although many investors may not be aware of it, it does not provide net new stimulus as the government had already included it in the 3% (of GDP) this year’s budget deficit target.

The EM rally continues, and shows no signs of letting up.  As long as the Fed is seen as retaining its dovish bias, the global liquidity outlook remains very EM-supportive.  Valuations have become quite rich for a variety of EM assets, but there has yet to be a significant market correction that would help alleviate this.  The Czech, Polish, and Mexican central banks meet this week, no action is seen by any of them.  Many EM countries will report April CPI prints this week.  With the exception of Colombia, all are expected to show a low inflation environment that should allow the respective central banks to maintain a dovish bias.

 

Early FX

May 2nd, 2016 6:21 am

Via Kit Juckes at SocGen:

<http://www.sgmarkets.com/r/?id=h10680d90,16d0aba3,16d0aba4&p1=136122&p2=0dcd1688bddcd3dd8f5af3e909200995>

A Bank Holiday in London is going to give markets a quiet start to the week, and there isn’t much on the data calendar to really shake things up. As ever, the first week of the month will see much attention paid to US non-farm payrolls, and nowadays, to wage growth. We’re looking for a 228k increase in jobs, a dip to 4.9% in the unemployment rate and 2.4% on average hourly earnings. i.e. solid jobs growth and some modest tightening in the labour market.

The Asian session sees Japanese equities lower and the yen stronger – plus ca change. Oil prices are a softer and bond yields are a touch lower to the extent that there’s really a market. All a little risk-off-ish.

As far as data so far today and over the weekend are concerned, we’ve already seen manufacturing PMIs edge down towards but not through 50 in China (50.1) and India (50.5) while staying below in Japan (48.2). Sweden, Norway, Hungary and Switzerland all publish PMIs this morning, as well as Euro-member countries but those are less exciting given we’ve seen the composite figure. And this afternoon, we get the US figure (which we expect to see fall to 51.0).

It’s the softness of the Japanese data which stands out among those PMIs and in an update of Fulcrum’s growth ‘nowcasts’ discussed by Gavyn Davis in yesterday’s FT. The piece has a cheerful title – Fading risks of global recession. Global growth is back close to trend (better in China’s). The unsustainability of that debt-fuelled Chinese bounce will remain a hot topic, of course. But Japan is back in the mire with falling output. Recession, capital outflows and long speculative positions, yet still the yen rallies towards USD/JPY 100. A hideous cocktail of investors fleeing the equity market and taking off yen hedges as a result, the correlation betweek Nikkei and Yen, and the divergence between Japanese real rates and those anywhere else, is doing its work.

I’m sidelined and while that’s a bit pathetic, I can’t see any alternative. USD/JPY looks like a lemming hurling itself off a cliff, and the yen bulls may end up feeling a bit like lemmings in due course.

The other striking feature of the Fulcrum nowcasts, is that UK growth goes on slowing. We’re actually expecting a pick-up in the UK PMI to 51.4 tomorrow but the UK economy has suffered though a toxic referendum campaign. The one weekend opinion poll I saw was at odds with Bookmakers’ growing confidence in a vote to remain in the EU and I doubt we’re ‘done’ with either pre-vote nerves or sterling weakness. Are all the shorts out? I don’t know, but when they are we will see EUR/GBP head higher again.

The growing importance of real rates is dragging the dollar down and flushing out any remaining dollar longs. EUR/USD is breaking higher and a final spike may be the chance to get short again, but I won’t rush in too early. The DXY chart still looks ominous. The RBA is meeting tonight and will probably leave rates on hold despite the CPI data last week. That would give AUD a lift. Our positions – still short GBP/NOK, EUR/RUB, USD/CAD, DKK/SEK and NZD/USD.

Commercial Real Estate Lending Restraint

May 1st, 2016 7:41 pm

Via the FT:

Top US bankers have sounded caution over commercial real estate lending as concerns rise that bubbles are forming in parts of the country’s property market.

Lenders have helped fund a boom in recent years in cities such as New York and Miami, where luxury high rises have sprung up across the skyline.

But executives at several banks signalled during results season that they were tightening up standards for CRE lending, which includes mortgages secured against big apartment and office developments.

“We want to be careful on CRE,” said Brian Moynihan, chief executive of Bank of America, which has a $58bn commercial real estate portfolio.

Richard Davis, chief executive of US Bancorp, told investors that the country’s fifth-largest lender by assets was being “very watchful”.

“We’re protecting what we have, and probably being more careful,” he added. “A lot of the banks are growing that [CRE] a lot. It’s been flat for us.”

Richard Fairbank, founder of Capital One, the eighth-biggest US lender, said last week that “competition is pressuring loan terms and pricing” in CRE.

Still, he said that also applied to loans for commercial and industrial businesses, and added there were “good growth opportunities” in some areas.

Rising rental incomes have made CRE look attractive at a time when rock bottom interest rates have reduced returns on offer from other assets.

Property prices have swelled, helping push up the value of banks’ CRE loans by 11 per cent in the year to March to $1.83tn, according to data from the US Federal Reserve.

Banks increased their share of the US market from 34 per cent in 2014 to 41 per cent last year, according to Real Capital Analytics, the commercial real estate data specialists.

They took share from originators of commercial mortgage-backed securities, which were disrupted by turmoil in the financial markets. Their share dropped from 27 per cent to 16 per cent.

In recent months the property market has softened, partly because difficult market financial conditions and the tumbling oil price have deterred cash-rich foreign buyers.

In February, sales of offices, apartment blocks, hotels and other commercial buildings collapsed by 46 per cent from the year before to $25.5bn, according to Real Capital Analytics — the biggest drop since 2008.

Meanwhile, banks are under pressure from regulators which have warned about risky lending practices.

Watchdogs including the Fed have raised concerns about slipping underwriting standards at some institutions and have threatened to force them to raise additional capital if necessary.

Signs exist that banks are taking a tougher line. A survey of senior loan officers by the Fed in the first quarter found a net 23 per cent were tightening standards for “multifamily” projects — big apartment blocks. That was up from 7.5 per cent three months earlier.

We’re protecting what we have, and probably being more careful

Richard Davis, chief executive of US Bancorp

Joseph DePaolo, chief executive of Signature Bank, said the New York-based lender was “being more selective”, although he added: “There is weakness in the higher end of the large-dollar co-ops, the large-dollar condos, but that’s not the market that we’re in.”

Peter Koh, chief credit officer of Wilshire Bancorp, said there were some “red flags” and added the Los Angeles-based bank was planning to “diversify away from CRE”.

“It’s doing well in some ways, but … there is talk that some areas of the CRE market seem to be a little bit frothy,” he said.

Kevin Hester, chief lending officer at Home Bancshares, said the Arkansas-based lender had “embarked on an effort to enhance our risk management practices” in CRE.

He said the bank was “comfortable with our CRE” exposure but cited regulatory scrutiny. “We know it’s going to be a focus when the examiners come in next. They told us that.”

Stagnant Wages

April 30th, 2016 7:07 am

Via WSJ:

Years of solid job gains are failing to produce a breakout in wages, suppressing the spark needed for a sustained pickup in economic growth.

U.S. employers for the past four years created more than 200,000 jobs a month on average. That has driven the unemployment rate down to 5% last month from above 8% in early 2012.

But wages have shown little progress. Wages and salaries for private-sectors workers advanced 2% in the first quarter from a year earlier, the Labor Department said Friday. The measure has grown near that rate, on average, since the start of 2012.

The U.S. economy, like much of the globe, is stuck in a slow-growth rut. Turmoil overseas and still-weak commodity prices are preventing the manufacturing, trade and energy sectors from supporting growth. That leaves U.S. consumers to boost the expansion. But without accelerating wages, it’s difficult for them to step up spending.

“We continue to be on track for very slow progress,” said BNP Paribas economist Laura Rosner. “That’s reflected in the lack of wage growth.”

Economists harbor little hope for a significant economic rebound this spring, though they do expect some pickup after a disappointing winter performance when the economy expanded at a 0.5% pace. Forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers projects gross domesticproduct to advance at a 2.1% pace in the second quarter. GDP figures are adjusted for price changes. Such anacceleration would only bring growth roughly back in line with the overallpace of the lackluster expansion.

Overall compensation for all workers, a figure that includes benefits, rose 1.9% from a year earlier, the Labor Department said. Federal Reserve officials watch the gauge for signs of labor-cost inflation.

The reading has been consistently stronger than overall inflation. Consumer prices rose 0.8% from a year earlier in March, a separate Commerce Department report said Friday. But the compensation growth remains small compared with the pace of increases during the previous expansion. From 2002 through 2007 compensation averaged better than 3% annual growth.

Another measure of wages, average hourly earnings for private-sector workers, shows slightly stronger gains, up 2.3% in March from a year earlier. But that, too, is little changed from recent years. Four years ago, in March 2012, the annual gain was 2.1%.

Some employers that hire low-wage workers say they are seeing increased pressures tied to minimum-wage increases in 26 states since the start of 2014. But other firms say there’s been little change.

Wage pressures are “nothing really any different than we’ve seen in the past,” Jeff Shaw, executive vice president for store operations at O’Reilly Automotive Inc., told investors Thursday. “There’s always a scramble for great people in the market. But…really no changes that we’ve seen.”

Several factors are constraining wage growth.

The unemployment rate might not fully reflect the degree of slack in the labor market. Some older workers and those displaced during the recession have returned to the workforce recently, and that makes it difficult for existing workers to demand higher pay.

And productivity growth in many service fields has been low, meaning even small wage gains can feel expensive for employers in those sectors, said BNP’s Ms. Rosner. That could partially reflect global cost pressures due to services that can more easily be provided from overseas, via the Internet and call centers, she said.

Weak wage gains are at least partially responsible for lackluster spending. Overall consumer outlays increased just 0.1% in March from February. Accounting for price increases, spending was flat for the second time in three months, Commerce Department data showed. The same report showed consumers are increasing savings at a faster rate than spending, a potential sign of shaky confidence.

The University of Michigan’s gauge of U.S. consumer sentiment, also released Friday, declined in April to its lowest level in seven months.

“Consumer mood and spending have been rather subdued recently due to volatility in the stock market and rising pump prices, despite well received employment reports,” said IHS economist Chris Christopher. But he forecasts better April spending, “so long as the stock market behaves itself, second-quarter consumer spending is likely to be significantly stronger than the first quarter.”

Write to Eric Morath at [email protected]

Weekend Data Preview

April 29th, 2016 1:16 pm

Via Robert Sinche at Amherst Pierpont Securities:

CHINA: The Bberg consensus expects the official Manufacturing PMI will have inched up to 50.3 in April from 50.2 in March, a modest sign that growth is stabilizing, while there is no consensus estimate for the Non-Manufacturing PMI, which rebounded to 53.8 in March.

AUSTRALIA: The AiG Performance of Manufacturing Index for April will follow an unsustainably strong 58.1 reading in March. The Melbourne Institute of Inflation (official data is quarterly) was down to 1.7% in March. Finally, the NAB Business Conditions Index for April will follow a surprising surge to an 8-year high in March – a sign of a China recovery?

S. KOREA: The April Manufacturing PMI will follow a 49.5 reading in March that was the 3rd consecutive reading below 50. The Bberg consensus expects that April Exports will have fallen -10.3% YOY, worse than the -8.1% YOY drop in March, suggesting that the relative strength of the KRW has been hurting competiveness.

INDIA: The Manufacturing PMI rebounded to 52.4 in March, the strongest since last July, as the impact of the New Year holiday across Asia faded and signs of a general growth pickup broadened.

TAIWAN: The April Manufacturing PMI will follow a rebound to 51.1 in March after having fallen below 50 in February.

JAPAN: The final Manufacturing PMI will follow the preliminary 48.0 reported last week, a clear disappointment across the region.

EURO ZONE: The Bberg consensus expects the final Manufacturing PMIs to be confirmed for the Euro Zone (51.5), Germany (51.9) and France (disappointing at 48.3).

SPAIN: The Bberg consensus expects the April Manufacturing PMI to slip slightly to 53.0 from 53.4 in March.

ITALY: The Bberg consensus expects the April Manufacturing PMI to slip to 53.0 from 53.5 in March.

SWEDEN: The Bberg consensus expects the April Manufacturing PMI to slip slightly to 53.0 from 53.3 in March. It seems the magic number is 53!

SWITZERLAND: The Bberg consensus expects the April Manufacturing PMI to slip to 52.9 from 53.4 in March as the strong CHF remains a consistent concern for producers.

Steve Stanley noted that the March data showed that consumption softened late in 1Q but income growth accelerated. After adjustment for inflation, the gap between real income and spending did widen (higher savings), leaving added potential for spending improvement during the months ahead; spending had tracked wage & salary income through mid 2014, but higher savings has widened the gap over the last two years.

GDP Now Q2 Forecast

April 29th, 2016 11:16 am

Via the Atlanta Fed:

Latest forecast: 1.8 percent — April 29, 2016

The first GDPNow model forecast for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2016 is 1.8 percent on April 29. The final model nowcast for first-quarter real GDP growth was 0.6 percent, 0.1 percentage points above the advance estimate of 0.5 percent released on Thursday by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

The next GDPNow update is Monday, May 2. Please see the “Release Dates” tab below for a full list of upcoming releases.

More Weak Data

April 29th, 2016 10:27 am

Via Millan Mulraine at TFDecurities:

TD SECURITIES DATAFLASH                   

US: Chicago PMI and Michigan Confidence Disappoint

·         The Chicago PMI fell well short of expectations, with the headline index falling to 50.4 from 53.6. This was a far weaker than expected performance, and the drop in the key forward-looking indicators suggests further downside ahead.

·         The weak tone of this report points to a relapse in the US manufacturing sector recovery.

·         Consumer confidence also soured, with the Michigan confidence index declining for the fourth consecutive month, falling to 89.7, signally further weakness in spending.

The Chicago PMI fell well short of consensus, with the headline number falling to 50.4 in April from 53.6 the month before. The market consensus was for a more modest drop to 52.6. The overall tone of this report was weak, suggesting further downside risks to the manufacturing sector outlook. The key forward-looking indicators were quite weak, with new orders (down from 55.6 to 51.0), order backlog (down from 49.7 to 38.7) and employment (down from 52.8 to 47.5) all declining. Production improved, rising to 54.0 from 53.7, though the new orders to inventory spread, a useful proxy for future production activity, drifted down to 1.4 from 11.6. The overall tone of this report was weak, providing some downside risks to our above-consensus call for a rise in the ISM manufacturing index to 51.8 from 51.5.

Consumer sentiment soured further in April, with the Michigan confidence index declining to 89.7 in April from 91.0. This marks the fourth consecutive monthly decline in this indicator, and while the level of the index remains relatively strong the direction matters, and household confidence continues to head in the wrong direction. To be sure, the exact cause of the rising anxiety among US consumer remains a bit of a mystery. However, what we do know is that the souring in moods appears to be translating in lower spending activity, even as the backdrop for consumption remains favorable. That said, this report augurs poorly for our expectation for a meaningful rebound in personal consumption activity in April.

Weak Data

April 29th, 2016 9:27 am

Via Millan Mulraine at TDSecurities:

US: Inflation Momentum Weakening, Consumption Stalls

·         The ECI rose at an on-consensus 0.6% q/q rate, with the annual pace of employment cost inflation decelerating to 1.9% y/y from 2.0% y/y..

·         The core PCE inflation rate was also on the weak side, rising at a meager 0.1% m/m pace. The annual pace of core PCE inflation declined to 1.6% y/y from 1.7% y/y.

·         On the consumption front, the news was quite disappointing as real personal spending ended the quarter on very flat footing, providing a very weak hand-off to Q2.

·         Overall, the tone of these reports was quite weak, playing into the current narrative of weakening growth and subdued inflationary momentum. This will continue to argue for caution at the Fed.

The US inflation picture appears a bit more benign, as the ECI rose at an on-consensus 0.6% m/m pace (up 0.64% m/m) in Q1, following a similar pace the month before. On a year ago basis, however, the annual pace of employment cost inflation slowed to 1.9% y/y from 2.0% y/y, marking the slowest pace of advance in this indicator since Q1-2014. Wages edged 0.7% m/m higher, though the annual pace of wage growth remained unchanged at 2.1% y/y. Benefits advanced 0.5% m/m, down from 1.8% y/y to 1.7% y/y. The core PCE inflation performance was also weak, rising at a very subdued 0.1% m/m pace (up 0.052% m/m at three decimal places), resulting in the annual pace of core PCE inflation also decelerating, falling to 1.6% y/y from 1.7% y/y. 

Personal spending activity was also disappointing. In particular, real personal consumption activity ended the quarter on a flat footing, providing a very weak hand-off to the next quarter. As a result, our early tracking for Q2 is now closer to the lower end of the 1.5% to 2.0% range, suggesting a very weak rebound for growth from the disappointing +0.5% q/q performance in Q1. To be sure, we continue to have a very favorable outlook for consumption spending activity, given the constructive backdrop (buoyant labor market activity, high confidence and a formidable savings war chest). Nevertheless, unless we have a very strong rebound in spending momentum in April, the risks to our current GDP tracking will drift to the downside.

Overall, the tone of these reports was quite weak, playing into the current narrative of weakening growth and the subdued inflationary momentum. This will continue to argue for caution at the Fed, and our current base-case is for the Fed to remain on the sidelines until the September FOMC meeting – unless growth rebounds strongly in Q2, which could potentially bring the July meeting into play.