FX

January 19th, 2015 8:49 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Drivers for the Week Ahead

We provide a thumbnail sketch of the top things to watch this week, including:
–        The ECB meeting will be the main event, but there are plenty of moving parts
–        The Greek national election next weekend
–        The BoJ will likely reduce its growth and inflation forecasts
–        Chinese stocks suffered the worst day since 2008 after a regulatory crack down, raising questions about the government’s intentions
–        Even as US oil and gas rigs fall, output continues to rise

Price action: The dollar is mixed on the day. The euro is trading on both sides of $1.16, and has risen to CHF1.0050. The pound is stable around $1.5150. The dollar is weaker against the yen, touching ¥117.0 overnight but now at ¥117.30. In
the EM space, TRY is underperforming on growing expectations for a rate cut this week. ZAR and MYR are also lower, while RUB is outperforming, with the basket trading back below the 70.0 level. The MSCI Asia Pacific index was
flat on next, dragged lower by a 7.7% fall in Chinese stocks. The Nikkei was up 0.9%. EuroStoxx is up slightly. Energy prices are giving up some of Friday’s gains with Brent and WTI both down about 1.5%.

The investment climate has become more treacherous.   Weak wage growth and disinflationary headwinds are making market participants question likelihood of a Fed rate hike around mid-year.  The Swiss National Bank’s jettisoning its prior strategy has thrown many investors off balance and less secure of their footholds.  OPEC’s unwillingness to make room for a continued increase in US oil output has unleashed both powerful positive and negative forces. Japan, the world’s second largest economy, which has contributed mightily to global growth, is slowing.   The Bank of Japan is engaged in an unprecedented monetary experiment; expanding its balance sheet by 1.4% (of GDP) a month.  At the same time that European political uncertainty has grown, the ECB is on the verge of accelerating the increase in its balance sheet.  The IMF will update its World Economic Outlook.  In October, it forecast the global economy to grow 3.8% this year.  It is expected to shave its forecasts as did the World Bank recently.  

Here is a thumbnail sketch of our top ten things to watch this week:

1.  ECB Meeting:  There are widespread expectations for the ECB to announce a broader asset purchase plan this week.  The complexity of such a program leaves plenty of moving parts that can be fought and compromised over.  Reports already suggest the direction of the compromise that will win a majority support, though once again probably over the objections of German representatives. In exchange for limiting the risk to the ECB itself, there may be an agreement for a more aggressive program.  While the ambiguity of an open-ended program may be strategically superior, national central banks are unlikely to be given carte blanche either.   There is also an issue of the quality of asset that can be bought.  The easiest decision would be to declare any asset good acceptable for repo operations is good enough to buy.  Another challenge is the significance of initial conditions.  Roughly a quarter of the eurozone sovereign debt has negative yields.   Given market positioning we caution of the risk of disappointment or buy the rumor, sell the fact type of activity.

2.  Greece:   The national election is a week away.  Syriza’s small lead has been maintained.  Flight from Greek banks has accelerated, and at least two banks have requested emergency funds from the central bank, which needs the approval of the ECB to grant.  At the same time, Greek banks are reportedly buying the T-bills that foreign investors are reluctant to roll-over.  Many foreign banks also may be less willing to do repos with Greek banks.  Although we do not expect Greece to leave the monetary union, we recognize that a period of political uncertainty likely lies ahead.   Italy’s presidential selection begins at the end of the month and promises its own drama.

3.  Switzerland:  The SNB’s decision to abandon the franc’s cap was momentous. Apparently even the Swiss government learned of it in the eleventh hour.  It is ironic that since the crisis, many observers have expressed concern that the independence of central banks was being encroached, and here when a central bank exercises precisely that independence it annoys the very same critics.  Moreover, unlike the devaluations that were denied until the very last minute, or the BOE abandoning the ERM peg but only after losing billions of sterling, or the US unilaterally breaking the dollar-gold link, here the Swiss franc appreciated.  This is not a beggar-thy-neighbour policy.  The SNB’s decision was unanimous.  The Danish peg came under attack following the SNB’s action.  We suspect Denmark’s first line of defense will be a return to negative interest rates.  

The SNB apparently judged that the cap-strategy, which replaced its strategy to buying foreign bonds had out-lived it usefulness.  Abandoning it now would arguably be less costly than defending if, as it seems likely the euro will continue to decline and the dollar will continue to appreciate.   It seems to be hoping that the more negative interest rates will help minimize the upside pressure.  The Swiss 10-year government bond now sports an unprecedented negative yield.   It is not only a hit for Swiss exporters, but also for the value of Swiss owned foreign assets, both publicly owned, such as reserves, and privately own.    Switzerland’s net international surplus investment position just narrowed significantly.

4.  Japan:  The Bank of Japan meets.  It will likely reduce its growth and inflation forecasts.    Yet cutting the inflation forecast will fuel expectations for even more monetary efforts unless there is a clear signal from BOJ Governor Kuroda.  This need not be the abandoning of the 2% target, but modifying it in light of the drop in energy prices. Separately, note that the opposition DPJ held its leadership election.   Although the party is trying to rebuild, its new leader Okada is not seen as offering a fresh alternative, but rather a continuation of the status quo.  The ruling LDP is a large coalition, and the rifts between its factions are more important in shaping policy than the competition between parties.

5.  UK:  In the run-up to the May elections, the labor market continues to improve.  The UK is expected to report that its unemployment rate fell below 6% for the first time since before the crisis. Moreover, average earnings should continue to recover.  The fall in inflation may be doing households more good than employers for boosting real incomes. Still, the high frequency data is noisy, and some pullback in retail sales in December is expected.  The BOE minutes will be released. Despite the fact that the MPC needed to write a letter explaining to the Chancellor why it undershot on inflation, McCafferty and Weale likely maintained their dissent in favor of immediate rater hike

6.  Canada:  Canada was not particularly exposed to the derivatives that imploded in 2008-2009. However, we under-estimated how much it was levered to high oil prices. While the Bank of Canada is not going to cut rates at this week’s meeting, it will shift to a more dovish shade of neutrality.  It will likely cut its growth and inflation estimates.   A weaker Canadian dollar is part of the adjustment process.  The December CPI report will be released before the weekend.  The headline rate will fall sharply, but the core rate could tick up, which may see the Canadian dollar find some support, albeit temporarily.

7.  China:  The Shanghai Comp fell 7.7% overnight, the worst performance since mid-2008. This was a reaction to news that three of China’s top brokers would be punished for their dealings in margin trading. The big question is whether this is genuinely a regulatory concern or if this is an official signal saying that the rally has good too far and two quick. As we have noted in the past, the government has largely supported the rally in local equity prices, not only through policy but also through positive comments in the official media.

On the data front, retail sales, industrial production, and investment figures are set be reported.  China will also report Q4 GDP figures.  It will be difficult to see in the data the gradual slowing of the Chinese economy.  However, the actions by the government and PBOC to provide extra stimulus, though in targeted rather than a generalized way, confirms a slowdown is taking place. The preliminary HSBC manufacturing PMI is expected to show the second consecutive reading below the 50 boom/bust level.   The weakness in China’s demand for industrial commodities has weighed on sentiment.  That said, the downside pressure on copper and oil prices eased at the end of last week.  Separately, Premier Li will speak before the World Economic Forum in Davos (that just became considerably more expensive to attend).

8.  Oil:  Even as US oil and gas rigs fall, output continues to rise.  According to Baker Hughes, the number of mainland rigs in the US was reduced by 72 to 1676.  This is the third largest weekly decline since 2000.  The number of rigs operating is 101 lower than a year ago.  The number of oil rigs fell by 55 to 1366. The number of oil rigs peaked in October 2014 at 1609.  Over the past four weeks, 170 rigs have been decommissioned. This represents a marked acceleration from the previous four weeks when 38 rigs were shut down.  Even as the rig count falls, the EIA expects US oil production to rise this year to an average of 9.3 mln barrels a day, up from about 9.0 mln last year. This includes a forecast for a 3% decline in output during the May through September period. Meanwhile, capital expenditure budgets are being slashed, especially by the exploration and production groups.   A credit squeeze also continues to unfold.  Before the weekend, S&P cut the rating of eight small E&P companies and put another nine on negative watch.  

9.  Emerging Market Central Banks:  Brazil is tightening both fiscal and monetary policy.  The new finance team is consolidating fiscal policy.  The central bank is expected to hike rates by as much as 50 bp, which would lift the Selic rate to 12.25%.  On the other hand, falling inflation and political pressure point to a high probability of a rate cut by Turkey’s central bank – we assign a 50/50 probability. Nigeria’s central bank is expected to hold rates steady after hiking them at late last year.  

10.  US:  Economic data in the week ahead is largely limited to housing starts/permits and existing home sales.  President Obama delivers his sixth State of the Union address.  Most of the initiatives will be leaked before the speech itself and will require Congressional support, which will be hard to come by given the Republican majority in both houses.  The Federal Reserve meeting is still a week away (January 28), but expectations for a mid-year lift-off have been weakened.  The implied yield of the December 2015 Fed funds futures contract fell 10 bp last week to 41.5 bp.  The implied yield of the December 2015 Eurodollar futures contract fell 11 bp to 69 bp.  Both yields are the lowest since the mid-October flash crash.  

We suspect that the pendulum of market expectations has swung nearly as far as it will. The University of Michigan survey showed long-term (5-10 years) inflation expectations remained unchanged at 2.8%, despite the fall in 1-year expectation to 2.4% (from 2.8%).  We expect the Fed’s leadership will continue to argue in favour of looking past the decline in energy prices, which on balance will still be a net positive for US growth.  There is a compelling reason for the FOMC to emphasize core inflation over headline inflation.  For at least the past 50 years, headline inflation has converged with core inflation—not the other way around.

Weak Real Estate In China

January 18th, 2015 7:15 am

Via the WSJ:

By
Esther Fung
Jan. 17, 2015 9:42 p.m. ET

SHANGHAI—The average price of new homes in 70 Chinese cities fell at a slower pace on a month-to-month basis in December as developers pulled back on price cuts at year-end after Beijing unexpectedly cut interest rates in November.

On a year-on-year basis however, the home-price decline widened in December.

China’s real-estate market saw a sharper-than-expected downturn last year and some analysts had expected some stabilization in the market this year after authorities cut interest rates and loosened mortgage rules last year.

But high inventories in many Chinese cities and concerns over property developers’ cashflow are driving some uncertainties about the sector’s health.
Related

Chinese Authorities Freeze Property Projects in Two Cities
China Property Stocks Suffer as Worries Rise

On a month-over-month basis, prices in December slipped 0.4%, compared with a 0.6% fall in November, according to calculations by The Wall Street Journal. It was the fourth consecutive month that average prices fell less sharply than in the previous month.

On a year-over-year basis, the average price of new homes declined 4.3% in December compared with a 3.6% fall in November and 2.5% drop in October.

Excluding public housing, private-sector home prices fell in 68 of the 70 cities surveyed in December from a year earlier, unchanged from the 68 cities that posted declines in November, according to data posted by the National Bureau of Statistics on Sunday. On a month-on-month basis, home prices fell in 66 of 70 cities in December, down from November’s 67.

Policymakers, who are concerned about the slowdown China’s economy, have been injecting liquidity into the market through piecemeal and targeted measures in recent months. Supporting the property market is also on their radar, as the real-estate market is estimated to account for nearly one-quarter of gross domestic product when construction, along with related industries such as furniture and raw building materials, are factored in.

Housing sales in the 70 cities surveyed rose 9% in December from November, due to adjustments in mortgage policies, the interest-rate cut and stepped up efforts by developers to reduce their inventories, said Liu Jianwei, a statistician at the National Bureau of Statistics in a statement on the bureau’s website.

But it may be premature to say that the housing market is on the mend, some analysts noted.

While China’s monetary data released earlier this week showed loosening in both the bank and shadow-banking sectors in December, it still isn’t clear whether the broader economy responded to the interest-rate cut in November, said investment bank North Square Blue Oak in a recent research note. “Mortgage lending actually fell in December from November, suggesting limited response in the household sector to the interest-rate cut,” NSBO added.

 

 

Obama Channels Piketty

January 17th, 2015 10:19 pm

When President Obama delivers his State of the Union address to the nation later this week the speech will contain proposals which will increase the progressiveness of the tax code. He will propose raising the top rate on capital gains income to 28 percent from 23.8 percent. Under current law one can pass large chunks of one’s estate untaxed. He will seek to impose a capital gains tax on those generational transfers of wealth. He will propose a tripling of the child care tax credit. He will propose a tax credit for families in which both spouses work. He has also discussed publicly this week free tuition at all community colleges and he has proposed seven days of sick leave for everyone.

I wrote the title first and then when I Googled Piketty to check the spelling I found this Washington Post headline.

Quantitative Mechanics

January 16th, 2015 12:10 pm

Via Bloomberg:

ECB Plans to Run QE Through National Central Banks, Spiegel Says
2015-01-16 17:01:15.182 GMT

By Jana Randow
(Bloomberg) — European Central Bank President Mario Draghi
briefed German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble on quantitative-easing plans under which
national central banks would buy bonds issued by their own
country, Spiegel magazine reported.
The plan, which tries to avoid a transfer of risk between
member states, envisages limits of 20 percent to 25 percent on
purchases of each country’s debt, Spiegel said in an article
published today, without saying where it got the information.
Greece will be excluded from the program because its bonds don’t
fulfill the necessary quality criteria, the magazine said.
An ECB spokesman declined to comment on the design of any
QE program. A German government spokesman said earlier that
Merkel and Draghi met on Jan. 14 for “regular informal talks,”
while declining to comment on the topic.
ECB officials presented various forms of quantitative
easing to policy makers at a Jan. 7 meeting in Frankfurt, and
Draghi signaled in an interview with Die Zeit that the ECB is
ready to take a decision as early as next week. Officials have
courted the German public in a series of interviews, arguing
that more stimulus is needed to fend off deflation in the 19-
nation currency region.
Klaas Knot, governor of the Dutch central bank, told
Spiegel that he’d support putting national central banks in
charge of implementing QE.
“If each central bank was only buying debt of its own
country, the danger of an unwanted redistribution of financial
risk would be lower,” he said. “We have to avoid that
decisions are taken through the back door of the ECB balance
sheet that have to continue to be reserved for elected
politicians in euro-area countries.”
By keeping the risk of government-bond purchases at the
national level, the ECB would show that it is “exclusively
concerned about monetary and not fiscal policy,” he was cited
as saying.

Treasury Update

January 16th, 2015 11:58 am

Dealers are shell shocked after the extreme volatility the market has experienced this week. Traders offered complaints about liquidity and suggested that when the market starts to run one way there is no one available to stop the flow.

In terms of flow today I have heard of real money paying in swaps in the 10 year sector. There was also some hedging activity against potential corporate issuance. Central banks have been aggressive sellers of the front end (2s and 3s) both yesterday and today. One market maker also noted some real money buying in the Long Bond on this morning’s sell off.

I spoke with end users too today and they averred that the front end is too expensive with 2s in low 40s and 3s below 80 basis points. They  anticipate a backup in those yields and a flatter yield curve. One portfolio manager commented that the back end will continue to benefit from the low inflation environment and from overseas demand as our yields are still well above Germany and Japan.

Core Pressures

January 16th, 2015 9:47 am

Here is an excerpt from a research piece by Jay Morelock of FTN Financial on the CPI this morning. He notes that in the core apparel price fell the most since 1998.

Bottom Line:  Prices for clothing fell 1.2% in December, the most since 1998, after falling 1.1% in November: this is how the US imports deflation.  The strong dollar makes imports cheaper, and if domestic producers want to compete, they have to lower prices as well.  That to say, falling energy costs and a strong dollar are a double-whammy for deflationary pressure, and do not seem to be ebbing anytime soon.  If core prices in the economy continue their decent towards 1%, the conversation will turn from tightening to stimulus.

 

Corporate Bond Spreads

January 16th, 2015 9:41 am

This is about an hour and thirty minutes old but you can see the pressure bank and finance paper was under at that time. In contrast the IG 23 was only a tad wider.

Via a fully paid up subscriber:

1/15 CLOSE    1/16 OPEN      CHANGE

GE  24        95/92          99/96            +4
WFC 24      120/117        123/120          +3
JPM 24      148/145        150/147          +2
BAC 24      151/148        155/152          +4
C  24      146/143        150/146          +4
GS  24      152/149        156/152          +4
MS  24      150/147        154/150          +4
IG23          73/73½      73½/74          +½

What to Watch Today

January 16th, 2015 6:54 am

Via Bloomberg:

WHAT TO WATCH:
* (All times New York)
Economic Data
* 8:30am: CPI m/m, Dec., est -0.4% (prior -0.3%)
* CPI y/y, Dec., est. 0.7% (prior 1.3%)
* CPI Ex Food and Energy m/m, Dec., est. 0.1% (prior 0.1%)
* CPI Ex Food and Energy y/y, Dec., est. 1.7% (prior 1.7%)
* CPI Core Index SA, Dec., est. 239.635 (prior 239.332)
* CPI Index NSA, Dec., est. 234.611 (prior 236.151)
* CPI Index NSA, Dec., est. 234.611 (prior 236.151)</li></ul>
* 9:15am: Industrial Production m/m, Dec., est. -0.1% (prior
1.3%)
* Capacity Utilization, Dec., est. 79.9% (prior 80.1%)
* Manufacturing (SIC) Production, Dec., est. 0.2% (prior
1.1%)
* Manufacturing (SIC) Production, Dec., est. 0.2% (prior
1.1%)</li></ul>
* 10:00am: U. of Mich. Sentiment, Jan. preliminary, est. 94.1
(prior 93.6)
* Current Conditions (prior 104.8)
* Expectations (prior 86.4)
* 1 Yr Inflation (prior 2.8%)
* 5-10 Yr Inflation (prior 2.8%)
* 5-10 Yr Inflation (prior 2.8%)</li></ul>
* 4:00pm: Total Net TIC Flows, Nov. (prior $178.4b)
* Net Long-term TIC Flows, Nov. (prior -$1.4b)
* Net Long-term TIC Flows, Nov. (prior -$1.4b)</li></ul>
Central Banks
* 8:50am: Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks in Golden Valley, Minn.
* 11:00am: Fed’s Williams speaks in San Francisco
* 1:10pm: Fed’s Bullard speaks in Chicago
SATURDAY, Jan. 17
* 8:50am: Fed’s Lockhart speaks in Atlanta

FX

January 16th, 2015 6:45 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Markets Still Trying to Make Sense of the SNB

– The decision by the SNB to abandon the peg was as the lesser of two poor choices  
– We find much of what is passing for analysis of the Swiss decision as speculators talking their books
– The SNB’s decision does not mean that it will accept a free-floating currency
– Participants are linking the SNB’s move to the prospects of the ECB’s move next week
– After the excitement from the central banks after India and the SNB, Peru and Egypt also surprised markets

Price action:  The dollar is mostly firmer against the majors.  The euro is trading below the $1.16 level and sterling near the $1.52 level. The dollar recovered a bit from yesterday’s drop against the yen which briefly took it below ¥116, and is now trading around ¥116.70. On the EM side, CNY had a relatively large downward move of 0.3%.  TWD and KRW are outperforming, while PLN and HUF are recovering somewhat from yesterday’s large gains by the euro on these crosses.  The MSCI Asia Pacific index was down 0.6%, with the Nikkei down 1.4%.  Euro Stoxx 500 is down 0.4% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a lower open.  Oil is rebounding today, with Brent up 2.4% and WTI up 1.8% in the London session.

  • Not only were market participants taken by surprise by the SNB, but apparently so were the IMF and the ECB.  Since the franc cap was imposed in 2011, there have been times when investors (including ourselves) thought the peg could be abandoned.  However, the SNB did not relent.  Last month, when adjusted for swings in prices, it appeared the SNB intervened by buying around 20 bln euros to defend the cap.  It seemed that the SNB reached a fork in the road.  Given the prospects of continued euro depreciation and outflows from Russia, where the ruble is off almost 7% this year, the SNB  would have to double down on its efforts to defend the cap or abandon it.  It chose to abandon it as the lesser of two poor choices.  
  • We find much of what is passing for analysis of the Swiss decision as speculators talking their books.  Judging from the recent Commitment of Traders in the futures market and the losses suffered by several retail platforms, the speculative market was heavily biased toward short franc positions.  At one point yesterday, the Swiss franc appreciated a little more than an unprecedented 40% against the euro.  It is a painful reminder that those who make money in the market do not do so by being right more often, but rather by disciplined risk management.  There is no short cut.  
  • Some observers argue that the Swiss experience proves that fighting “free-market” forces or pegged regimes are unsustainable.  Yet several pegs remain, like the Hong Kong dollar and many Middle East currencies.  On the Swiss news, the market immediately took the Hong Kong dollar to the strong side of its band, but the peg (really a cap) has not been broken.  The market did not break the SNB cap as it did, say, the peg in Mexico in 1994-1995 and Asia in 1997-1998.  The SNB abandoned its strategy.  
  • The SNB’s decision does not mean that it will accept a free-floating currency.  We suspect that it may still accumulate some euros.  Given that it reports its reserves in Swiss franc terms, valuation adjustment alone will point to a dramatic surge.  However, it can be much more flexible in smoothing the currency than having to defend a Maginot Line.  As one would expect, it will take the market some time to find a new equilibrium.  The euro-franc range today is around 5% and the Swiss stock market is off about 5% as well.   The 10-year benchmark yield is negative nine bp.  
  • Participants are linking the SNB’s move to the prospects of an ECB move next week.  To the extent that the anticipation of a sovereign bond buying program that will weaken the euro was behind the SNB’s decision, it drives home another point:  sometimes in the capital markets, the cause takes place after the effect.  While this may seem counter-intuitive, the anticipatory nature of participants, both official and private, is a fundamental characteristic.  
  • The market is generally anticipating that the ECB will announce a new 500-700 bln euro asset purchase program.  The market did not seem to react to ECB’s Coeure suggestion that to be effective, the bond buying program needs to be large.  Because even at this late date that the Bundesbank’s Weidmann and others are still reluctant to endorse a sovereign bond buying program, many suspect a compromise that will limit the size and risk to the ECB itself.  
  • That said, there are two important considerations about the program.  First, it is not a done deal that such a purchase program is announced next week.  At last month’s press conference, Draghi made it a point, not to commit to the January 22 meeting, and explicitly referred to the March 5 meeting as well.  Subjectively, we would place the odds of an announcement next week at around 75%.  Second, Draghi and the ECB have been specific about their desire.  The intention is to return the balance sheet to its earlier peak.  To do so requires around 1 trillion euros.  The covered bond and ABS purchase scheme and the TLTROs may conservatively get the ECB almost half way there.  This does not seem like a case for shock and awe, but rather a modest program, especially when compared with the Federal Reserve or Bank of England experience, let alone the extremely ambitious Bank of Japan efforts.  
  • The slippage of eurozone CPI into negative territory (-0.2% year-over-year) was confirmed today. The core rate was revised lower to 0.7% from 0.8%.  The core rate is evidently less important to the ECB than the headline rate, even though the latter provided poor policy signals such as in  2008 when Trichet led the central bank to hiking rates just before the bottom dropped out, and it entered a prolonged recession.
  • Aside from trying to make sense of the SNB’s move, the North American session will be dominated by two things:  a flurry of economic data and the price action itself, notably a likely continued correction in US shares and a fall in yields.  The S&P 500 closed on its lows yesterday and is likely to gap lower at the open.  We have found the gaps to be technically important.  A break of the mid-December lows in the 1972-1973 area would be significant.  The next immediate target would be in the 1957-1960 area.  US 10-year yields slipped to near 1.70% yesterday.  They are holding just above there now.  A break of it would suggest potential to 1.60%, on the way to 1.50%.  
  • The US data may encourage such moves.  Headline CPI may be nearly halved to 0.7% from 1.3%.  The core rate will prove stickier, but investors should be prepared to see a negative headline year-over-year print in the coming months.  Industrial output is likely to be soft.  The consensus expects a 0.1% decline after the outsized 1.3% gain in November.  Manufacturing output likely cooled after the 1.1% increase, though it may still eke out a small gain.  Capacity utilization is expected to have slipped back below the 80% threshold.  Going into today’s data, the Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now sees the US economy tracking 3.4% annualized growth in Q4 14.
  • When we thought the day had enough excitement from central banks after India and the SNB, Peru and Egypt also surprised markets. We see this as just the start of more aggressive EM easing, towards which investors should keep dovish surprise skew ahead of any EM central bank meeting.  Late last night, Peru topped a day of central bank surprises by cutting rates by 25 bp to 3.25%.  While the timing was a surprise, easing was expected this year.  Of course, lower fuel prices and weaker growth from Peru’s commodity sector drove the decision.  Copper (-10% YTD) accounts for about a quarter of Peru’s exports. These factors will help inflation converge quicker to the 2.0% target from 3.2% y/y currently. Aside from commodity export exposure, Peru still has a highly dollarized economy, which authorities have been trying to reduce.  At the end of the year, the central bank increased reserve requirements for dollar lending, for example.  Outstanding dollar loans ($29 bln) make up about 38% of total credit, so a weaker PEN (down 18% since its strongest level in early 2013) is a serious issue.
  • The Egyptian central bank also cut rates 50 bp to 8.75%.  This move was unexpected, but not that surprising to us since we expect more and more EM central banks to ease.  We just put out a big picture piece this week (Inflation and Monetary Policy Trends in EM) highlighting EM easing risks, so it’s nice of India, Peru, and Egypt to fall into line.  Most EM yield curves have seen a bullish flattening in recent weeks, and we expect this trend to continue.
  • China released its FX reserve figures yesterday showing another sharp decline.  Reserves declined almost $50 bln in Q4, and this is after falling $88 bln in Q3.  What’s more interesting is what a back of the envelope breakdown tells us.  The trade surplus continues to improve (nearly $150 bln in Q4) and FDI remains stable (just over $30 bln).  So if you add it all up ($50 + $150 + $30), you get $230 of unexplained outflows.  Bloomberg estimates that $100 bln of this is the service balance, income flows, and outward FDI.  Then it is estimated that the PBOC lost $35 bln in valuation from a weaker EUR.  So we are left with ($230 – $100 – $35) about $95 bln, which could be capital outflows.  Again, this just adds to the argument that China is not going to be in a hurry to let the CNY weaken.
  • The PBOC allocated money for farm and small company lending, in line with its targeted approach to monetary easing after its surprise cut in November.  The PBOC gave a CNY20 bln ($3.2 bln) re-loan quota for banks to support agriculture, and CNY30 bln to boost smaller companies, according to a statement on its website. The move is aimed at lowering financing costs, it said.  The PBOC’s outstanding re-lending reached CNY267.8 bln at the end of 2014, an increase of CNY99.4 bln compared to the beginning of 2014.

January 16 2015 Opening

January 16th, 2015 6:22 am

Prices of Treasury coupon securities have registered mixed results when viewed against levels which prevailed in late NY trading yesterday (about 415PM New York time). The yield on the 2 year note climbed to 44.4 basis points from 41.6. The yield on the 5 year note climbed to 1.186 from 1.173. The yield on the 7 year note edged higher to 1.494 from 1.476. The yield on the benchmark 10 year note is exactly unchanged at 1.721. The Long Bond changed hands at 2.362 versus 2.36 late yesterday. The 5s 10s spread is flatter at 53.5 versus 54.8 yesterday. The 5s 30s spread narrowed to 117.6 from 118.7. The 10s 30s spread is a tad steeper at 64.1 versus 63.9 yesterday. The 5s 10s 30s spread has richened to -10.6 from -9.1. The 2s 5s 10s spread richened to 20.4 from 20.9.

The move in the 2s 5s 10s spread is stunning. Last March just prior to Ms Yellen’s first press conference that spread traded at about 9 basis points. The very first trades after her hawkish comments that day took the spread to 17 and then it proceeded to cheapen and eventually it traded at 54 basis points in December on the day of the 7 year note auction. I received that info from a fully paid up subscriber. The cheapest level I recorded in my copious notes was 51.4 on December 29. That spread trades currently at 20.4 basis points so we have retraced almost nine months worth of cheapening in a little more than two weeks of trading. That move has happened wit very little movement in 5s 10s 30s. That spread has also gotten richer but since Dec 29 it has only moved from -7.3 to -10.4. The interesting leg of the 2s 5s 10s spread is the 2s 5s piece which has exploded from 101 on Dec 29 to 74 this morning. On Dec 29 the 5s 10s leg was 56.9 and it has only moved to 53.5 this morning. So that is how you price a Fed move out of the market.

In the overnight session dealers report light volume from clients with real money a better buyer of the 10 year sector.

There are lots of casualties from the Swiss Bank move yesterday. You can read about it here and here. Most of what I observed thus far is carnage for smaller players but given the extent of the move and the unpreparedness of the market for such a move there is probably some high profile losses buried in a position somewhere.

This weekend is a three day weekend as the US pauses to honor civil rights pioneer Martin Luther King. ( I wonder how he would feel about the state race relations in the US half century after he led historic protests to free African Americans from the shackles of overt de jure institutionalized racism.) The market has held in well overnight following the sharp rally yesterday. It does not feel right now as if that was a blow off top yesterday. Against that backdrop I think that traders will have a propensity to buy dips into the long weekend. Similarly, I would anticipate that the equity market would will continue its wobble and that should also be supportive of bond prices. The levels are nutty but it aint over till its over.