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Futures Tumble As Yields Rise, Yen Plummets; ECB And GDP Loom

Futures Tumble As Yields Rise, Yen Plummets; ECB And GDP Loom

US equity futures tumbled, following global stocks lower, with Nasdaq contracts…

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Futures Tumble As Yields Rise, Yen Plummets; ECB And GDP Loom

US equity futures tumbled, following global stocks lower, with Nasdaq contracts underperforming as Meta shares sinking 4% on an  uncertain outlook and ugly reversal from gains to losses after the close added to earnings worries. As of 8:00am, S&P futures were down -0.8%, Nasdaq futs down -1.1% as the "Magnificent Seven" technology companies that have powered this year’s US stock rally are posting disappointing earnings, wiping about $200 billion off their market value. Amazon reports after hours. The bearish mood carried over to other markets, with European and Asian equities also recording steep losses. The greenback strengthened, gold added 0.6% and Treasury yields edged closer to 5%. The yen slumped back past 150 per dollar again, fueling speculation about government intervention in the currency market. On the economic front, a fresh US GDP print is part of a data flurry due later today. A policy decision is also due from the European Central Bank, which is expected to keep interest rates on hold for the first time in more than a year.

In premarket trading, Meta Platforms shares fell 4% as the Facebook parent’s fourth-quarter revenue forecast trailed the average analyst estimate at the midpoint. The company also dashed investors’ hopes for a long-term advertising recovery, saying it was at the whim of an uncertain economic environment. Google’s owner Alphabet Inc. lost 1.8%, extending a selloff on Wednesday on disappointing cloud figures. Amazon.com Inc., which reports results after the bell, slid 1.2%. Here are some other notable premarket movers:

  • Adobe edged 0.7% higher as Oppenheimer joins DA Davidson in turning bullish on the stock. The broker raised its recommendation on the software company to outperform from market perform.
  • Align Technology shares slid 24% after the maker of dental aligners cut its net revenue guidance for the full year. Some analysts lowered their price targets on the stock, flagging a slowdown in demand due to a tough backdrop, especially among adult orthodontic patients.
  • Endeavor Group shares soared 23% after private equity group Silver Lake Management said it’s considering a takeover bid for the talent agency and entertainment company. Endeavor also announced it would be undertaking a strategic review.
  • Ford rose 2.3%, set to extend gains to a second session, as the United Auto Workers reached a tentative labor agreement with the carmaker.
  • Mattel shares drop 10% after the toy manufacturing and entertainment company maintained its full-year sales outlook, citing softness in the industry and a weaker global economy.

There were fireworks in FX land after the yen blew past 150 per dollar, raising the risk of government intervention in the currency market and piling pressure on the Bank of Japan to adjust monetary policy.

“The yen’s persistent weakness also adds pressure on the BOJ’s policy settings, whether or not to raise the ceiling for yield-curve control, remove YCC or end the negative policy rate,” said Koji Fukaya, a fellow at Market Risk Advisory in Tokyo. He added that the yen is probably hemmed in for now with intervention risk limiting further losses and the yield gap preventing a recovery.

Earnings missteps at the biggest US tech companies — which have already seen $200 billion wiped off their market value — are causing ructions in equity markets as investors rethink sky-high valuations against a backdrop of rising Treasury yields. While the Nasdaq 100 has been seemingly immune to pessimism, with the index still up 31% this year, there’s now growing concern about its vulnerability in a wider stock market selloff.

On the economic front, US initial jobless claims and GDP numbers are part of a flurry of data later Thursday. A policy decision is also due from the European Central Bank, which is expected to keep interest rates on hold for the first time in more than a year.

A key report this morning is the Q3 GDP data: US economic activity will probably blow past already-high consensus estimates for the third quarter, according to Bloomberg Economics which predicts a 4.9% pace of expansion on an annualized basis, higher than the 4.5% average estimate in a survey of outside forecasters, largely because of a “frenzy of summer spending on travel and entertainment,” writes Bloomberg economist Eliza Winger. She warns that the pace of growth is unsustainable and likely to have been driven by one-off factors like the ‘Barbenheimer’ movie blockbusters and concert tours by Taylor Swift and Beyonce. Bloomberg Economics projects a shallow recession will begin in the fourth quarter.

“Earnings season has left much to be desired as typically economically sensitive stocks, that have held up well against a difficult backdrop, begin to creak under the pressure,” said Geir Lode, head of global equities at Federated Hermes Ltd. “Good results are no longer enough for these economically sensitive stocks to gain traction as investors are concerned about a weaker macroeconomic backdrop.”

European stocks are on the back foot after a flurry of disappointing corporate updates with automakers posting the biggest decline among sectors after Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and Volvo Cars all reported disappointing third-quarter reports. The technology subindex outperforms as chip stocks including BE Semiconductor and STMicroelectronics gain.  Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas, Unilever, WPP and Mercedes are all in the red after their respective reports. Here are the most notable movers:

  • BE Semiconductor rises as much as 11%, the most in more than a year, after third-quarter results fueled optimism around hybrid bonding systems — an emerging tool used to connect chips
  • Neste gains as much as 7.2% after the Finnish oil and chemicals engineering firm reported solid third-quarter figures across all key performance indicators, analysts note
  • Jeronimo Martins advances as much as 9.3% after reporting a 3Q earnings beat, thanks to solid volumes and only a slight erosion of Ebitda margin as it mitigated competition pressures in Poland
  • Sodexo shares gain as much as 7.1% after the French catering company reported full year underlying operating profit that beat estimates. JPMorgan said the results were “decent”
  • Worldline rallies as much as 9% in Paris trading after a record 59% plunge on Wednesday that Chief Executive Officer Gilles Grapinet tells Les Echos is “uncorrelated” to the firm’s fundamentals
  • Siemens Energy shares slump as much as 36% to a record low after reports the German renewable energy company is in talks with the nation’s government for state guarantees
  • Standard Chartered shares slump as much as 18% in London after the bank’s third-quarter pretax profit missed estimates due to impairment charges related to investments in China
  • Evolution slides as much as 11% after the Swedish online gambling group reported third-quarter results that missed estimates, with analysts highlighting that FX headwinds were a big factor
  • HelloFresh shares drop as much as 14% after the meal-kit company missed estimates for active customer numbers in the third quarter
  • Swedbank drops as much as 9.2%, the worst performing stock on the Stoxx 600 Banks Index, as DNB Markets highlights the lender’s beat on profits as low quality, with NII growth looking “light”
  • Volvo Car falls as much as 13%, the most since the Swedish carmaker’s 2021 IPO, after worse-than-expected third-quarter earnings that were weighed down by electric-vehicle competition
  • Mercedes-Benz Group shares fall as much as 6.3% after 3Q revenues came in below consensus and Morgan Stanley says commentary from the German carmaker seems cautious
  • Volkswagen shares fall as much as 3% after the carmaker reported a miss for the third quarter after pre-releasing figures Monday

Earlier in the session, Asian stocks slumped with technology shares leading the declines following another surge in Treasury yields and weak earnings by some of the sector’s bellwether companies. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid as much as 1.6%, the most in a week. TSMC and Samsung were the biggest drags on the gauge while Chinese sportswear maker Li Ning was the top loser after it reported lackluster sales for the third quarter. Equity benchmarks in Vietnam, Korea and Japan tumbled the most amid a broad regional selloff that followed another surge in US Treasury yields on Wednesday, with the Kospi reaching its lowest level in almost 10 months. “Fears of elevated imported inflation and higher longer-term funding costs due to the renewed strength seen in the US 10-year Treasury yields overnight” are the main drivers behind Asia’s weakness, said Kelvin Wong, a senior market analyst at Oanda.

  • Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp opened lower, but their losses were shallower than those of their regional peers, potentially amid stimulus optimism, while reports, before the Chinese market opened, suggested that US President Biden was expected to meet with Chinese Top Diplomat Wang Yi on Friday at the White House.
  • Japan's Nikkei 225 also saw its losses led by the Tech sector, whilst the losses in the JPY vs the USD failed to cushion the downside for the index.
  • Korea's KOSPI saw its chip sector languish, facing added headwinds as SK Hynix slumped over 4% post-earnings.
  • Australia's ASX 200 was dragged lower by its Tech sector, mirroring a similar sectoral performance seen stateside. Energy, however, was among the better performers.

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index gained as much as 0.3% while the Treasury 10-year yield was steady at 4.97%. The US is expected to report a sturdy growth rate of 4.5% later Thursday with its third quarter gross-domestic-product data. USD/JPY soared to 150.40 after breaching the key 150 level without BOJ intervention.

  • Dollar is rising “as traders shift positions amid a global equity slump; the war is still going on and there’s also the China property market problem,” said David Lu, director at NBC Financial Markets Asia Ltd. The strong dollar trend will continue at least until US GDP data is released, and until we see any risk-on news, Lu said
  • The yen slumped back past 150 per dollar again, raising the risk of government intervention in the currency market and piling pressure on the Bank of Japan to adjust monetary policy. “The yen’s persistent weakness also adds pressure on the BOJ’s policy settings, whether or not to raise the ceiling for yield-curve control, remove YCC or end the negative policy rate,” said Koji Fukaya, a fellow at Market Risk Advisory in Tokyo. He added that the yen is probably hemmed in for now with intervention risk limiting further losses and the yield gap preventing a recovery.
  • The euro dropped 0.2% against the dollar to 1.0546 ahead of the ECB decision. Following 10 back-to-back increases, policymakers will leave the deposit rate at 4%, according to all 59 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, amid growing evidence its tightening campaign is helping to bring down inflation.
  • The Australian dollar extended an intraday decline in the wake of RBA Senate testimony, which saw residual buy orders under 0.6290 filled, spurring CPI-inspired longs to exit, according to an Asia-based FX trader

In rates, treasuries are lower ahead of US GDP data with the curve steady as yields broadly hold within one basis point of Wednesday’s session close into the early US session. US 10-year yields around 4.97%, up 2bps on the day with bunds and gilts slightly outperforming in the sector; long-end Treasuries narrowly outperform, slightly flattening Treasury spreads on the day. Core European rates outperform Treasuries ahead of ECB rate decision. US session focus includes GDP data while this week’s auction’s conclude with $38 billion 7-year note sale at 1pm New York. The Treasury auction cycle concludes with $38b 7-year sale at 1pm, follows Wednesday’s sloppy 5-year auction which tailed the WI by 1.9bp. The WI 7-year trades around 4.975% is ~30bp cheaper than the September sale which tailed the WI by 0.3bp. More ominously, it appears that the bond market is freezing again: dollar IG issuance slate empty so far; Wednesday marks the third straight day with just a single issuer, taking weekly total to just $3.3b vs. $20b dealer estimates.

In commodities, oil prices decline, with WTI falling 0.8% to trade near $84.70. Spot gold adds 0.6%.

Bitcoin is slightly in the red but retains the bulk of the last few sessions upside which saw it convincingly eclipse the USD 35k mark; as it stands, BTC is holding around the USD 34k figure within relatively narrow bounds.

Looking to the day ahead. In terms of data, we have US Q3 GDP, personal consumption, core PCE, the October Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity, the September durable goods orders, advance goods trade balance, retail, and wholesale inventories, pending home sales, and initial jobless claims. Regarding central banks, we have the ECB decision, and we will be hearing from the BoE’s Cunliffe. Lastly, there will be earnings releases from Amazon, Mastercard, Merck and Co, Linde, Comcast, Intel, UPS, Honeywell, Bristol-Myers Squibb, American Tower, Northrop Grumman, Boston Scientific, Chipotle, Ford Motor, STMicroelectronics, Keurig Dr Pepper, Hershey, Kenvue, Newmont, Royal Caribbean Cruises, and Hertz.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.6% to 4,183.25
  • STOXX Europe 600 down 0.9% to 431.49
  • German 10Y yield little changed at 2.90%
  • Euro down 0.2% to $1.0547
  • MXAP down 1.4% to 150.08
  • MXAPJ down 1.2% to 470.22
  • Nikkei down 2.1% to 30,601.78
  • Topix down 1.3% to 2,224.25
  • Hang Seng Index down 0.2% to 17,044.61
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.5% to 2,988.30
  • Sensex down 1.3% to 63,200.84
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 down 0.6% to 6,812.32
  • Kospi down 2.7% to 2,299.08
  • Brent Futures down 0.7% to $89.54/bbl
  • Gold spot up 0.6% to $1,991.04
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.20% to 106.74

Top Overnight News

  • With China’s property bust threatening to sink the country’s economic recovery, Xi Jinping is looking for someone to blame. After putting the billionaire founder of Evergrande, a heavily indebted property firm, under investigation for possible crimes, Beijing is expanding its probes to include bankers and financial institutions that facilitated developers’ risky behavior, people familiar with the matter say. Among those under scrutiny: a former head of Bank of China, one of the country’s biggest lenders, the people said. WSJ
  • President Joe Biden will see Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi when he visits the White House on Friday, a courtesy gesture that could lay the groundwork for a leaders’ meeting next month, according to a person familiar with the matter. BBG
  • The head of Australia's central bank on Thursday said the strong third-quarter inflation report was around policymakers' expectations, and they were still considering whether it would warrant a rate rise. RTRS
  • Rishi Sunak said he would not “rush to regulate” artificial intelligence as he announced the creation of an AI Safety Institute in the UK which would examine, evaluate and test new technologies. FT
  • Israeli forces carried out a “targeted raid” in the north of the Gaza Strip in the early hours of Thursday, as they stepped up preparations for a ground operation in the coastal enclave to topple the militant group Hamas. FT
  • Siemens Energy plummeted 36% after saying it’s seeking about $16.9 billion in guarantees from the German government. BBG
  • MS announces Ted Pick will become CEO effective 1/1/24 (and join the board) while Gorman becomes executive chairman. Co-President Andy Saperstein will become the Head of Wealth and Investment Management with Dan Simkowitz named Co-President of the Firm and the Head of Institutional Securities. FT
  • The US economy probably grew at a 4.5% annualized pace in the third quarter but the boost came from mostly temporary factors. Bloomberg Economics expects today’s figures even higher at 4.9%, but sees a slowdown this quarter. BBG
  • The UAW reached a tentative deal with Ford, putting more pressure on Stellantis and GM. Ford agreed to a record 25% hourly wage hike over the life of the contract, which exceeds four years. Top pay will be more than $40/hour, UAW said. BBG

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks traded lower across the board, following the weak lead from Wall Street as participants juggle earnings, geopolitics, and data as major central banks line up for their next confabs, with the ECB due today, while the BoJ, FOMC, and BoE are slated for next week. ASX 200 was dragged lower by its Tech sector, mirroring a similar sectoral performance seen stateside. Energy, however, was among the better performers. Nikkei 225 also saw its losses led by the Tech sector, whilst the losses in the JPY vs the USD failed to cushion the  downside for the index. KOSPI saw its chip sector languish, facing added headwinds as SK Hynix slumped over 4% post-earnings. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp opened lower, but their losses were shallower than those of their regional peers, potentially amid stimulus optimism, while reports, before the Chinese market opened, suggested that US President Biden was expected to meet with Chinese Top Diplomat Wang Yi on Friday at the White House. US equity futures softened across the board, with the NQ (-1.1%) lagging after Meta shares initially rose almost 5% following earnings but later fell into losses of over 3% during the earnings call.

Top Asian News

  • RBA Governor Bullock said CPI was a little higher than expected but was about where we thought it would come. She added that goods prices coming down, but services inflation remains persistent, but she's still considering whether CPI was a "material" change to outlook. Bullock said services inflation is higher than what the RBA is comfortable with and will have to build this into forecasts. She said she would not like to say if CPI makes the rate rise more likely, and said there will be a change to the inflation forecast, but she's not sure if it will be material. Bullock said the RBA is wary of inflation and has made it clear that the RBA might have to hike again but has not yet decided whether a rise is needed, according to Reuters.
  • Westpac economists change their call on RBA, and now see a rate rise in November, according to Reuters.
  • Japan Finance Minister Suzuki said closely watching FX moves with a high sense of urgency, according to Reuters. Suzuki added they stick to previous currency policy, closely watching FX moves.
  • Japanese PM Kishida said BoJ's monetary policy aims to achieve sustainable inflation in tandem with wage hikes and does not contradict the government's inflation countermeasures, according to Reuters. Japanese PM Kishida says BoJ holds ETFs and JGBs as part of its monetary policy.
  • PBoC injected CNY 424bln via 7-day reverse repos with the rate at 1.80% for a CNY 80bln net daily injection.
  • PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.1784 vs exp. 7.3265 (prev. 7.1785)
  • SK Hynix (000660 KS) - Q3 (KRW) Revenue at 9.1tln (exp. 8.17tln). Operating loss 1.8tln (exp. loss 1.7tln). Net loss 2.2tln (exp. loss 1.5tln); Sees about 10% rise in Q4 DRAM shipments vs Q3 due to the rise in sales. Q3 DRAM average selling price is up about 10% vs Q2. Q3 NAND average selling price is down slightly vs Q2. 2024 CAPEX to be higher than 2023, but to keep the hike to a minimum. Plans a fall of teens % in Q4 NAND shipments vs Q3, aiming to cut low-profit sales. Semiconductor prices are starting to stabilize.
  • Chinese Commerce Ministry says consumption recovery has become more obvious since Q3.

European bourses are in the red, Euro Stoxx 50 -0.8%, with a blockbuster docket of earnings dominating action and the overall tone hampered by the soft Wall St. handover and subsequent pressure in Meta, -2.5% pre-market; from a macro perspective, the ECB looms. Sectors feature marked Autos/Parts pressure after Volvo Car (-9.2%), Mercedes-Benz (-5.5%) & Volkswagen (-1.0%) updates; Banking names pressured post-Standard Chartered (-10.2%) & BNP Paribas (-4.0%); more broadly, Utilities have been experiencing some modest relative outperformance, perhaps owing to their defensive nature in the absence of updates from the sectors heavyweights. Stateside, futures reside in the red ES -0.5% with the focus firmly on mega-cap corporates and the NQ -0.8% continuing to languish given the poor-reception to the Meta call; ahead, AMZN & INTC are the after-hours highlights

Top European News

  • Citi/YouGov Inflation Expectation Survey (Sep): Short-term expectations 4.2% (prev. 4.4% in August); 5-10yr ahead remains at 3.3%, according to Reuters.
  • Riksbank says it has decided to offer central counterparties that clear SEK and are participants in the RIX-RTGS system the opportunity to borrow money overnight from the Riksbank.

FX

  • Dollar continues its resurgence with DXY extending towards 107.00 within a 106.520-880 range.
  • Yen loses the battle to defend 150.00 and stealthily arrests slide after hitting a sub-150.50 low; note, at 07:50BST USD/JPY moved sharply lower after advancing to a high of 150.77. Pulled back to 149.80 before trimming downside and moving back to circa 150.40.
  • Euro straddles 1.0550 amidst spread of decent option expiry interest ahead of ECB.
  • Franc and Sterling lose more ground vs Greenback before finding support circa 0.9000 and 1.2070 respectively.
  • Aussie undermined by not so hawkish RBA Bullock response to hot CPI data, as AUD/USD pivots 0.6300 and AUD/NZD cross sits under 1.0900.

Fixed Income

  • Debt futures regain a degree of composure in contrast to equities ahead of key risk events.
  • BundsGilts and T-note all back just into positive territory within 128.18-127.56, 92.35-91.62 and 105-24+/15+ respective ranges pre-US GDP, IJC, durable goods and ECB.

Commodities

  • Crude benchmarks are modestly softer on the session but once again newsflow is relatively limited in nature ex-geopols; as such the December'23 contracts remain within familiar levels around 30-40 cents below the USD 85.00/bbl and USD 90.00/bbl marks for WTI and Brent respectively.
  • Main development has been rhetoric from Israel and Iran regarding the expected ground invasion of Gaza by Israel after the PM confirmed it would happen; in response, the Iranian IRGC warned Israel against such an operation.
  • Spot gold is firmer to the tune of USD 10/oz and is testing the USD 1990/oz mark to the upside with the focus on geopols; levels above largely coalesce around the USD 2050/oz figure before the YTD peak of USD 2081/oz.
  • Base metals are in the red as they are tracking the broader market tone and the accompanying underlying USD bid; though, the pace of the decline has slowed significantly in recent trade alongside a slowdown in macro developments and a steadying in broader price action ahead of a packed PM agenda.

Geopolitics: Israel-Hamas

  • "IDF carried out an unusual and extensive ground raid by infantry and armored forces inside the Gaza Strip", according to Israeli press citing Army Radio; "According to the report, the raid took place on a larger scale and deeper inside Gaza" "The objective of the raid was to attack Hamas targets from the Gaza Strip and strengthen the defense." "The defense establishment says that this is a more extensive operation than the raids carried out so far in the past two weeks inside the Gaza Strip." Thereafter, the Israeli Army said soldiers have since exited Gaza, according to Bloomberg.
  • The Israeli army announced the downing of a surface-to-air missile launched from Lebanon, according to Sky News Arabia.
  • Hamas fighters reportedly trained in Iran before the October 7th attacks, according to WSJ citing sources; roughly 500 Hamas and Palestinian militants received specialized combat training. Sources add they have no information suggesting the training was Intended for October 7th.
  • The Iranian Foreign Minister arrived in New York for international talks after the intensification of the crisis in Gaza, according to Al Jazeera citing Iranian press IRNA.
  • Iranian IRGC Commander warns Israel against commencing a ground operation within Gaza, saying "“the dragon of Gaza will devour them. If they set foot in Gaza, they’ll be buried there.".

Other

  • US President Biden is expected to speak with Chinese Top Diplomat Wang Yi on Friday at the White House, according to Reuters sources.
  • Russian Defence Minister Shoigu said "we are to start training on nuclear strike", according to Reuters.
  • An explosion was heard near a US base in the suburbs of al-Hasakah in north-eastern Syria, according to Iran International citing Syrian press.

US Event Calendar

  • 08:30: 3Q GDP Annualized QoQ, est. 4.5%, prior 2.1%
    • 3Q Personal Consumption, est. 4.0%, prior 0.8%
    • 3Q Core PCE Price Index QoQ, est. 2.5%, prior 3.7%
    • 3Q GDP Price Index, est. 2.7%, prior 1.7%
  • 08:30: Sept. Durable Goods Orders, est. 1.8%, prior 0.1%
    • Sept. Durables-Less Transportation, est. 0.2%, prior 0.4%
    • Sept. Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air, est. 0.2%, prior 0.7%
    • Sept. Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air, est. 0%, prior 0.9%
  • 08:30: Oct. Initial Jobless Claims, est. 207,000, prior 198,000
    • Oct. Continuing Claims, est. 1.74m, prior 1.73m
  • 08:30: Sept. Advance Goods Trade Balance, est. -$86b, prior -$84.3b, revised -$84.6b
  • 08:30: Sept. Retail Inventories MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 1.1%
    • Sept. Wholesale Inventories MoM, est. 0.1%, prior -0.1%
  • 10:00: Sept. Pending Home Sales YoY, est. -14.6%, prior -18.8%
    • Sept. Pending Home Sales (MoM), est. -2.0%, prior -7.1%
  • 11:00: Oct. Kansas City Fed Manf. Activity, prior -8

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

After not having a night alone/away with my wife from our kids for the 8 years since we've first had one, tonight is our second in just two weeks as some crazy parent at school has taken all three on a half-term sleepover. So we're going to watch the latest Scorsese film. The good news is it gets tremendous reviews. The bad news is it's 3 hours 26 minutes long. With my short attention span and tea and coffee habit during the day I'm not sure if and how I'll make it through. You'll hear tomorrow. I also can't remember the last time I went out in the week outside of a client dinner.

With recent developments, it’s anyone’s guess how much Treasuries will move in 3 hours and 26 minutes tonight. Indeed, if you have traded the daily swings in Treasuries well in recent days then you deserve a lot of credit or you’ve had an enormous slice of luck. I would pretend the former even if the latter is true. Whilst there has been no crazy moves, the daily swings in both directions have been wildly unpredictable even if the general direction has been higher. It was a bruising day yesterday for 60/40 portfolios as 10yr US yields rose +13.2bps with the S&P 500 -1.43% and the NASDAQ -2.43% (the worst drop since Feb and -10.7% from YTD highs in July) after the previous night’s tech results were digested. The sell-off continues overnight in Asia trading. The ECB meeting, Q3 US GDP and Amazon’s results after the bell are the highlights today .

If we start with the rates move, the long-end led the sell-off, as 30yr Treasury yields gained +14.8bps to 5.09% -- which is within a couple of bps of their 16-year closing high seen last week. 2yr yields were up a marginal +0.7bps. The 2s10s curve steepened +12.5bps, and the 2s30s by +13.7bps, with the spread of the latter a whisper away from zero again at -3.9bps having traded above zero for the first time in over a year intra-day on Friday. It hasn’t closed above it since last August. The latest refunding announcement occurs next week with fears over increased auction sizes creating some of the issues yesterday including a weak 5yr auction at 6pm London time which cemented the last leg of the sell-off last night. See our rates strategist's preview of the refunding here. Note that the last coupon auction before this takes place today with 7yr Treasuries being offered to the market.

Also adding support to the sell-off was the upside surprise to US new home sales, which came in at 759k (vs 680k expected), rising from 675k in August and up 12.3% month-on-month. This coincided with US 30-year mortgage rates hitting 7.90% yesterday, reaching fresh 23-year highs. So the data continues to be resilient in the face of everything thrown at it for now, with the next stop the Q3 US GDP growth and US PCE price index later today. Our economists expect an annualised 5.2% for GDP with consensus at 4.1% against 2.1% last quarter.

Earnings results from Microsoft and Alphabet on Tuesday night painted a mixed picture for big tech earnings last quarter, dragging down US equities more broadly. The NASDAQ fell -2.43% against this backdrop, its sharpest decline since February, while S&P 500 was down -1.43%. Both indices are down to their lowest levels since May, while the equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 (-1.12% yesterday) is now down to its lowest level in 12 months. After their results, Alphabet dropped -9.01%, the most since March 2020, and to its lowest level since July, whilst Microsoft moved in the opposite direction, up +3.07% to its highest level since the last week of July. Meanwhile, an outlook downgrade by Texas Instruments (-3.49%) from the previous night weighed on chipmakers with the Philadelphia semiconductor index down -4.13%. The VIX volatility measure jumped +1.2 points on the day to 20.2.

After the bell, Meta released its latest earnings report, which exceeded revenue and earnings expectations. The stock initially climbed in after-hours trading but then moved lower as the company cited macro volatility creating an uncertain revenue outlook for next year. We now have had Q3 earnings results from four companies out of the Magnificent Seven, representing over 15% of the S&P 500’s total market capitalisation. These have been mixed but overall have signalled an underwhelming outlook, with the Magnificent Seven index down nearly 7% since last Monday. NASDAQ 100 (-1.1%) futures are slipping again in Asia overnight with the S&P equivalent down -0.7%. All eyes will next be on Amazon, with earnings due after the bell later today. The last two of these seven to report are Apple and Nvidia who report next Thursday (2 November) and on 21 November, respectively.

Moving over to Europe and today’s ECB meeting. Market pricing and surveys overwhelmingly expect rates to stay on hold after 10 consecutive rates hikes totalling 450bps. Our economists see Lagarde avoiding saying that rates have necessarily peaked but with the first order focus being on achieving a sufficient duration of restrictive policy. They expect the ECB to discuss QT this week but to move gradually and conditionally when it comes to signalling any further acceleration of QT. See their preview piece here.

Ahead of the meeting the STOXX 600 traded sidewards (+0.04%) on Wednesday. The real estate sector particularly underperformed, down -1.98%, followed by consumer discretionary (-0.48%). In terms of data, Euro area M3 money supply fell -1.2% year-on-year (vs -1.8% expected) in September, consistent with continued tight credit conditions but with some evidence that bank credit flows are bottoming out. So one isolated argument against prospects of a hard landing for the euro zone. Euro banks relatively outperformed, climbing +0.56%, supported by strong earnings results in the sector.

Staying in Europe, the German October IFO business confidence index surprised to the upside at 86.9 (vs 86.0 expected), up from 85.7 last month as sentiment improved. It remains too early to declare a broad turnaround in sentiment, but the survey lends some optimism to the economic outlook after weak PMIs and subdued Gfk consumer confidence in the previous session. Against this backdrop, German 10yr bunds followed the US, as yields rose +6.3bps, with yields on OATs (+6.7s) and BTPs (+8.9bps) seeing a larger rise .

On the topic of geopolitics, newsflow regarding Middle East tensions remained fluid. Earlier in the day, WSJ reported that Israel will continue to delay its invasion of the Gaza strip to allow for the US to move additional air defences to the region, while Qatar’s foreign minister stated that talks on releasing Hamas’ hostages were moving forward. We then heard from Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu who said that Israel is preparing a ground invasion of Gaza. The headlines saw oil fluctuate during the day, with Brent trading around -1.5% lower below $87/bbl at one point, but ending the day up +2.34% to $90.13/bbl. WTI crude was up +1.97% to $85.39/bbl.

Asian equity markets are seeing a broad sell-off this morning, with the KOSPI (-2.28%) leading losses after shares of South Korean chip supplier SK Hynix dropped more than -3.5% as the firm reported a net loss for its third quarter. Meanwhile, the Nikkei (-2.13%) is also sharply lower while the Hang Seng (-0.82%), the CSI (-0.63%) and the Shanghai Composite (-0.29%) are also lower and largely wiping out the gains from the previous day after the latest stimulus package.

In FX, the J apanese yen weakened past the key 150 level against the dollar again, trading very close to its lowest level since August 1990, thus triggering the possibility of intervention from Japanese authorities and also putting pressure on the BOJ to consider tightening monetary policy. The yen has tumbled more than 12% so far in 2023, making it the worst currency among its G-10 peers .

In terms of overnight data, the South Korean economy expanded +0.6% q/q in the July-to-September period (v/s +0.5% expected), as against a similar quarterly growth in the previous three month period as exports rebounded, thus maintaining its growth momentum.

In US politics, Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana was elected as Speaker of the House Representatives yesterday afternoon with unanimous support among House Republicans. He had been the fourth Republican nominee for the position since Kevin McCarthy’s ouster three weeks ago. Johnson has spoken in favour of a new short-term spending deal so his appointment ought to improve the prospects of a government shutdown being avoided next month. And sticking to US news flow, overnight we heard from the UAW union that it had reached a tentative deal with Ford, one of the three US automakers affected by the now nearly 6-week-long autoworkers’ strike.

In other news yesterday, the Bank of Canada held its key interest rate steady at 5%, as expected, with the central bank now seeing the economy approaching balance. The bank left the door open for more tightening, but also focused on dampening effect of past hikes on activity and price pressures. Futures continue to price a roughly 40% likelihood of another hike by the BoC (similar to the Fed ), but the Canadian dollar did fall -0.25% versus the US dollar yesterday to its lowest since March.

Looking to the day ahead. In terms of data, we have US Q3 GDP, personal consumption, core PCE, the October Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity, the September durable goods orders, advance goods trade balance, retail, and wholesale inventories, pending home sales, and initial jobless claims. Regarding central banks, we have the ECB decision, and we will be hearing from the BoE’s Cunliffe. Lastly, there will be earnings releases from Amazon, Mastercard, Merck and Co, Linde, Comcast, Intel, UPS, Honeywell, Bristol-Myers Squibb, American Tower, Northrop Grumman, Boston Scientific, Chipotle, Ford Motor, STMicroelectronics, Keurig Dr Pepper, Hershey, Kenvue, Newmont, Royal Caribbean Cruises, and Hertz.

Tyler Durden Thu, 10/26/2023 - 08:14

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Did You Spot The Gorilla In The Fed’s Meeting Room?

Did You Spot The Gorilla In The Fed’s Meeting Room?

Authored by Simon White, Bloomberg macro strategist,

Monetary policy remains exceptionally…

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Did You Spot The Gorilla In The Fed's Meeting Room?

Authored by Simon White, Bloomberg macro strategist,

Monetary policy remains exceptionally loose given one of the fastest rate-hiking cycles seen. Pressure is likely to remain on rate expectations to move higher as the Federal Reserve reluctantly eases back on its December pivot, with the fed funds and SOFR futures curves continuing to steepen.

A famous experiment asks volunteers to watch a video of a basketball game and count the passes. Half way through, a gorilla strolls through the action. Almost no-one spots it, so focused they are on the game. As we count the dots and parse the language at this week’s Fed meeting, it’s easy miss the fact that policy overall remains very loose despite over 500 bps of rate hikes. The gorilla has gone by largely unnoticed.

The Fed held rates steady at 5.5% as expected and continued to project three rate cuts this year. But standing back and looking at the totality of monetary policy in this cycle, we can see that - far from conditions tightening - we have instead seen one of the biggest loosening of them in decades.

The chart below shows the Effective Fed Rate: the policy rate, plus its expected change over the next year, plus the one-year change in Goldman Sachs’ Financial Conditions Index, which is calibrated to convert the move in stocks, equity volatility, credit spreads and so on to an equivalent change in the Fed’s rate.

As we can see, in the three prior rate-hiking cycles the Effective Rate tightened; this time the rate has loosened, by more than it has done in at least 30 years.

It is against this backdrop the Fed’s pivot in December is even more inexplicable. By then it had become clear that a US recession was not imminent. Yet Jay Powell did not push back on the over six cuts that were priced in for 2024.

Since then inflation and growth data have come in better than expected. Still, though, the Fed may cut rates even if there is a smidge of an opening to do so. That would likely prove to be a mistake.

Typically the Effective Rate starts falling before the Fed makes its first cut and continues to fall after. This time around, the Effective Rate’s fall is already considerably steeper than normal – even before a cut is made. The Fed may end up spiking the punch bowl with more booze when the party is already quite tipsy.

The gorilla can be spotted in a number of different ways. Inflation has fallen, but it has done so largely despite the actions of the central bank, not because of them.

The San Francisco Fed splits core PCE inflation into a cyclical and an acyclical component. Cyclical inflation is made up of the PCE sub-components most sensitive to Fed interest rates, and acyclical is compiled from what’s left over, i.e. inflation that’s more influenced by non-Fed factors.

While acyclical inflation has fallen all the way back to its pre-pandemic average, cyclical PCE remains at its 40-year highs. The Wizard of the Fed has been pulling the rate-hiking levers, but they have done little to directly quell inflation.

It’s even worse if we account for borrowing costs. Mortgage costs were taken out of CPI in 1983 and car repayments in 1998. In a recent NBER paper by Larry Summers et al, the authors reconstruct CPI to take account of housing borrowing costs.

Inflation on this measure not only peaked much higher than it did in the 1970s, it is still running at 8%. Again, the question lingering in the air is: … and the Fed is considering cutting rates?

Source: NBER Working Paper 32163

(The main point of the paper is that the reason consumer sentiment indices have been depressed despite falling inflation is that they do include the impact of higher borrowing costs.)

If monetary policy was operating in the way expected, we would expect to see more slack in the economy. Yet this has signally failed to happen. The index of spare labor capacity – composed of the unemployment rate and productivity - has fallen only marginally, and remains stuck at 50-year highs.

Other measures of slack, including capacity utilization and job openings as a percentage of the unemployed are still near highs or remain historically very elevated. Under this backdrop, a Fed cut looks distinctly unwise.

Why did we not see a bigger rise in unemployment or drop in job openings despite the steep rate-hiking cycle? In short, massive government deficits allowed job hoarding.

The Kalecki-Levy equation illustrates the link between corporate profits and private and foreign-sector savings. Simply put, the more the household or government sectors dissave, i.e. spend, the higher are profit margins.

In this cycle, it has been the government’s dissaving that has allowed the corporate sector in aggregate to grow profits and - capitalizing on monopolization and on the unique economic disruption seen in the wake of the pandemic - expand profit margins.

It’s for the same reason that EPS growth has bounced back. (Buybacks also play a part here, but they too tend to happen when companies’ profits are growing, which is much easier when the government is spending like a drunken sailor.) As the chart below shows, there is a strong relationship between EPS and job openings, with EPS growth recently turning back up.

With such little movement on slack, no wonder the fall in inflation was due to factors outside of the Fed’s direct influence, most notably China’s glacial recovery. But that leaves markets in an increasingly precarious spot.

Inflation likely lulled the Fed into a false in of security when it performed its policy pirouette in December. But as was clear then and is clear now, this CPI movie isn’t over yet. Furthermore, any recession the Fed may have been wanting to circumvent continues to look off the cards for the next 3-6 months.

Yet the bank may still cut rates, on limited pretext, so confident they sounded last year that they would. That will inflame stock and other asset-bubble risks even more, at a time when we already have bitcoin making new highs and a dog “wif” a hat buying ad space on the Las Vegas Sphere.

Gorillas playing basketball is a very odd thing; the Fed cutting rates before the last quarter of this year would be even odder. Before then, though, markets are likely to try to re-impose some sobriety by reducing or eliminating the number of rate cuts priced in.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/21/2024 - 08:25

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Futures, Global Stocks Soar After Dovish Powell Greenlights Meltup

Futures, Global Stocks Soar After Dovish Powell Greenlights Meltup

Futures and global stocks are soaring and building on Wednesday’s powerful…

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Futures, Global Stocks Soar After Dovish Powell Greenlights Meltup

Futures and global stocks are soaring and building on Wednesday’s powerful gains after the Fed signaled expectations for three rate cuts this year and said inflation eased substantially while Powell greenlit the next big pre-election leg to the rally with dovish press conference comments that suggested the Fed has all but raised its inflation target to 3%. Both Tech and Small-caps are outperforming; while all of the Mag 7 are higher pre-mkt ex-AAPL which was hit on some negative regulatory headlines (AAPL shares have been a funding short for the group). As of 8:00am, S&P futures were 0.4% higher, trading just above 5,300 while Nasdaq futures up 0.8%, both in record territory. 10Y Treasury yields are lower, trading around 4.22% are the curve bull flattens while the USD trades higher after a shock rate cut by the SNB sent the swiss franc plunging. Today’s macro data focus includes flash PMIs, leading index, existing home sales, and jobless data. Powell flagged that a weakening labor market is cue for when to cut rates but did not indicate which data release is the most impactful but in the 5 years leading into COVID, weekly claims averaged 244k and today consensus is 213k.

In premarket trading, Micron shares surged 18%, lifting peers with it, after the maker of computer memory chips gave a 3Q forecast that was much stronger than expected. Chip equipment makers also gain after Micron said it plans to boost capital spending in fiscal 2025: Western Digital (WDC US) +6.7%, Seagate Technology (STX US) +1.2%; chip equipment makers Applied Materials (AMAT US) +3.4%, Lam Research (LRCX US) +3.1%. Here are some other notable premarket movers:

  • Astera Labs shares rise 5.6%, set to extend Wednesday’s 72% gain. The semiconductor connectivity company’s initial public offering topped expectations to raise $713 million, adding momentum to AI-related stocks and a listings rebound.
  • Broadcom shares gain 2.7% as analysts were positive about the chipmaker’s opportunities following its AI event. Cowen raised its rating to outperform from market perform.
  • Guess shares advance 12% after the clothing company reported 4Q adjusted earnings per share and sales above consensus estimates.
  • Li Auto ADRs fall 6.8% after the Chinese EV maker reduced its 1Q vehicle deliveries target, citing lower-than-expected order intake. CEO Li Xiang said the firm’s operating strategy for its newly launched Mega model was “mis-paced.”

Stock optimism was reignited after Federal Reserve policymakers kept their outlook for three cuts this year, despite a recent rebound in price pressures. While Chair Jerome Powell continued to highlight that officials would like to see more evidence prices are coming down, he also said it will be appropriate to start easing “at some point this year.” As part of the dovish hurricane response, treasuries advanced, lowering the 10-year yield by four basis points, while the dollar posted small moves. Brent crude traded around $86 a barrel and Bitcoin held at about $67,000. Gold rallied above $2,200 an ounce for the first time and a gauge of emerging-market stocks climbed the most since December.

While the Fed decision surprised some - especially the bears - there were more central bank shockers overnight, notably Taiwan which unexpected hiked 25bps to 2.00% and from the SNB which shockingly cut rates, sending the Swiss franc tumbling. The franc fell more than 1% against the dollar after the SNB lowered its key rate by 25 basis points in a move only a small minority of economists anticipated.

The decision to cut by Swiss policymakers was the first such reduction for one of the world’s 10 most-traded currencies since the pandemic abated.

“This signals to the world that we have turned a corner,” said Philipp Hildebrand, vice chairman at BlackRock and former Chairman of the SNB. “Central banks are easing and the question is where does all this settle in the long term.”

The Stoxx 600 traded up 0.4% after hitting a record earlier in the session. Mining and real estate stocks lead gains, while the health care sector lags. Equities in Europe paired some of their gains after euro-area manufacturing data missed estimates. S&P Global’s purchasing managers’ index showed sustained weakness in Germany and France — the bloc’s top two economies — even as overall private-sector activity for the euro-area rose to a nine-month high in March. Here are some of the most notable premarket movers:

  • Chip equipment stocks lead a rally in European tech stocks after the US Fed maintained its outlook for interest-rate cuts, and US firm Micron signaled it will increase capex next year
  • Glencore rises as much as 4% as it eyes a stake in Indonesian miner Harita Nickel, a sign of growing interest in the country’s fast-expanding nickel sector
  • Argenx gains as much as 12% after a rival for the biotech firm said a phase 3 Luminesce study of Enspryng as an investigational treatment for generalized myasthenia gravis failed
  • Remy Cointreau rises as much as 6.1% after Deutsche Bank lifts its recommendation on the stock to buy from hold, with inventory levels seen materially ahead of current market value
  • 3i Group shares gain as much as 4.4%, reaching record highs, after its Action unit reported 21% like-for-like sales growth vs. a year earlier, which analysts note shows continued strength
  • Energean rises as much as 6.1% as the company reiterated its guidance for this year. Analysts say markets are pleased that operations in Israel have so far not been disrupted
  • Esso surged as much as 23%, its biggest intraday gain since April 2022, after the French unit of Exxon Mobil announced a €12-a-share special dividend as part of its full-year report
  • Pernod Ricard rises as much as 2.9% as Deutsche Bank upgrades to hold from sell, saying the cognac maker is now “broadly fairly valued,” also seeing a fairly evenly balanced risk profile
  • M&G gains as much as 4.2% as the pension fund and asset manager sees better-than-expected institutional flows and operating profit for the full year period
  • Next gains as much as 5.9% after full-year results beat estimates and 2025 guidance was maintained. Analysts described the earnings as “pleasing”
  • Douglas falls as much against its IPO price as the German perfume retailer began trading in Frankfurt, trading at €23.8 as of 11am, down from the IPO price of €26.
  • Nemetschek falls as much as 5.4% after refining its 2024 guidance first proposed in March last year. Analysts deemed Ebitda margin and revenue growth targets cautious

Earlier in the session, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced as much as 2.2%, the most since Nov. 15, with Taiwan Semiconductor, Toyota and Samsung among the biggest contributors to the move. The bullish session echoes US gains after Fed policymakers kept their outlook for three cuts in 2024 and moved toward slowing the pace of reducing their bond holdings, suggesting they aren’t alarmed by a recent rebound in price pressures. Sentiment on Chinese tech stocks got a lift after Tencent Holdings Ltd. announced plans to more than double its stock buyback program and boosted dividends. The region’s semiconductor shares gained after Micron Technology Inc. gave a surprisingly strong revenue forecast for the current quarter, buoyed by demand for memory chips used in artificial intelligence applications.

“With the FOMC event risk out and market pricing roughly in line with dot plots, we think focus of Asian equity investors should return to earlier themes of AI momentum,” Chetan Seth, a strategist at Nomura Holdings Inc., wrote in a note. “We still expect a US soft landing.”

In FX,the Swiss franc sits at the bottom of the G-10 FX pile, falling 0.7% against the dollar after the Swiss National Bank surprised with a 25bps interest rate cut. The Norges Bank stood pat, as expected, prompting an uptick in the krone. The pound is little changed as investors now turn their attention to the Bank of England decision at noon UK time.

In rates, treasuries extended Wednesday’s post-Fed rally, supported by gains in UK front-end as traders fully price in 75bps of easing by Bank of England easing this year for first time since March 12.  Treasury yields richer by 3bp to 5bp across the curve with gains led by belly, steepening 5s30s spread by around 1.5bp and adding to Wednesday’s sharp steepening move as additional easing was priced back into the front-end; 10-year trades around 4.23% with bunds lagging by 1bp in the sector, gilts trading broadly in line. European bonds are firmly in the green, with rate markets drawing additional support from SNB’s surprise cut. US session includes several economic indicators and 10Y TIPS auction.

In commodities, oil prices decline, with WTI falling 0.3% to trade near $81. Spot gold rises 1%.

Bitcoin climbed back to best levels at USD 68k, before paring back to around the USD 66k level.

Looking at today's calendar, economic data calendar includes 4Q current account balance, March Philadelphia Fed business outlook and weekly jobless claims (8:30am), March preliminary S&P Global manufacturing and services PMIs (9:45am), February leading index and existing home sales (10am). Fed members scheduled to speak include Barr at 12pmTo contact the reporter on this story:

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.5% to 5,311.25
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.8% to 509.14
  • MXAP up 2.0% to 178.40
  • MXAPJ up 1.9% to 540.84
  • Nikkei up 2.0% to 40,815.66
  • Topix up 1.6% to 2,796.21
  • Hang Seng Index up 1.9% to 16,863.10
  • Shanghai Composite little changed at 3,077.11
  • Sensex up 0.7% to 72,624.50
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 1.1% to 7,781.97
  • Kospi up 2.4% to 2,754.86
  • German 10Y yield little changed at 2.41%
  • Euro down 0.2% to $1.0901
  • Brent Futures up 0.5% to $86.36/bbl
  • Gold spot up 0.7% to $2,202.16
  • US Dollar Index up 0.19% to 103.58

Top Overnight News

  • Taiwan’s central bank unexpectedly raises rates from 1.875% to 2% (the consensus was looking for rates to be unchanged). WSJ
  • China’s PBOC signals an openness to additional bank reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts, but sounds reluctant about lowering interest rates until the Fed begins easing. BBG
  • BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda said the central bank scrapped its massive easing program this week partly to avoid the need for aggressive action later, a comment that may help market players judge his next moves. BBG
  • SNB unexpectedly lowers its policy rate from 1.75% to 1.5% (the Street was looking for rates to stay unchanged) as the central bank highlights progress in the battle against inflation. RTRS
  • Eurozone flash PMIs are mixed, with a soft manufacturing figure (45.7, down from 46.5 in Feb and below the Street’s 47 forecast) and a decent services number (51.1, up from 50.2 in Feb and above the Street’s 50.5 forecast). BBG
  • AMZN is focusing its attention on combating Shein and Temu as the firm views both as larger competitive threats than Walmart and Target. WSJ
  • Korean Air Lines passed Boeing over to order 33 Airbus SE A350 wide-body jets in a $14 billion deal. And Japan Airlines said it’ll buy 11 Airbus A321neos — alongside some Boeings — breaking the US planemaker’s hold as its sole single-aisle supplier. BBG
  • The DOJ will sue Apple in federal court as soon as today for alleged antitrust violations, people familiar said, escalating the crackdown on Big Tech by regulators in the US and abroad. Apple is accused of blocking rivals from accessing hardware and software features of its iPhones. Shares slipped premarket. BBG
  • MU +17% pre mkt after reporting strong EPS upside in FQ2/Feb at 42c (the Street was looking for a 24c loss), w/the beat driven by better sales ($5.82B vs. the Street $5.35B), higher gross margins (20% vs. the Street 13/5%), and superior operating margins (pos. 3.5% vs. the Street’s neg. 4.4% forecast). The FQ3 guide was very. Mgmt said supply/demand conditions are improving thanks to a “confluence of factors”, including strong AI server demand, a healthier demand backdrop in most other end markets (it sees PCs growing in the low-single digits this year, w/AI PCs becoming a larger factor in 2025, while smartphones grow in the low/mid-single digits), and supply reductions across the industry. RTRS

Central Banks

  • SNB cut its Policy Rate by 25bps to 1.50% (exp. 1.75%); FX language reiterated "willing to be active in the foreign exchange market as necessary", Ready to intervene in FX; Loosening permitted by inflation progress.
  • SNB Chairman Jordan says that rates were able to be lowered as the fight against inflation has been effective. Says we give no forward guidance on future interest rates and will see where we are in 3 months time. Says we remain willing to sue balance to be active on forex market and could be sales of purchases; situation in ME is tricky; neither sales of forex are in focus at the moment
  • Norges Bank maintains its Key Policy Rate at 4.50% as expected; reiterates guidance that "policy rate will likely need to be maintained at the current level for some time ahead".
  • Norges Bank Governor Bache says the rate path indicates a cut is most likely in September, second rate cut indicated by end of Q1'25
  • Taiwan hikes its benchmark interest rate to 2.0% from 1.875%

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were mostly underpinned after the fresh record levels on Wall St post-dovish FOMC where the Fed maintained the projection for 3 rate cuts in 2024 and Powell downplayed recent hot inflation data. ASX 200 strengthened with sentiment also helped by a stellar jobs report and a fall in unemployment, while gold miners outperformed after the precious metal rose above USD 2,200/oz to a new all-time high. Nikkei 225 rallied from the open to unprecedented levels north of 40,800 despite recent hawkish source reports. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp. were mixed in which the Hong Kong benchmark rallied to just shy of the 17,000 level amid strength in the property sector and as the Fed projection for three rate cuts keeps similar action on the table for the HKMA. Conversely, the mainland lagged as the PBoC injected the least amount of funds in its open market operations since August last year despite the PBoC's Deputy Governor reaffirming that China's monetary policy has ample room and there is still room for cutting RRR

Top Asian News

  • HKMA maintained its base rate unchanged at 5.75%, as expected. HKMA said financial and monetary markets in Hong Kong continue to operate in a smooth and orderly manner, while it added that the HKD exchange rate remains stable and Hong Kong dollar interbank rates might remain high for some time.
  • PBoC Deputy Governor Changneng Xuan said they will promote effective investment and help resolve excess capacity, while he added that China's monetary policy has ample room and there is still room for cutting RRR. PBoC Deputy said he expects China's nominal economic growth to be around 8% in 2024 and will maintain appropriate growth in credit and total social financing, while they will guide banks to lower deposit rates and lower financing costs, support consumption and investment, as well as promote a rebound in prices.
  • China's Vice Finance Minister said fiscal policy will provide the necessary support for achieving the 2024 growth target and China's government debt is at an appropriate level, while he said China has continued to reduce the overall level of tariffs, which has now been reduced to 7.3% and is relatively low in the world, according to Reuters and Global Times.
  • China state planner vice chair said they will speed up approval for investment projects and that total bond funds for government investment will exceed CNY 6tln, while they will step up support for private investment and encourage private firms to participate in infrastructure investment projects, according to Reuters.
  • BoJ Governor Ueda said the BoJ is expected to maintain an accommodative monetary policy for the time being and accommodative monetary policy is likely to underpin the economy, while he added that cost-push pressure on inflation is dissipating but service prices continue to rise moderately and the preliminary wage negotiation outcome tends to be revised down but even so, they thought the final outcome would be a fairly strong number. BoJ Governor Ueda said as they end massive stimulus, they will likely gradually shrink the balance sheet and at some point reduce JGB purchases but at present, they have no clear idea regarding the timing of reducing JGB buying and scaling back the size of the balance sheet. Furthermore, he said they are not immediately thinking of selling BoJ's ETF holdings and will take plenty of time examining how to reduce ETF holdings.
  • BoJ is reportedly seen weighing the next rate hike in July or October as the Yen weakens, according to Nikkei. A source noted that additional hikes are of course on the table and that an early hike leaves room for the BoJ to consider rolling out another increase before the end of the year, while the timeline would keep the BoJ coming off like they are rushing to hike rates. Furthermore, it was stated that a growing number see a July rate boost as another possibility if a weak yen raises the price of imports and accelerates inflation, forcing the BoJ to step in. It was earlier reported that the Yen's decline appears to be raising little alarm at the BoJ for now which was to be expected given that Governor Ueda is maintaining an accommodative stance on policy, according to a source at the BoJ cited by Nikkei. However, it was noted that some at Japan's Finance Ministry are wary of rapid fluctuations in the currency market driven by speculative trades.
  • Fitch expects BoJ to raise policy rate to 0.25% by 2025.
  • CNOOC (600938 CH) FY (CNY) IFRS Net 123.84bln (exp. 130.33bln); In 2024, will insist on increasing oil and gas reserves and production; ongoing recovery trajectory in China will support demand for oil and gas

European equities, Stoxx600 (+0.4%) are entirely in the green, with sentiment lifted following a post-FOMC equity rally in the US & APAC. Following the release of poor French PMIs and bleak German commentary, equities have edged off best levels. European sectors are firmer; Tech takes the top spot, with optimism permeating within the sector after strong Micron results and Basic Resources benefits from broader strength in base metal prices. US equity futures (ES +0.4%, NQ +0.7%, RTY +0.6%) are stronger, in a continuation of the prior day's post-FOMC rally; Micron (+16% pre-market) is soaring after beating on EPS/Revenue and lifting guidance.

Top European News

  • EU New car registrations (Feb): +10.1% (prev. 12.1%); battery electric market share 12% (prev. 10.9%). EU27 New Car Registrations by Manufacturer (Y/Y). Volkswagen (VOW3 GY) +8.7%; Stellantis (STLAM IM/STLAP FP) +11.2%; Renault (RNO FP) +5.9%; BMW (BMW GY) +7.0%; Mercedes Benz Group (MBG GY) -2.1%; Volvo Cars (VOLCAR SS) +33.9%. (acea)
  • Portugal's President named centre-right democratic alliance leader Luis Montenegro as the new PM, according to Reuters.

FX

  • USD is attempting to claw back post-FOMC losses with some help via EZ-PMI releases. DXY still has some way to go to close the gap to yesterday's best at 104.14. High print for today at 103.66 coincides with the 200DMA.
  • EUR has been dragged lower by EZ PMIs which were indicative of the composite figure approaching neutral territory; EUR/USD on a 1.09 handle after slipping to a low of 1.0888.
  • GBP is a touch softer vs. the USD but near post-FOMC highs which saw Cable peak at 1.2803. UK PMIs saw services and composite miss but the manufacturing print edge closer to neutral. Focus ahead is firmly on the BoE.
  • JPY pausing for breath vs. the USD after vaulting to a high of 151.81 yesterday, which saw the pair stop shy of the 2023 high at 151.91 and 2022 peak at 151.94.
  • AUD the best performer across the majors following encouraging jobs metrics. AUD/USD as high as 0.6634 but unable to breach last week's best at 0.6638. NZD marginally higher vs. USD despite the surprise contraction in Q4 GDP data.
  • CHF is the clear laggard across the majors as the SNB surprises with a 25bps rate cut and reiterates a willingness to intervene in the FX market. EUR/CHF as been as high as 0.9782 to its highest level since July last year; 0.9842 was the high that year.
  • An unchanged announcement from the Norges Bank but one which sparked NOK strength given the repo path has not formalised a Q4-2024 rate cut as some were hoping for. As such, EUR/NOK slipped from 11.5300 to 11.4857. However, a modest dovish move was seen on Governor Bache indicating the first cut is "likely" in September.
  • PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.0942 vs exp. 7.1792 (prev. 7.0968).

Fixed Income

  • Choppy price action for Bunds owing to varied PMIs from France and Germany. The former sparked a dovish reaction with Bunds lifting from 131.90 to 132.72, whilst the German metrics sent Bunds back down to 131.85, though downside was shortlived given the Manuf. miss and SNB rate cut.
  • USTs are underpinned by the dovish fixed narrative which is dictating EGBs/Gilts into the BoE post-SNB/PMIs. Action which has taken USTs to a 110-24+ high, eclipsing the post-FOMC 110-22 peak.
  • Gilt price action is in-fitting with EGBs and as such approached their own PMIs with gains of around 30 ticks on the session. A release which saw two-way action with Gilts initially slipping to 99.24 (strong Manuf.) before rebounding to 99.46 (Comp. & Serv. miss); BoE up next.
  • Spain sells EUR vs exp. EUR 5.5-6.5bln 2.50% 2027, 5.75% 2032, 3.45% 2043 Bono
  • France sells EUR 12.498bln vs exp. EUR 11-12.5bln 2.50% 2027, 2.75% 2029, and 1.50% 2031 OAT

Commodities

  • Crude was initially firmer after the Fed-induced Dollar decline coupled with broader risk appetite, and geopolitics. However, the complex then trimmed gains after PMIs for France and Germany painted a bleak economic recovery picture; Brent is now lower on the session and just shy of USD 86/bbl.
  • Precious metals extend on post-Powell gains despite an attempted recovery in the Dollar, with spot gold topping USD 2,200/oz to fresh ATHs in APAC trade while spot silver gained status above USD 25.50/oz.
  • Base metals are higher across the board in the after-math of the FOMC which boosted broader market sentiment.

Geopolitics

  • US military said coalition forces destroyed an unmanned aerial vehicle fired by Yemen's Houthis in the Red Sea and destroyed an unmanned surface vessel on March 20th, according to Reuters.
  • Australia and Britain signed a defence pact which includes a status of forces agreement and makes it easier for the respective forces to operate together in each other’s countries, while the agreement also formalises the established practice of consulting on issues that affect our sovereignty and regional security.
  • "Al-Arabiya sources: Pressure on Israel to postpone the Rafah operation for at least 45 days", according to Al Arabiya; "The mediators and America rejected a preliminary Israeli proposal on the military operation in Rafah"

US Event Calendar

  • 08:30: March Initial Jobless Claims, est. 213,000, prior 209,000
    • March Continuing Claims, est. 1.82m, prior 1.81m
  • 08:30: 4Q Current Account Balance, est. -$209b, prior -$200.3b
  • 08:30: March Philadelphia Fed Business Outl, est. -2.5, prior 5.2
  • 09:45: March S&P Global US Manufacturing PM, est. 51.8, prior 52.2
    • March S&P Global US Services PMI, est. 52.0, prior 52.3
    • March S&P Global US Composite PMI, est. 52.2, prior 52.5
  • 10:00: Feb. Existing Home Sales MoM, est. -1.3%, prior 3.1%
  • 10:00: Feb. Leading Index, est. -0.1%, prior -0.4%

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Considering that US inflation has surprised notably on the upside this year, last night saw a remarkably relaxed Fed as Chair Powell indicated that January’s higher inflation could have been seasonal, and that February’s print had already seen improvements. The dots continued to show three cuts for 2024 and alongside a dovish-leaning press conference, this drove equities higher and yields lower, especially at the front end.

In terms of the details, the statement was little changed as the FOMC continued to see that “ it will likely be appropriate to begin dialing back policy restraint at some point this yea r” while wanting to gain “greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2%”.

The dot plot showed the median 2024 dot unchanged at three cuts this year. This came even as 2024’s economic projections were revised higher, with real GDP growth revised up from 1.4% to 2.1%, core PCE inflation up two-tenths to 2.6%, and unemployment a tenth lower to 4.0%. Our US economists note that this forecast implies core PCE averaging 19bps a month for the rest of the year – only a little above the 2% target run rate. So a pretty Goldilocks take for now even if this was accompanied by 25bp upward revisions to the 2025-26 median dots, and a larger share of FOMC members seeing inflation risks as tilted to the upside.

Powell’s press conference also erred on the dovish side, with his comments notably suggesting that the upside inflation data for January and February did not alter the Fed’s baseline, with the inflation story “essentially the same”. He also mentioned a couple of times that unexpected labor market weakening could warrant a policy response (though the FOMC did not see this currently), while expressing no concern about the ongoing easing in financial conditions.

When asked about rate cut timing, Powell made no effort to rule out the possibility of a May move, saying the FOMC “didn't make any decisions about future meetings”. Our US economists continue to expect the first rate cut to come in June with 100bps of cuts in total this year, but with risks skewed to a more hawkish outcome. See their full reaction here.

On the balance sheet side, Powell indicated that a decision on slowing the pace of QT would come “fairly soon”. He emphasized that slowing QT did not equate to stopping it, noting that moving to a slower run-off pace could actually allow for a greater reduction in the balance sheet over time by reducing the risk of liquidity problems emerging.

Following the FOMC, futures dialled up the probability of a June cut to 84% from 66% the previous day, with 84bps of cuts now priced by year-end (+10.7bps on the day). This backdrop saw a bull steepening of the Treasury curve, as 2yr yields fell by -8.1bps while 10yr yields were down -2.0bps on the day to 4.27% (and closing near their pre-FOMC levels). This came as higher breakevens offset most of a -5.9bps decline in 10yr real yields. The 2s10s slope reached its steepest level in over month at -33.2bps. And overnight, there’s been a further decline in yields, with those on 10yr Treasuries down another -0.8bps.

Equities basked in a risk-on mood following the Fed, with the S&P 500 (+0.89%), NASDAQ (+1.25%) and Dow Jones (+1.03%) all reaching new records. Small-caps led the gains, with the Russell 2000 up +1.92%, whilst the VIX index of volatility fell to its lowest since early February (-0.78pts to 13.04).

That rally has continued in Asia overnight, with strong advances for the Nikkei (+1.97%), the Hang Seng (+1.80%) and the KOSPI (+2.18%). Moreover, US equity futures are pointing to further gains, with those on the S&P 500 up +0.40%. That comes amidst some strong data releases, as we’ve started to get the March flash PMI releases from around the world. For instance in Japan, the composite PMI rose to 52.3 in March, which is the highest it’s been since August. Likewise in Australia, the composite PMI was up to 52.4, the highest since April. And Australia also had some strong employment data for February as well, with employment up by +116.5k (vs. +40.0k expected). However, even as markets have been positive for the most part, there have been losses for Chinese equities, with the CSI 300 (-0.11%) and the Shanghai Comp (-0.14%) both seeing modest declines.

In FX, the Japanese yen (+0.32%) has strengthened against the dollar, trading at 150.90 this morning after the Nikkei newspaper reported that investors were speculating about another hike in July or October. Before the news broke out, the Japanese yen was trading at 151.91, within a whisker of its post-1990 low.

Before the Fed, European markets had struggled to gain much traction yesterday, with the STOXX 600 unchanged (-0.00%) by the close. That came as ECB President Lagarde stuck to her previous message on monetary policy, saying that “when it comes to the data that is relevant for our policy decisions, we will know a bit more by April and a lot more by June.” That’s meant investors continue to see the June meeting as the most likely for an initial rate cut, and sovereign bonds were also fairly subdued in response. So there was only a modest decline in yields across most of the continent, with those 10yr bunds (-1.8bps) and OATs (-1.1bps) falling slightly.

The main exception to that pattern was in the UK, where 10yr gilts fell by a larger -4.6bps after the latest CPI release surprised on the downside. That showed headline CPI falling to +3.4% in February (vs. +3.5% expected), which is the lowest since September 2021. Moreover, core CPI fell to a two-year low of +4.5% (vs. +4.6% expected). In turn, that led investors to dial up the chance of rate cuts this year, and the chance of a cut by the June meeting moved up from 52% on Tuesday to 58% by the close yesterday.

That inflation release comes ahead of the Bank of England’s latest policy decision today, where they’re widely expected to keep rates on hold as well. So the focus will instead be on any signals about the timing of future rate cuts, along with the vote split. In his preview (link here), our UK economist Sanjay Raja sees the risks skewed towards a dovish surprise, but thinks that the MPC will stick to its February guidance that Bank Rate is restrictive and "will need to remain restrictive for sufficiently long to return inflation to the 2% target".

Lastly, there was some marginally brighter data from the Euro Area, as the European Commission’s preliminary consumer confidence indicator rose to -14.9 in March (vs. -15.0 expected). That was the highest reading since February 2022, just before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began.

To the day ahead now, and the main data highlight will be the flash PMIs for March. Alongside that, we’ll get the US weekly initial jobless claims, the Conference Board’s leading index for February, existing home sales for February, the Philadelphia Fed’s business outlook for March, and the Q4 current account balance. From central banks, there’s a policy decision from the Bank of England, and we’ll hear from Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Barr. Today’s earnings releases include Nike and FedEx. And in the political sphere, a summit of EU leaders is taking place in Brussels.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/21/2024 - 08:16

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The positive streak of news from initial and continuing jobless claims continues

  – by New Deal democratInitial and continuing claims once again continued their recent good streak. Initial claims declined -2,000 to 210,000, while…

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 - by New Deal democrat


Initial and continuing claims once again continued their recent good streak. 

Initial claims declined -2,000 to 210,000, while the four week moving average rose 2,500 to 211,250. Continuing claims, with the typical one week delay, increased 4,000 to 1.807 million:



While these aren’t the 50+ year lows we saw 18 months ago, they’re not far off.

For forecasting purposes, the YoY% change for initial claims is -15.0%, while the four week average is down -10.4%. Continuing claims are now only up 0.2%:



Needless to say, these strongly indicate no recession in the next few months.

Because jobless claims can be used to forecast the “Sahm rule” for recessions, let’s update that as well.


With last month’s 2 year high in the unemployment rate, last week I write that U wondered whether, because unemployment includes both new and existing job losses, it followed continuing claims more than initial claims (although initial claims lead both). The historical graph, which I won’t repost this week, indicated that continuing claims also lead the unemployment rate, although with much less of a lead time.

Here is this week’s update of the post-pandemic record for the past two years on a monthly YoY% basis (unemployment rate YoY shown in red):



Since both initial and continuing claims YoY are virtually unchanged, or even lower, I expect the unemployment rate to recede to at least unchanged YoY in the next several months. This would take it back down to the 3.7% or 3.6% area.

Here’s the same comparison on an absolute rather than YoY basis:



This also suggests a lowering at least back down to 3.8%.

The bottom line: no triggering of the Sahm rule.

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