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FX Daily, July 28: Dollar and Equities Closing Week on Heavy Note

Swiss Franc

The franc is off another 0.5% today, to bring its weekly loss to a sharp 2.5%.

EUR/CHF and USD/CHF, July 28

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EUR/CHF and USD/CHF, July 28

Source: markets.ft.com - Click to enlarge

FX Rates

The US dollar is mostly lower, though one of the features of recent days has been the dramatic slide of the Swiss franc, and that is continuing today. The euro finished last week near CHF1.1030 and is now near CHF1.1370; its highest level since the cap was lifted in mid-January 2015.

The dollar-bloc currencies are underperforming a bit, but the European complex is firm, led by the Swedish krona, which has been buoyed by a sharp jump in Q2 GDP. The 1.7% quarterly expansion in the April to June period was near twice expectations. The nearly 1% rise of the krona today lifts the weekly gain to 1.25% and extending the rally for a fifth consecutive week.

Global equity markets are sliding, as the high flying technology sector succumbs to profit-taking pressures. US S&P technology sector is up 22% year-to-day. The retreat began in the US yesterday, and continued in after hours trading, following the disappointing news from Amazon. The decline carried over into Asia, where the MSCI Asia Pacific Index was off 0.7%, and offset the gains earlier in the week to close fractionally lower for the week, and on its lows. Chinese equities were resilient and were the only large market in the region to close higher. The tech heavy Korean Kospi slid 1.7%, the most since last November.

FX Daily Rates, July 28

FX Daily Rates, July 28

- Click to enlarge

European equities are also heavy. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is off 1% in morning turnover. Information technology, telecom, and materials are the hardest hit sectors. The benchmark was up 0.5% on the week coming into today, so without a recovery, it will finish lower for the second consecutive week.  It has declined in seven of the past 10 weeks.

The retreat in equities is not providing the bond markets with a good bid. Bond markets are also heavy, and benchmark 10-year yields in Europe are 3-6 basis points and are 6-9 basis points higher on the week. The US 10-year yield is up a single basis point at 2.32%, a six basis point increase on the week.

There are several developments to note. In the US, there have been two important legislative events that will likely underscore investor anxiety about Trump Administration’s economic agenda going forward. First, in the House of Representatives, the Border Adjustment Tax (BAT) has been dropped from the tax reform measures being debated. This is important, not so much because it indicates a step away from protectionism, but because without the funds from BAT, significant tax reform is considerably more difficult. Moreover, and secondly, the Senate’s efforts to repeal and replace or even repeal the Affordable Care Act has been defeated, and the bill has been pulled.

FX Performance, July 28

FX Performance, July 28

- Click to enlarge

Japan

In Japan, the labor market got tighter, and consumers shopped, but price pressures remained minimal. The unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 2.8% in June from 3.1%, and that job-to-applicant ratio rose to 1.51 from 1.49.

Japan Unemployment Rate, June 2017

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Japan Unemployment Rate, June 2017

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On a year-over-year basis, household spending rose 2.3%. It is the first rise in over a year.

Japan Household Spending YoY, June 2017

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Japan Household Spending YoY, June 2017

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

On the other hand, headline and core CPI was unchanged at 0.4% year-over-year.

Japan National Core Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, June 2017

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Japan National Core Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, June 2017

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

Eurozone

In Europe, Germany and Spain have reported preliminary July CPI figures, while Spain and France have also reported Q2 GDP. The eurozone aggregate figure will be reported next week. It is expected to be unchanged at 1.3% on the headline and 1.1% at the core.

 

Eurozone Consumer Confidence, July 2017 (flash)

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Eurozone Consumer Confidence, July 2017 (flash)

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

Germany

German states have reported, and this suggests a risk that the national figure that will be reported in the German afternoon may have risen 0.3-0.4% on the month for a year-over-year rate little changed from June’s 1.5% pace.

Germany Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, July 2017 (flash)

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Germany Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, July 2017 (flash)

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

Spain

Appears that fuel prices were behind the tick up in Spanish headline CPI which rose to 1.7% from 1.6%.

Spain Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, July 2017 (flash)

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Spain Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY, July 2017 (flash)

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

Spain’s GDP expanded 0.9% in Q2, in line with expectations, and lifted the year-over-year pace to 3.1% from 3.0%.

Spain Gross Domestic Product (GDP) YoY, Q2 2017

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Spain Gross Domestic Product (GDP) YoY, Q2 2017

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

France

We noted earlier in the week that there were rising tensions between France and Italy. France had apparently taken credit for developments in Libya that were partly due to Italy’s initiatives. Those tensions intensified following President Macron’s decision to block and Italian takeover of French shipyard company but nationalizing it. It had been owned by a Korean company previously. While Macron’s honeymoon seems over, Japan’s Abe failed to turn the tide of that has seen his public support wane (a poll at the start of the week, put it at 26%, the lowest since he returned to power in 2012). What was seen as an uninspired testimony before the Diet this week failed to lift the cloud of scandal and misuse of power allegations. A cabinet reshuffle is expected next week, and the much-maligned defense minister resigned earlier today.

France Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) YoY, Jul 2017 (flash)

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France Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) YoY, Jul 2017 (flash)

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

France’s Q2 GDP rose 0.5%, matching the Q1 increase. This was sufficient to lift the year-over-year pace to 1.8% from 1.1%. It is the fastest growth since Q3 2011. The improvement in net exports appears largely offset by the decline in inventories. Consumption was soft at 0.2%, (separately France reported a 0.8% decline in June consumption, twice the decline expected).

France Gross Domestic Product (GDP) QoQ, Q2 2017

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France Gross Domestic Product (GDP) QoQ, Q2 2017

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

United States

The data focus in North America is on GDP. The US reports its first look at Q2 GDP. The Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now sees the economy tracking 2.8% annualized growth. The NY Fed’s tracker put it at 2.0% at the end of last week. The median forecast from the Bloomberg survey is 2.8%. Our own guesstimate is a bit lower. In terms of details, the consumer is expected to have recovered from the 1.1% pace in Q1 to something close to 2.75%-3.0%. On the other hand, the deflator, including the core PCE deflator may have softened considerably. For its part, Canada reports May GDP. A 0.2% gain would lift the year-over-year rate to 4.1% from 3.3% in April. It would be the fastest year-over-year pace in six years.

U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) QoQ, Q2 2017

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U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) QoQ, Q2 2017

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

U.S. Michigan Consumer Sentiment, July 2017 (flash)

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U.S. Michigan Consumer Sentiment, July 2017 (flash)

Source: investing.com - Click to enlarge

Graphs and additional information on Swiss Franc by the snbchf team.

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Marc Chandler
He has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for more than 30 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. After 14 years as the global head of currency strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, Chandler joined Bannockburn Global Forex, as a managing partner and chief markets strategist as of October 1, 2018.
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