Tag Archive: ECB
Dollar and Rates Soften a Little Ahead of US CPI
The focus is on the US CPI report today, but the price action is anything but intuitive. Although the revisions of the basket and methodological changes reinforce expectations for the largest rise in three months, the US dollar continues to trade heavily after rallying last week. The dollar-bloc currencies are underperforming today. And US rates are softer. The US 2- and 10-year yields are 1-2 bp lower.
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A Day of Surprises
(I
am on a business trip and did not intend to post any analysis today. However,
there have been a number of unexpected developments that warrant some
commentary. Thanks for bearing with me.) Japanese press reports that the BOJ Deputy
Governor Amamiya turned down the opportunity to become the next BOJ governor. Instead,
next week, former BOJ board member Kazuo Ueda will be nominated. The market
reacted dramatically, taking the yen sharply higher...
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Markets Calm after Dramatic Swings on Powell’s Comments
The US dollar is mostly trading with a downside bias today against the G10 and most emerging market currencies. It had begun the week extending the gains spurred by the dramatic jump in nonfarm payrolls and the strong ISM services survey. Market expectations for the trajectory of Fed policy in the first part of this year converged with the Fed's December dot plot. The market now leans toward two more quarter-point hikes this year.
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The Dollar Pares Yesterday’s Gains but Near-term Change in Sentiment may be at Hand
Overview: The dollar remained firm yesterday, even
after the ECB's hawkish stance, reaffirming its intention to hike rates by
another 50 bp next month. We had expected the greenback to have been sold in
North America yesterday. That this did not materialize warns that despite its
pullback in Asia and especially Europe today, that near-term sentiment may be
changing with the Fed and ECB meetings over and die cast for next month, where
the Fed is...
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North America likely will Sell USD Bounce Seen in Europe
Overview: The failure of the Federal Reserve to push harder against the market's dovish views and the easing of financial conditions encouraged a risk-on trade that saw the dollar and yields slump and equities rally. There has been limited follow-through dollar selling today, and a small recovery ahead of the Bank of England and European Central Bank meetings.
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Bank of Canada may say Pause, but the Market Hears Finished
Overview: Amid sharp losses in the US equity futures, the US dollar is mostly firmer against the G10 currencies. The notable exception is the Australian dollar, where high-than-expected inflation boosts the risk of a more aggressive central bank.
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Euro Pokes Above $1.09. Will it be Sustained?
Overview: The Lunar New Year holiday has shut many centers in Asia until the middle of the week, though China's mainland is on holiday all week. The signaling of a downshift in the pace of Fed tightening by some notable hawks helped lift risk appetites ahead of the weekend and saw the
S&P 500 snap a four-day decline.
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Dismal UK Retail Sales Weigh on Sterling, While the Yen Softens
Overview: The US dollar is mostly softer today against the G10
currencies, with the notable exception, yen, Swiss franc, and sterling. The
risk-on mood is seen in the foreign exchange market with the Antipodean and
Scandi currencies leading the move against the greenback. The yen has fallen by
about 1.3% this week, leading losers, while sterling's 1.1% gain puts it at the
top. Despite the poor showing of US equities yesterday, risk appetites...
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The BOJ Surprises by Standing Pat
Overview: The BOJ defied speculation and stuck to its
current policy, which saw the yen sell-off sharply. The dollar rallied about
3.4 yen before falling back. The greenback is broadly lower against the other
G10 currencies. However, for the fifth consecutive session, the euro has
stalled around $1.0870. While UK headline inflation softened, mostly due to fuel,
core prices were unchanged, and this may have helped sterling extend its recent
gains to...
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Consolidative Tone in FX
Overview: After sharp losses yesterday, the US dollar has stabilized today arguably ahead of Fed Chair Powell's speech at the Riksbank symposium. Yesterday's Fed speakers stuck to the hawkish rhetoric, and this seemed to help reverse the equity market gains, though the greenback remained soft.
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Greenback’s Sell-off may Stall Ahead of Powell Tomorrow
Overview: Don't fight the Fed went the manta as the
market took the US two-year yield back up to 4.50% in the aftermath of the FOMC
minutes last week, the highest in over a month. The minutes warned of a
premature easing of financial conditions. And then bam, softer than expected
hourly earnings and a weak service PMI and bonds and stocks rallied, and the
dollar was sold. This is a key part of the backdrop for this week, for which
several Fed...
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USD Stretched Ahead of Employment Report, while Yuan Jumps on Hopes of New Property Initiatives
Overview: The US dollar extended yesterday's gains
as the market adjusts positions ahead of the jobs data. Yesterday and today's
price action looks to have strengthened the near-term technical outlook for the
greenback. However, the intraday momentum indicators are stretched. This warns
of the risk of a counter-intuitive move after the data, barring a significant
surprise. Meanwhile, one of the Fed's leading hawkish voices, St. Louis Fed
President...
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Yesterday’s Gains Unwound may Make the Greenback a Better Buy Ahead of FOMC Minutes
Overview: Yesterday's greenback gains have been
mostly reversed today. New efforts by China in its property market and
anticipation of more stimulus helped rekindle the animal spirits today. Asia
and Europe shrugged off yesterday's losses on Wall Street and the rally in
bonds continued. The 8-12 bp decline in European benchmark 10-year yields comes
even though the final composite PMI was better than expected fanning hopes of a
short and shallow...
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European Rates Continue to Surge, Sending Stocks Spiraling Lower
Overview: Seven of the G10 central banks pumped the brakes between last week and this week as they purposely seek to push demand back into line with supply. And there are more signs that they are succeeding in weakening growth impulses. The dramatic surge in European bond yields continues today with 10-year rates mostly rising another 13-15 bp.
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The Greenback Recovers After the Initial Post-Fed Wobble
Overview: The US dollar has come back bid after losing ground against
most currencies as the markets reacted to the FOMC decision and press
conference. The Antipodeans and Scandis have been tagged the hardest, illustrating
the risk-off mood, and arguably the weakening growth prospects. Countries that
peg their currencies to the dollar have hiked rates, as has the Philippines and
Taiwan. The Swiss National Bank and Norway have also lifted policy...
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Markets Await Central Banks and Data
Overview: There are two themes today. First, there has been a modest bout of profit-taking on Chinese stocks (and yuan) after last week’s surge. Second, the ahead of the five G10 central bank meeting this week a series of market-sensitive economic reports, a consolidative tone is seen in most of the capital markets. Most of the large bourses in the Asia Pacific region fell, led by a 2.2% loss in Hong Kong and 3% loss in its index of mainland shares.
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Five G10 Central Banks Meet and US CPI on Tap
Half of the G10 central banks meet in the week ahead. The Fed is first on December 14, and the ECB, BOE, Swiss National Bank, and Norway's Norges Bank meet the following day. Before turning a thumbnail sketch of the central banks, let us look at the November US CPI, which will be reported as the Fed's two-day meeting gets underway on December 13.
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Chinese Stocks Extend Rally Even Though Covid Infections Appear to be Spreading
Overview:
The easing of vaccination, quarantine, and some travel protocols
related to Covid in China (and Hong Kong) continues to draw funds back into Chinese
stocks, wherever they trade. The Hang Seng rose 2.3% today to close the week
with a nearly 6.6% advance. The index of mainland companies that trade there
rose 2.5% on the day for a7.3% weekly gain. The CSI 300 of mainland shares rose
1% today and almost 3.3% for the week. Japan’s 1% gain...
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Dollar Jumps, while Surge in Covid Cases Raise Questions about China’s Pivot
Overview: Surging Covid cases in China and Hong Kong
are undermining hopes of a Covid-pivot and the US dollar is broadly higher.
Equities are under pressure to start the week. Most of the large bourses in the
Asia Pacific but Japan, fell earlier today. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is paring last
week’s minor gain, which was the fifth consecutive weekly rise. US stock futures
are lower, while the 10-year US Treasury yield is flat near 3.83%. European
yields...
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Higher Japanese CPI Won’t Change the BOJ’s Stance
Overview: The capital markets are heading into the
weekend mostly quietly in a consolidative fashion. Ambiguous signals from yesterday’s US
equities saw a narrowly mixed performance among the large Asia Pacific bourses,
but of note, Hong and China markets saw this week’s gains trimmed. Europe’s
Stoxx 600 is up around 1% near midday and is slightly above last week’s
close. US equity futures are trading
with a firmer bias ahead of a large...
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