Tag Archive: inflation
Weekly Market Pulse: A Fatal Conceit
Inflation* in the US is falling rapidly with the CPI rising just 0.9% in the second half of 2022 versus 5.4% in the first six months. Existing home sales are down 14.6% in the last 3 months and 34% over the last year. Housing starts are down 22% and permits are down 30% year-over-year. Orders for durable goods are down 1.2%, exports are down 3.8%, and imports are down 4.3% over the last 3 months.
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Dollar Index Gives Back Half of 21-Month Gains in 3 1/2 Months
Overview: The continued easing of US price pressures
has strengthened the market's conviction that the Federal Reserve will further
slow the pace of rate hikes and that the terminal rate will be near 5.0%. The
decline in US rates has removed a key support for the US dollar, which has
fallen against all the G10 currencies this week. The Dollar Index has now retraced half of what it gained since bottoming on January 6, 2021. Meanwhile, there are...
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Is it Too Easy to Think the Market Repeats its Reaction to a Soft US CPI?
The market expects a soft US CPI print today, which has recently been associated with risk-on moves. The US 10-year yield is holding slightly above 3.50%, the lowest end of the range since the middle of last month. The two-year yield is a little above 4.20%, also the lower end of its recent range. Most observers see the Federal Reserve slowing the pace of its hikes to a quarter point on February 1.
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US CPI Featured and Why the Fed may Still Hike by 50 bp
The most important economic report in the week ahead is the US December Consumer Price Index on January 12. To be sure, the Federal Reserve targets an alternative measure, the deflator of personal consumption expenditures. However, in this cycle, when households, businesses, investors, and policymakers are particularly sensitive to inflation, CPI, which is reported a couple of weeks before the PCE deflator, has stolen the thunder.
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Your Wealth Will Save Central Banks!
Today we ask, what is wealth? As we start a new year many will be looking at their portfolios and wondering what 2023 will have in store for them. Similar to 2022, we suspect there will be a lot of unknowns.
As with anything unforeseen, it’s a good idea to have some insurance. This is why there were record levels of gold buying last year, and we expect the same in the coming months; because people want to protect their wealth with the...
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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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What Can the Fed tell the Market it Does Not Already Know?
Overview: The softer than expected US CPI drove the
dollar and interest rates lower, while igniting strong advances in equities,
risk assets, commodities, and gold. Calmer market conditions are
prevailing today, and we suspect that in the run-up to the FOMC meeting, a broadly
consolidative tone will emerge. The dollar is mostly softer, but within yesterday’s
ranges. Only the New Zealand and Canadian dollars among the G10 currencies are softer....
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Gold is money – everything else is credit!
What physical precious metals investors can expect 2023 and beyond
Throughout the better part of 2022 there has been one question that has consistently, and predictably, popped up in conversations with my friends, clients and readers. Those who know me and are familiar with my ideas are well aware of my position on precious metals and the multiple roles they serve, so I can’t blame them for them for being curious whether I still “stick to my...
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US CPI ahead of FOMC Outcome Tomorrow
Overview: The dollar
softer against the G10 currencies ahead of today’s CPI report and the FOMC meeting
the concludes tomorrow. Emerging market currencies are most mixed. The
Hungarian forint leads the complex with around a 1% gain on news of a
preliminary deal struck with the EU. The South African rand is the worst
performer, off around 0.8%, as impeachment proceedings against Ramaphosa
proceed. Global equities are mostly higher today after the...
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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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Week Ahead: RBA and BOC Meetings Featured and China’s Inflation and Trade
The week ahead
is more than an interlude before five G10 central banks meet on December
14-15. The data highlights
include the US ISM services and producer prices, Chinese trade and inflation
measures, Japanese wages, household consumption, and the current account.
Also, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Bank of Canada hold policy
meetings. Central banks from India, Poland, Brazil, Peru, and Chile also meet.The dollar appreciated in Q1 and Q2...
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Hope Springs Eternal in China
Overview: Hope that the recent events in China are cathartic continues to lift risk appetites. Led by Hong Kong and mainland shares that trade there, the large bourses in the Asia Pacific region rallied. Japan, where macro data continues to disappoint, was the notable exception. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is snapping a three-day down draft and is up about 0.6% in late morning turnover. US futures are trading with a slightly firmer bias.
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US Jobs and Eurozone CPI Highlight the Week Ahead
Two high-frequency economic
reports stand out in the week ahead: The US November employment report
and the preliminary eurozone CPI. The Federal Reserve has deftly distanced itself from any one
employment report. As a result, it would take a significant miss of the median forecast
(Bloomberg survey) to alter market expectations for a 50 bp hike when the FOMC
meeting concludes on December 14.Economists are looking for
around a 200k increase in US...
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The Bitcoin is ‘as-good-as-gold’ myth is over
When you invest in gold or buy silver coins with GoldCore you are choosing to invest in an asset that has no counterparty risk. Sadly those who have been holding their bitcoin on the crypto exchange FTX, have not experienced the same level of reassurance and service from the exchange’s management.
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Weekly Market Pulse: Good News, Bad News
One thing I can tell you for certain about last week’s big rally on Thursday and Friday: there were a lot of people who desperately wanted a good excuse to buy stocks. And buy they did after a better-than-expected CPI report Thursday morning, pushing the S&P 500 up nearly 6% on the week with all of that coming on Thursday and Friday.
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Capital Flows Outstrip Trade Flows and that is Where to Look for Drivers of FX
Policymakers have often said that exchange rates should reflect fundamentals. What does that really mean? Can they do anything but that? It begs the question of which fundamental factors they should reflect.
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Caution Advised in Chasing FX, but Wow!
Overview: The softer than expected US inflation figures unleashed significant market adjustment that continue to ripple through the capital markets. The modification of some of China’s Covid stance may have also fanned some optimism, but we suggest that measures are modest tweaks, and the surge in infections will prevent the end of disruptive restrictions.
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High Anxiety: China’s Covid and US Inflation
Overview: Anxiety is running high. Rather than ease its Covid restrictions, a surge in cases is seeing more areas in China come under restrictions. The US reports CPI and of the ten reports this year, seven of them have been stronger than expected.
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Here are three things you can learn from the Fed
2023-01-13
by Stephen Flood
2023-01-13
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