Tag Archive: Trade
Financial Stress Continues to Recede
Overview: Financial stress continues to recede. The
Topix bank index is up for the second consecutive session and the Stoxx 600
bank index is recovering for the third session. The AT1 ETF is trying to snap a
four-day decline. The KBW US bank index rose for the third consecutive session
yesterday. More broadly equity markets are rallying. The advance in the Asia
Pacific was led by tech companies following Alibaba's re-organization
announcement. The...
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Tumbling Tokyo Prices Gives Ueda Breathing Space
Overview: Talk from two Fed officials yesterday,
which seemed to validate market expectations eased the upward pressure on the
dollar and helped equities launch a dramatic recovery. The market is pricing in a terminal rate near 5.50%, a little higher than the median dot in December. The S&P 500 posted a
dramatic recover and posted a potential bullish key reversal. Its 0.75% closing
gain was the largest advance in nearly three weeks. A large...
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No Turn Around, but Consolidation Featured
Overview: After large moves yesterday, the capital
markets ae quieter today. Stocks are mostly firmer, and the 10-year US yield is
a little softer near 3.62%. Strong nominal wage increases in Japan and a
hawkish hike by the Reserve Bank of Australia helped their respectively
currencies recover, though remain within yesterday's ranges. The euro briefly
traded below $1.07, and sterling has been sold through $1.20. That said, a
consolidative tone is...
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The Market Appears to Shrug Off the Fed’s Warning
Overview: The US dollar is consolidating in a mixed
fashion today. The FOMC minutes drew much attention but failed, at least
initially, to spur a significant shift in expectations. The pricing in the Fed
funds futures strip is still consistent with a cut later this year, which the
minutes were clear, no officials anticipate. Today's US ADP jobs estimate, and
November trade balance are being overshadowed by tomorrow's nonfarm payroll
figures. The...
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Yesterday’s Dollar Recovery Questioned Today
Overview: The 11 bp jump in the 10-year US yield yesterday after dropping nearly 26 bp in the previous three sessions, helped the greenback recover and took a toll on stocks. Still, the S&P 500 is above the low set on November 30 (~3939) before Fed Chair Powell's talk that day.
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Risk Appetites Survive China Keeping Zero Covid Policy
Overview: Chinese officials denied plans to end the zero-Covid policy
and after a brief wobble, risk assets have traded better. Asia Pacific equities
rallied, led by Hong Kong and mainland stocks that trade in Hong Kong. Europe’s
Stoxx 600 opened lower but recovered and is around 0.5% higher after the 1.8%
gain before the weekend. US futures are firm. Benchmark 10-year yields are mostly
2-4 bp softer in Europe and the US. The dollar is mixed. The...
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Fed’s Hawkishness Roils the Capital Markets
Overview: The Fed delivered the expected 75 bp
rate hike, and although it says it will take into account the cumulative effect
of past hikes and their lagged impact, the takeaway has been a hawkish message.
Risk appetites have evaporated. The dollar is stronger, while stocks and bonds
have been sold. Japan’s markets were spared due to the national holiday, but the
other large markets in the area were sold, lead by the 3% decline in the Hang
Seng....
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Dollar Recovers from Yesterday’s Stunning Reversal, but has Sentiment Turned in North America?
There has been little follow-through dollar selling so far today after yesterday’s dramatic downside reversal after the initial flurry of buying in response to the stronger than expected US CPI.
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Bank of England Steps in to Buy Inflation-Linked Bonds for the First Time
Overview: The dollar continues to ride high. It reached its highest level against the yen since the recent intervention. The Canadian dollar has fallen to its lowest level in two-and-a-half years and the New Zealand dollar is approaching the 2020 extreme.
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Intraday Momentum Indicators Point to a Dollar Recovery After the Employment Report
Asia Pacific bourses followed yesterday’s US loss, but after opening lower Europe’s Stoxx 600 has steadied. US futures are narrowly mixed ahead of the US jobs report. Benchmark 10-year yields are higher across the board.
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Macro: Tell Us Something We Don’t Already Know
As September winds down, three sets of economic reports will draw the most attention. We will review them and then offer a snapshot of the emerging market central bank meetings.
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The Dollar Heads into the Weekend Well Bid
Overview: The dollar is well bid. It has risen to new two-year highs against
the dollar bloc and Chinese yuan. Aided by worse than expected retail sales,
sterling, on its anniversary of leaving the European Exchange Rate Mechanism fell
to its lowest level since 1985. This fits into the broader risk-off move. The
S&P 500 fell to new two-month lows yesterday, and FedEx warnings after the
bell yesterday add to the string of worrisome comments...
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ECB: Coping with Conflict, Covid, and Climate
Overview: Heightened warnings from Japanese officials has helped the dollar steady against the yen, while the euro hugs parity ahead of the outcome of the ECB meeting, where a 75 bp hike is anticipated. Most Asian equity markets rallied in the wake of yesterday’s gains in the US.
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The Yen and Yuan Continue to Weaken
While the US dollar appears to be consolidating its recent gains, the Japanese yen and Chinese yuan remain under pressure. Officials seem more concerned about the pace of the move than the level it has reached. New and large fiscal initiatives that the new UK government has floated has failed to change sentiment toward sterling, which is the second weakest major currency today after the Japanese yen.
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Markets Look for Direction
Overview: The biggest development today in the capital markets is the
jump in benchmark interest rates. The US
10-year yield is up five basis points to 2.86%, which is about 10 bp above
Monday’s low. European yields are up 9-10
bp. The 10-year German Bund yield was
near 0.88% on Monday and is now near 1.07%.
Italy’s premium over German is near 2.18%, the most in nearly three
weeks. Although Asia Pacific equities
rallied, led by Japan’s 1.2%...
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Johnson Resigns, but Still not Clear if He Controls the Timing
Overview: The resignation of a UK prime minister makes for high political drama, but the markets hardly moved on it. Sterling, like most of the major currencies, are recovering against the dollar today.
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The Greenback Bounces Back
Overview: After modest US equity gains yesterday, the weaker yen and Beijing’s approval of 60 new video games helped lift most of the large markets in the Asia Pacific region.
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Reserve Bank of Australia Surprises, but Aussie Struggles
Overview: The jump in US interest rates helped lift the greenback to new 20-year highs against the Japanese yen and pushed the euro back below $1.07. US equities saw initially strong gains pared and this set the tone for today’s activity.
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The Week Ahead: US CPI and PPI Set to Soften
The Fed's 50 bp rate hike is behind us. Another 50 bp hike is expected next month. The April
employment report will do little to calm the anxiety about the "too tight" labor market.
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Central Banks on a Preset Course Reduces Significance of High-Frequency Data
Arguably the most important data next week is the flash PMI. It is not available for all countries, but for those generally large G10 economies, the preliminary estimate is often sufficiently close to the final reading to steal its thunder.
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