Tag Archive: U.K.
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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Aussie Sells Off After RBA Hikes 50 bp while Sterling Bounces on UK New Initiative
Overview: A GBP130 bln initiative by the new UK government to protect households from the surge in power costs helped lift sterling from 2.5-year lows. The Reserve Bank of Australia delivered the expected 50 bp rate hike, but the prospect of smaller moves going forward saw the Australian dollar sold through yesterday’s lows.
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What Happened Monday
The US and Canada may have been on holiday on September 5, but the world waits for no one and there were several significant developments. First, Gazprom's decision to indefinitely suspend gas shipments through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline announced before the weekend saw the European natgas benchmark soar 23.7.
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New Lockdown in China and the First Drop in South Korea’s Chip Exports in 2 years Euthanizes Animal Spirits
Overview: The precipitous fall in equities continues while the dollar remains buoyant. Nvidia’s warnings about US curbs on sales to China and the first drop in South Korea’s chip exports in two years, coupled with the largest lockdown in China since Shanghai encouraged investors to move to the sidelines.
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EMU August CPI at 9.1%, while the Core Rate Jumps to 4.3%
Overview: The rise in global interest rates continues. The US 10-year yield is a few basis points near 3.15% and European benchmarks are mostly 5-6 bp higher. Of note, the sharp sell-off in UK Gilts has being extended. Yesterday’s 10 bp rise has been followed by another 14 bp surge today. Italian bonds are also getting hit. The 10-year yield is up a little more than 10 bp.
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Stocks and Bonds Sell Off, while the Dollar Rallies
Overview: The reverberations from last week continue to roil the capital markets today. Equities and bonds have been sold and the greenback bought. Most of the large markets in Asia Pacific fell by more 2%, including Japan’s Nikkei, Taiwan’s Taiex, and South Korea’s Kospi.
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Jackson Hole and More
Overview: Ahead of the much-anticipated speech by
Federal Reserve Chair Powell, the Fed funds futures are pricing in about a 70%
chance of a 75 bp hike next month. The
US 10-year yield is up nearly five basis points today to 3.07% and the two-year
yield is firm at 3.38%. Asia Pacific equities
were mostly higher, with China the main exception among the large markets, after
US equities rallied yesterday. Europe’s
Stoxx 600 is off about 0.3% to...
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Surging Energy Prices Pushing Europe Closer to Recession
The poor eurozone PMI underscores likely recession and weighs on the single currency, which was sold to a new 20-year low. Rather than a "Turn Around Tuesday" a broadly consolidative session is unfolding. Asian and European equities are weaker, while US futures are positive but little changed. Benchmark 10-year bond yields are mostly firmer and the premium offered by Europe's periphery is edging higher. The US 10-year is little changed near...
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No Relief for the Euro or Sterling
Overview: The euro traded below parity for the second time this year and sterling extended last week’s 2.5% slide. While the dollar is higher against nearly all the emerging market currencies, it is more mixed against the majors.
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Flash PMI, Jackson Hole, and the Price Action
For many, this will be the last week of the summer. However, in an unusual twist of the calendar, the US August employment report will be released on September 2, the end of the following week, rather than after the US Labor Day holiday (September 5).
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The Dollar is on Fire
The dollar is on fire. It is rising against all the major currencies and cutting through key technical levels like a hot knife in butter. The Canadian dollar is the strongest of the majors this week, which often outperforms on the crosses in a strong US dollar environment. It is off 1.5% this week.
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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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Greenback Remains Firm
Overview: After retreating most of last week, the US
dollar has extended yesterday’s gains today. The Canadian dollar is the most resilient,
while the New Zealand dollar is leading the decline with a nearly 0.75% drop ahead
of the central bank decision first thing tomorrow. The RBNZ is expected to
deliver its fourth consecutive 50 bp hike. Most emerging market currencies are
lower as well, led by central Europe. Equities in Asia Pacific and Europe...
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Week Ahead: More Evidence US Consumption and Output are Expanding, and RBNZ and Norges Bank to Hike
After two-quarters of contraction, many still do not accept that the US economy is in a recession. Federal Reserve officials have pushed against it, as has Treasury Secretary Yellen. The nearly 530k rise in July nonfarm rolls, more than twice the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey, and a new cyclical low in unemployment (3.5%) lent credibility to their arguments. If Q3 data point to a growing economy, additional support will likely be...
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Heading into the Weekend, Dollar’s Downside Momentum Stalls
Overview: The markets are putting the finishing
touches on this week’s activity. Japan, returning from yesterday’s holiday
bought equities, and its major indices jumped more than 2%. China, South Korea,
and Australia struggled. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is firmer for the third consecutive
session. It is up about 1.3% this week. US futures are also firmer after reversing
earlier gains yesterday to close lower on the day. The US 10-year yield is flat
near...
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Is it All Really about Today’s US CPI Print?
Overview: The US dollar is trading with a heavier bias ahead of the July CPI report. The intraday momentum indicators are overextended, and this could set the stage for the dollar to recover in North America.
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Downside Risks to the US Employment Report?
Overview: The US dollar enjoys a firmer bias against
the major currencies ahead of the July employment data. Emerging market
currencies are mixed. Asian currencies are generally firm while central Europe is a bit softer. Some detect a relaxation in tensions around Taiwan, though
China’s aerial harassment continues. Taiwanese shares jumped 2.25% to lead the
region that saw China’s CSI 300 rally over 1%. Europe’s Stoxx 600 is giving
back yesterday’s...
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Over to the BOE
Overview: Strong gains in US equities yesterday and
easing fears following Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan helped lift most Asia Pacific
equities, with Hong Kong leading the way with a 2% rally. Taiwan, Australia,
and India did not participate in the regional rally. The Stoxx 600 is edging higher
today. It was flat on the week through yesterday. US futures are a little
firmer. The greenback is offered against the major currencies led the Antipodeans.
The...
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Dismal EMU Flash PMI on Heels of First ECB Rate Hike since 2011
Overview: The euro is over a cent lower from yesterday’s peak, pressured by
the drop in the flash PMI composite below 50 for the first time since early
last year. More generally, the flash PMIs have shown the global economic
momentum is waning, and the bond markets have responded accordingly. The US
10-year yield is flirting with 2.80%, its lowest level in more than two weeks. European
yields are 15-20 bp lower and the spread between Italian and...
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Italian Politics Complicate the ECB’s Task
The appetite for risk seen earlier this week is fading. Yesterday’s US equity gains helped lift most of the large markets in the Asia Pacific region, but China’s CSI 300 fell 1.1%, giving back most of this week’s gains as credit issues from the property sector haunt sentiment.
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