Fed Day

<div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjP3v0ukMo8fLz0OFd0B4qx9h6gmUUYwccLdI44YMpW-zaibgkgiO640y3A_nqkfOwpf3yhsYhcx2FVYMjxoHmsz_N_erDJzGoZCVy8GNwQSehSlEGCdpb3draowxePWsur1QfYsxpumOeQO_vhPix8x2TtyRHqsGhemaCaB4cLlpy_j8OnLaANoiRujQ/s381/Fed%201%20a.PNG"><img alt="" border="0" data-original-height="183" data-original-width="381" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjP3v0ukMo8fLz0OFd0B4qx9h6gmUUYwccLdI44YMpW-zaibgkgiO640y3A_nqkfOwpf3yhsYhcx2FVYMjxoHmsz_N_erDJzGoZCVy8GNwQSehSlEGCdpb3draowxePWsur1QfYsxpumOeQO_vhPix8x2TtyRHqsGhemaCaB4cLlpy_j8OnLaANoiRujQ/s400/Fed%201%20a.PNG" width="400" /></a></div><p><b><span>Overview:&nbsp;</span></b><span>The markets are mostly treading water ahead of the FOMC decision later today.&nbsp;Tech stocks tumbled in Hong Kong and the Hang Seng fell a little more than 1%, while India was the worst performer in the region falling over 2% following an unexpected and inter-meeting hike by the Reserve Bank of India.&nbsp; It raised the repo rate to 4.4% from 4.0%.&nbsp; Europe's Stoxx 600 is a little lower and has been unable to close the gap from Monday created from the lower opening.&nbsp; US futures are firm.&nbsp; A gain today would be the third in a row for the S&amp;P 500 and NASDAQ and the longest streak since March.&nbsp; The US 10-year yield is little changed near 2.96%, while European benchmark yields are 3-4 bp higher.&nbsp; The US dollar is mostly heavier, with the dollar-bloc currencies taking the lead. Norway's krone and the Swiss franc are trading lower.&nbsp; Norway's central bank meets tomorrow and is expected to hold until June.&nbsp; Most emerging market currencies are firm against the US dollar.&nbsp; The notable exceptions today are the Turkish lira, the Philippine peso, and the South African rand.&nbsp; Turning to commodities, gold is steadying after yesterday’s test on $1850.&nbsp; It needs to resurface above $1878 to signal a low is in place.&nbsp; June WTI is firm and set a new three-day high near $106.50.&nbsp; US natgas price is lower for the fourth session, while Europe's benchmark has jumped 6.5% after yesterday's 1% gain.&nbsp; Iron ore fell for a third session, while copper is edging higher.&nbsp; July wheat is stabilizing after falling for the past five sessions.&nbsp; &nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><span>&nbsp;</span></p><p><b><span>Asia Pacific</span></b><span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>China's markets re-open tomorrow.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b><span>It will report Caixin service and composite PMI.&nbsp; The economy is reeling, and the composite will likely fall toward 40 (below 50 means that output is falling).&nbsp; The situation may get worse.&nbsp; The Shanghai lockdown has not been fully lifted and elements are spreading to Beijing.&nbsp; Reports suggest that as many as 60 metro stops (15%) have been shut and nearly 160 bus routes altered.&nbsp; Zhengzhou, a city of around 12.6 mln people has been locked down.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>A day after the Reserve Bank of Australia started its tightening cycle, it reported a surge in March retail sales.&nbsp;</span></b><span>&nbsp;The 1.6% rise compared with economists (median in Bloomberg's survey) projected a 0.5% gain.&nbsp; Meanwhile, the April service and composite PMI were revised to show more modest acceleration from March then initially reported.&nbsp; The service PMI stands at 56.1, down from the 56.6 flash reading, but still above the 55.6 in March.&nbsp; The April composite PMI is 55.9, not quite as strong as the 56.2 initial estimate but still better than the 55.1 reading in March.&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>With Japanese markets closed until Friday, the dollar is consolidating in a narrow range against the yen.&nbsp;</span></b><span>&nbsp;Today it has been confined to a little less than a quarter of a yen below JPY130.20.&nbsp; For the fourth session it is trading within the previous session.&nbsp; The pattern often acts like a spring coiling.&nbsp; It is often associated as a continuation pattern, which in this case points to a stronger dollar.&nbsp; However, the technical indicators are still over-extended.&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>The Australian dollar is firm but within the cent-range traced yesterday (~$0.7045-$0.7145).&nbsp;&nbsp;</b>Recall that the low set earlier this week was near $0.7030.&nbsp; It is trading around $0.7120 in Europe. Yesterday's high is the first obstacle, but a move above $0.7200 is needed to signal the upside correction is at hand, rather than a broad sideways consolidation.&nbsp;<b>&nbsp;The US dollar reversed lower yesterday after approaching CNH6.70</b>.&nbsp; Follow-through selling today saw the losses extend to CNH6.6315.&nbsp; Recall that end at the end of last week, before the mainland holiday, it settled a little above CNH6.64.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>Europe</span></b><span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>The final April EMU service and composite PMI were unchanged from the flash estimate at 57.7 and 55.8, respectively.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b><span>However, the composition changed a bit.&nbsp; Germany figures were revised lower.&nbsp; The service PMI still showed improvement over March (57.6 vs. 56.1), but not quite as much as the preliminary reading (57.9).&nbsp; The composite stands at 54.3.&nbsp; The flash report put it at 54.5.&nbsp; In March it was 55.1.&nbsp; Recall that at the end of last year, it slipped below the 50 boom/bust mark.&nbsp; The final French PMI was revised slightly higher.&nbsp; The service PMI is at 58.9 rather than 58.8 preliminary estimate.&nbsp; The composite is at 57.6 up from 57.5 flash estimate and 56.3 in March.&nbsp; However, it was Italy and Spain that offered the larger surprise.&nbsp; Italy's service PMI rose to 55.7 from 52.1 and the composite improved to 54.5 from 52.1.&nbsp; Spain was even stronger.&nbsp; The service PMI rose to 57.1 from 53.4 and the composite rose to 55.7 from 53.1.&nbsp; The takeaway is that through April, EMU was showing greater economic resilience than expected.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>On the other hand, Germany's March trade figures give a sense that all is not right.&nbsp;</span></b><span>&nbsp;It is not so much that the trade surplus fell to 9.7 bln euros from a downwardly revised 11.0 bln surplus in February (initially 11.4 bln euros).&nbsp; Rather it was the larger than expected fall in exports (3.3%, the largest since April 2020) and it is the second month in Q1 that shipments fell and the surge in imports, which reflect higher energy costs.&nbsp; Imports rose by 3.4% after a 4.7% rise in February.&nbsp; German critics often have harangued it for not importing enough and now that imports are rising it is not helping the EMU.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>The euro is holding above $1.05 today but is well below yesterday's $1.0580 high.&nbsp;</span></b><span>&nbsp;The $1.06 area is still key to the consolidative/corrective phase.&nbsp; There are options for 1.9 bln euros that expire there today and another set for 1.5 bln euros tomorrow.&nbsp; The downside momentum has broken but there is little enthusiasm on the upside.&nbsp; Yesterday's upticks were sold. We suspect that Friday's US jobs report will keep the bottom-picker at bay at bit longer.&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>Sterling slipped to a marginal new low for the week today slightly below $1.2470.&nbsp;&nbsp;</b>A bounce has lifted it to around $1.2525.&nbsp; Yesterday's high was near $1.2565.&nbsp; Sterling has been recording descending highs for the past couple of sessions.&nbsp; Today could be the third session of lower highs.&nbsp; The Bank of England meets tomorrow, and expectations are solid for a 25 bp hike.&nbsp; UK local elections are likely to stir the political climate.&nbsp; The Tories are face a two-prong setback.&nbsp; They are poised to lose a few hundred council seats. and Sinn Fein may garner a majority in Northern Ireland's assembly.&nbsp; The latter would impinge on the Tory's Brexit strategy involving Northern Ireland.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>America</span></b><span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>There is near universal consensus that the Federal Reserve will hike the Fed funds target to 0.75%-1.00% with a 50 bp hike.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b><span>It will also confirm the forward guidance in the March minutes about the balance sheet run-off that will quickly (a few months?) reach a pace that nearly doubles the previous experience (to $95 bln a month).&nbsp; In light of the unexpected contraction in Q1 GDP, the wording of the statement will likely be tweaked to recognize the recovery in consumption and capex.&nbsp; St. Louis Fed President Bullard dissented from the March decision to hike 25 bp favoring a 50 bp move at the time.&nbsp; Subsequently, he suggested a 75 bp hike may be appropriate at some juncture, but he said it was not his base, and it did not appear to win much support from other Fed officials.&nbsp; Governor Waller, the previous head of research at the St. Louis Fed is perceived to be the closest to his former boss. A Governor dissent is rarer and weightier than a dissent by a regional president. To be sure, the statement will point to continued rate hikes.&nbsp; After tomorrow's move, the Fed funds futures are pricing in another nearly 200 bp increases in the year's remaining five meetings.&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>The pricing of the individual contracts shows the perception of a slight risk of a 75 bp move in June or July. This has helped lift the dollar broadly.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b><span>However, we are wary of "buy the rumor sell the fact" type of activity.&nbsp; First, most of this news has been discounted.&nbsp; Second, there again is talk of demand for US long-end yields as the long-term yields hover around 3%.&nbsp; Third, looking ahead into next week, there is a reasonably good chance that both consumer and producer prices ease (year-over-year). It would be the first time since April 2020. Fourth, the dollar's upside momentum stalled in recent days, and after a significant run the technical indicators are stretched.&nbsp; Still, the US April employment picture will be released before the weekend, and around another 400k non-farm payroll additions are expected.&nbsp; The ADP private sector jobs estimate will be reported today.&nbsp; Through Q1, it has estimated an average of 484k private sector jobs were filled.&nbsp; The BLS data puts the average at 552k, and little higher (562k) including government jobs.&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p></o:p></span></p><p><b><span>Yesterday, we mistakenly expected the Canadian March trade figures were going to be reported.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b><span>They are due today.&nbsp; But the analysis holds:&nbsp;<span>&nbsp;Canada is benefitting from a positive terms-of-trade shock.&nbsp; The 3-month average trade surplus has risen to C$1.43 bln.&nbsp; A year ago, it was practically zero.&nbsp; It is the highest three-month since 2014.&nbsp; A C$3.75 bln surplus is expected today, which would be the largest since 2008.&nbsp; In Mexico, President AMLO is expected to announce the deal he has negotiated with a dozen or two primary goods producers to voluntarily limit price increases, and in exchange, the government may boost some income and consumption support spending.&nbsp; Some estimates suggest the agreement might be worth 100-200 bp off headline inflation.&nbsp; Still, the market is looking for Banxico to lift the overnight target rate by 125 bp over the next three months to 7.75%.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p> </p><p><b><span>The US dollar recorded the year's high near CAD1.2915 on Monday.&nbsp;</span></b><span>&nbsp;It has since come off.&nbsp; Yesterday, with the help of rising US equities, the greenback eased to around CAD1.2825.&nbsp; There has been a little follow-through selling that took the US dollar to almost CAD1.28.&nbsp; Support is seen slightly lower, and a break of CAD1.2790 could see a test on the CAD1.2750 area.&nbsp; However, the intraday momentum indicators suggest it is over-extended and the US dollar is likely to tick higher in the North American morning, perhaps back to the CAD1.2850 area.&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>The US dollar fell to around MXN20.2630 yesterday and remains at the lower end of yesterday's range.</b>&nbsp; It has held below MXN20.31 today.&nbsp; Yesterday's high was close to MXN20.4850.&nbsp; Chart support is seen in the MXN20.1600-MXN20.1850 area.</span><span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p><br /></p><p><span>Disclaimer</span></p><p><span><br /></span></p><div>
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