U.S. Dollar And Japanese Yen Surge

U.S. Dollar And Japanese Yen Surge

Global equities are bleeding lower. Several large markets in the Asia Pacific region, including Hong Kong, Taiwan, and India were off more than 2%. Japan and Australian bourses fell by more than 1.5%. Europe's Stoxx 600 was off more than 2% and giving back the gains recorded in the past two sessions plus some. US futures were extending yesterday's loses.

The sharp sell-off of equities gave the sovereign bond market a strong bid. The 10-year US Treasury yield that had approached 3.20% on Monday, tumbled to 2.81% today.

The 2-year yield had approached 2.75% yesterday after the disappointing CPI report. It was around 2.57%. European 10-year benchmark yields were 10-14 bp lower.

The dollar was flying, except against the Japanese Yen. The Antipodeans and Norwegian krone were getting tagged more than 1% today. The euro and sterling were sold to new lows.

Emerging market currencies were sea of red too. Hungary, which kept its one-week deposit unchanged, saw the biggest hit, off almost 1.5% today, while the Chinese yuan was off by slightly more than 1%, which was a large move for it. Hong Kong Monetary Authority intervened to defend its peg for the first time in three years.

Gold was heavy, after recovering from a three-month low yesterday near $1832. It was hovering a little below $1850 near midday in Europe. June WTI was trading with a lower bias ahead of the OPEC and IEA reports.

US natgas was off almost 3% after gaining more than 8.5% over the past two sessions. Disruptions of Russian gas to Ukraine saw Europe's benchmark jump by more than 13% today.

Iron ore, which snapped a three-day slide yesterday with a 4.2% jump was off nearly 5% today. Similarly, June copper rose for the first time in five sessions yesterday. However, today's 3.6% plunge more than offset yesterday's 1.3% gain. July wheat prices were little changed ahead of the US World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimate report.

Asia Pacific

China's fourth largest property developer, Sunac China Holdings (HK:1918), has defaulted on a dollar bond, according to reports, adding to the angst emanating from Beijing. New COVID cases in Shanghai meant the lockdown will continue. The restrictions were estimated to cover around a third of the country's GDP.

A PBOC indicated that it was guiding rates lower. The benchmark 1-year medium-term lending rate may be set on Monday. It stands at 2.85%. The market was disappointed that there was no reduction last month and does not want to be bit by the same dog twice; most look for it to be unchanged. Next week Chinese officials will meet with tech companies and there was hope that the crackdown will end.

Japan was suffering from a terms-of-trade shock as the prices of imports have soared compared with exports. However, the broader measure, the current account surplus swelled in March to JPY2.55 trillion from JPY1.65 trillion and well above expectations (median forecast in Bloomberg's survey was JPY1.75 trillion.

They key, as we have argued, was the primary income, which was the return on past investment, such as interest, dividends, re-invested earnings, royalties, and licensing fees. The weakness of the yen boosted the value of these foreign earnings.

On balance-of-payment terms, Japan recorded a trade deficit of JPY166 bln, a little smaller than in February but larger than expected. Japanese figures which did not always jive with the US Treasury data, showed Japanese investors were sellers of JPY2.9 trillion of US government bonds in March, the sixth consecutive month this time series has recorded sales. Canadian, British, German, and Italian bonds were also sold in March. Japanese investors looked kinder toward Australian, French, and Dutch bonds.

The continued drop in US Treasury yields saw the dollar slump against the Japanese yen. The greenback was sold to new lows for the month near JPY128.40. It broke the 20-day moving average (~JPY129) for the first time since early March. A break of the JPY128.30 area could signal a move toward JPY127.00.

The Australian dollar broke down and was trading at new lows since mid-2020, pushing below $0.6900. After rising to around $0.7055 yesterday, the Aussie reversed sharply lower and settled near $0.6940. The next significant chart area was closer to $0.6760, which corresponded to the (50%) retracement of the gains from March 2020 low around $0.5500.

The greenback rose to almost CNY6.79 as it broke higher out of the consolidative phase seen earlier this week. It was the strongest level of the US dollar since last October.

We suggested the next target was around CNY6.82. For the eighth consecutive session, the PBOC set the dollar's reference rate lower than expected (Bloomberg survey). The fix was at CNY6.7292, while the market anticipated CNY6.7341. Given that the greenback was allowed to move 2% from the fixing, the lower dollar reference rate was a means of moderating the dollar's move higher.

Europe

Many observers thought that ECB President Lagarde cast her lot in favor a July rate hike yesterday. However, it did not look like she really said anything new. As she said in her speech, she has been very clear that "sometime" in the context of raising rates after bond buying stops, could be a matter of weeks. That sounded more like a central banker trying to preserve some flexibility.

The operative word was "could." As Fed Governor Waller said, the market understanding of officials' communications began taking rates up (and tightening financial conditions) six months before the central bank began increasing rates.

Consider that on Oct. 1 last year, the implied yield of the December 2022 Eurodollar futures (yield on three-month time deposit) was 0.47%. On the eve of the FOMC's decision to hike rates in mid-March, the yield had already risen to nearly 2.15%. The December 2022 Euribor futures contract had an implied yield of negative 27.5 bp on Mar. 1. It has rose to 76bp by the start of this week, but pulled back to around 56 bp today. 

The UK disappointed. The economy unexpectedly contracted by 0.1% in March. Industrial output and services fell, and the trade deficit worsened. The net impact was to shave Q1 growth to 0.8% quarter-over-quarter, compared with expectations for a 1% expansion. The quarterly figures showed private consumption was weaker than expected (0.6% vs expectations for 0.9%).

Foreign demand for British goods was also weak (exports fell by almost 5% quarter-over-quarter). Among the biggest surprises, though, was the 1.7% contraction in government spending (quarter-over-quarter). Economists in Bloomberg's survey had forecast a 0.5% expansion.

Draghi seemed to be moving into a vacuum created by the ambiguous signals from the EC. An agreement to ban Russian oil was not agreed upon, let alone gas. Yet, the EC has suggested that paying rubles for Russian energy violated the sanctions. It nevertheless was sufficiently vague that the no-EU skeptic Draghi said it was a "gray area" and noted that many gas importers have opened a ruble account with Gazprombank.

The idea, recall, was that the contracts specify payment in euros, but the sanctions made it difficult to use the euros. Putin demanded that European customers have two accounts with Gazprombank, which was still on the SWIFT messaging system.

One is in euros and the customer pays into that. Gazprombank will make the necessary conversion and credit the ruble account which would then be drawn down to pay for the oil.

The two-week consolidation pattern that had confined the euro resolved to the downside. The single currency fell to almost $1.0420 in the European morning. The next targets were the lows from late 2016/early 2017 around $1.0340. On the upside, the $1.0480-$1.0500 area offered the nearby cap now.

Sterling was sold to a new two-year low near $1.2165. The next chart area of interest was by $1.2080, but the $1.20 area may offer stronger support. The intrasession momentum studies were extended for both the euro and sterling. However, neither was particularly close to the lower Bollinger® Band (~$1.0370 and $1.2045, respectively).

America

While the US April CPI was a bit firmer than expected, it was not a game changer. First, it was not like it was a precision machine tool that can be measured in fractions of the diameter of a human hair.

Second, the Fed funds futures for the next two meetings were practically unchanged from the day before, and the market remained less convinced that the Fed will go another 50 bp hike in September.

Consider that the October Fed funds futures contract had an implied yield of about 2.37% on the eve of the Fed's announcement. Yesterday, after the CPI data and the recent Fed-speak, the contract was implying around 2.26%.

Third, the composition of measured inflation. Used car prices, which were a source of consternation last year, fell for three consecutive months. On the other hand, new car prices rose 1.1%, the most this year. While food and energy prices rose, the core rose more than the headline. Part of this was airfares jumped 18.6%, which may be worth 0.1-0.2 percentage points of the core rate's 0.6% increase.

Some part of this was likely reflecting higher energy prices too. Housing accounted for a little more than 40% of the CPI basket and costs rose by 0.6%. That was essentially the average this year. Without some moderation, CPI was likely to be sticky.

Finally, the eight-basis point increase in the 10-year breakeven needed to be placed in the context of it having fallen by more than 20 bp Monday and Tuesday. The point was that it was still lower on the week, and if sustained, would be the first weekly back-to-back decline in four months.

Meanwhile, the Senate has confirmed Philip Jefferson as Governor on the Federal Reserve and Lori Logan will become the next president of the Dallas Federal Reserve in August.

The central bank of Mexico meets today. Only one of 23 surveyed by Bloomberg didn't expect a 50 bp hike, and its forecast was for 75 bp. It was not that growth was particularly strong in Mexico or that there was much fiscal support. Instead, the challenge was s inflation. It has accelerated.

The headline rate has averaged 0.74% a month this year compared with 0.66% average in the January-April 2021 period. The core rate averaged a monthly increase of 0.72% this year after 0.41% in the first four months of last year.

A 50 bp hike by Banxico would lift the overnight target rate to 7%. Headline inflation was nearly 7.7% and the core was slightly more than 7.2%. The swaps market was pricing in 110 bp of tightening over the next three months, suggesting some risk of more than a 50 bp move, perhaps if the Fed opted for a quicker pace.

The risk-off environment continued to weigh on the Canadian dollar. The US dollar was confined to yesterday’s range when it traded just shy of CAD1.3040. Support was seen near CAD1.2980. We wanted to be sensitive to the possible weakening of the near-lockstep movement of the exchange rate and US equities.

It will take more than one session to weaken that strong correlation we have documented. The greenback was hovering around CAD1.3025, which was the (38.2%) retracement of the decline from the March 2020 high (~CAD1.4670). The next retracement (50%) was close to CAD1.3340.

The US dollar was also knocking on yesterday's high against the Mexican peso (~MXN20.4670). At the end of April, the greenback tested the MXN20.64 area and that seemed to be the next target. A move above there could spur a move toward MXN20.80.



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