Stocks and bonds are selling off today. The greenback is also trading heavily. Ironically, the yen is the strongest among the G10 currencies and the Chinese yuan is the strongest among emerging market currencies. The US Dollar is firmer against the Scandis and Canadian dollar. Most emerging market currencies, including the Mexican peso, which traded at its best level yesterday since 2015.
While nearly all the bourses but India fell in the Asia Pacific region, Hong Kong and mainland shares that trade there were tagged for more than 3%. Europe's Stoxx 600 is off more than 1% and if these losses hold, it would be the biggest down day since late May. US index futures are extended yesterday's losses. The bond market is not offering a haven today. Benchmark 10-year yields are up 6-7 bp in Europe, though Gilt yields are up a little more. The 10-year US Treasury yield is about four basis points higher to 3.98% to its highest level since mid-March. The two-year yield is drawing nearer 5%, which it last traded above on March 9. The minutes from last month's FOMC meeting struck a hawkish tone. Gold is confined to a narrow range above yesterday's low slightly below $1915. August WTI is extending yesterday's gains on the back of a large drawdown of US inventories and extension of cuts recently announced by Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Asia Pacific
Earlier today, Japan reported weekly portfolio flows for the last week of H1. There are two elements that stand out. First, Japanese investors have returned as buyers to the global bond market after having been massive sellers last year. In the first six months of the year, Japanese investors have bought JPY14.63 trillion (~$108.4 bln) of foreign bonds compared with net sales of JPY12.75 trillion in the first half of 2022 calendar year. Second, foreigners have been notable buyers of Japanese equities this year. In H1 23, foreign investors bought near JPY5.94 trillion of Japanese shares. In H1 22, foreign investors sold about JPY1.43 trillion of Japanese stocks.
Australia's trade surplus widened in May to A$11.8 bln from a revised A$10.45 bln (initially nearly A$11.2 bln in April). In May 2022, it reported a A$14.1 bln surplus. Shipments of non-monetary gold (16%), LNG and other mineral fuels (3.4%) and coal, coke, and briquettes (1.6%) helped lift overall exports by 4.4%. They helped offset the nearly 2% decline in iron ore and other minerals. The export revenues, in turn, saw the government record a record May budget surplus (A$24 bln).
Despite firmer US yields, the dollar was sold to an eight-day low against the yen near JPY143.55. A combination of resistance near JPY145, amid rising fear of intervention, and the expiration of $2.4 bln in options today struck at JPY144 seemed to play role. There are also $1.1 bln of options at JPY145 that expire today and another batch for $1.24 bln expires there tomorrow. The greenback is straddling the JPY144 level in the European morning. Nearby resistance is seen near JPY144.20. The Australian dollar is recovering from a four-day low near $0.6635 set in the Asia Pacific session and rose to almost $0.6690 before Europe entered the fray. It is consolidating around $0.6670 in the European morning. Options for A$1.6 bln at $0.6700 expire tomorrow. The PBOC continues to signal its concern by setting the dollar's reference rate well below market projections. Today's fix was at CNY7.2098 compared with the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey for CNY7.2458. The yuan is trading fractionally higher. Note that the dollar settled last week near CNY7.2535. It has risen in all but three weeks since the end of Q1.
Europe
German reported a 6.4% surge in May factory orders. It blew away expectations for 1% gains in Bloomberg's survey. April's 0.4% decline was revised to a 0.2% gain. Europe's manufacturing sector is the doldrums, and this is particularly true of Germany. Orders for "other transport equipment" which includes ships and military equipment surged 137%. Note that May factory orders in France also jumped (best level in three years). The manufacturing PMI was lowered to 40.6 from the flash estimate of 41.0 and 43.2. Exports unexpectedly softened in May (-0.1%).
Tomorrow, Germany reports industrial output figures. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey is for a flat reading after a 0.3% rise in April and a 2.1% drop in March. The year had begun considerably better. After falling 2.9% in December, Germany's industrial production jumped 3.5% in January and 1.7% in February. Ironically, Germany's competitive position within the monetary union is improving as it experiences a modest internal devaluation by having higher inflation than the other large EMU members at 6.8% (Italy is the closest at 6.7% and Spain the lowest at 1.6%, on the harmonized measure). Separately, Germany's June construction PMI softened to 41.4 from 43.9 in May. The last time it was above the 50 boom/bust level was in March 2022. In contrast, the UK June construction PMI slipped for the first time in three months to stand at 51.0. It dipped below 50 last December and this January.
The euro was sold to a three-week low near $1.0835 but recovered to around $1.0875. Pushing the single currency above $1.0889, where options for 775 mln euros expire today, could spur additional euro buying. Still, we note that the euro's five-day moving average (~$1.0885) is dipping below the 20-day moving average (~$1.0890) for the first time since June 13, illustrating the euro's heavier tone. Sterling found support slightly below $1.2700 but is not going anywhere quickly unless it overcomes resistance that extends into the $1.2735-60 area, which it has not traded above for two weeks. The UK's construction PMI dropped to 48.9, its first sub-50 reading since January and the BOE's survey of inflation expectations eased slightly. Nevertheless, l0-year Gilt yields have jumped more than 10 bp to 4.60%. Last year's panic peak was near 4.64%.
America
Amid a bevy of data today, jobs data ahead of tomorrow's nonfarm payroll report stand out. There is the June Challenger job report, the ADP private sector jobs estimate, the weekly initial jobless claims, the JOLTS report, and the employment component of the ISM services survey. The bottom line is that the labor market is slowing gradually, but it remains strong enough to underpin demand, which the overwhelming majority of Fed officials see in excess of supply. Separately, the final services and composite PMI tend to be overshadowed by the flash estimates and the ISM services index. The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey anticipates a modest gain (51.3 vs. 50.3) even though the services PMI slowed in June for the first time this year (54.1 vs. 54.9). The May trade deficit will also be reported. The advance goods balance was already reported, and it helps explain why the trade balance now elicits little reaction. The advanced goods deficit narrowed more than expected in May to $91.1 bln from $97.1 bln. The improvement was driven by a 2.7% decline in imports, and especially consumer goods. Exports of food and industrial supplies weighed on exports, which fell by 0.6%. Lastly, one of the new Fed presidents, Logan from Dallas is speaking before the equity market open on the policy challenges for central banks. She has the vote on the FOMC this year and her comments seem to put her on the hawkish side.
Canada reports its May merchandise trade figures today ahead of the June jobs report tomorrow. Canada's positive terms of trade shock is waning. Through April, the goods trade surplus has averaged C$854 mln a month. In the first four months of 2022, the trade surplus averaged C$2.46 bln a month. Canada enjoyed a C$9.48 bln goods surplus with the US in April and a C$7.23 bln surplus in March. Canada ran a C$2.45 bln goods deficit with China in April and a C$2.51 bln deficit in March. The strike that is disrupting shipments from Canada's first and third busiest ports accounts for around a quarter of all the country's traded goods or around C$800 mln a day (~$605 mln). The disruption is likely to be seen in the data for July. Although the disruptions to supply chains may be inflationary, it will also be a drag on economic activity.
The Canadian dollar has fallen out of favor. The greenback set a nine-month low near CAD1.3115 on June 27 and today rose above CAD1.33 for the first time since mid-June. The CAD1.3320 area is the (38.2%) retracement of the US dollar decline from the end of May high (~CAD1.3650). The next retracement (50%) is around CAD1.3385. There are options for $1.3 bln at CAD1.3300 that expire tomorrow. The US dollar traded below MXN17.00 yesterday for the first time since the end of 2015. The peso is under some pressure today amid profit-taking and what may be unwinding of a favorite carry trade (short yen/long peso). The greenback has approached MXN17.0965 today. More stops may be triggered above MXN17.13-15.