Lower US yields undermine the US dollar

A drop in US yields has undermined the USD over recent days against major currencies although emerging market currencies remain under varying degrees of pressure. US 10 year Treasury yields have fallen by around a quarter of a percent since the end of last year, acting as a real drag on the USD.

A rise in risk aversion over recent days (the VIX fear gauge has risen by over 13% since its low on 10 January) appears to have resulted in increased demand for Treasuries and weaker equities, with markets ignoring generally firmer than anticipated US economic data this week including weekly jobless claims and existing home sales.

Emerging market currencies have come under strong pressure while the usual safe havens have strengthened most against the USD in particular CHF and JPY. The EUR has also made up some ground. Fortunately for the USD expectations of Fed tapering continue to fuel some buying of the currency, constraining any downside. Nonetheless, until US Treasury yields resume their upward movement the USD’s upside momentum will be limited.

USD firm versus EUR but not against JPY

Finally back in the office after two weeks of traveling and it appear that the upside momentum for equity markets has definitely waned. Concerns about the pace of growth, earnings and valuations finally appear to have caught up with stocks. Meanwhile US Treasury yields have remained under downward pressure since the release of the disappointing US December jobs report despite some encouraging data since. In Asia China’s GDP release for Q4 reveaked some loss of momentum, with growth decelerating to 1.8% QoQ. Nonetheless, the annual pace of growth looked reasonably healthy at 7.7%, suggesting a limited reaction in markets today.

A US holiday today will likely keep a cap on market activity today but there will be plenty of Q4 earnings reports over coming days to give further direction. In terms of policy decisions the Bank of Japan and Bank of Canada will likely keep policy unchanged following their policy decisions this week. The BoC is faced with inflation well below target while the BoJ continues to battle to push inflation towards its 2% target. Both central banks will maintain easy policy.

On the data front there is very little of note in the US to focus on, with the main release the December existing home sales report on Thursday where a rebound of 1% is expected. European data releases may prove to be more interesting, with the release of flash purchasing managers indices on tap. Further gradual gains are likely to be registered in January although there will be attention on France which has lagged other countries.

Ratings decisions by Moody’s and Fitch on Germany and France, respectively, will also garner some attention. Rumours of a German downgrade are likely to prove unfounded. In the UK the Bank of England MPC minutes will be is likely to reveal an unchanged outcome of voting to keep policy unchanged although the BoE is likely to adjust its guidance soon reflecting the quicker than anticipated fall in the unemployment rate.

The USD looks well placed to extend last week’s gains, especially against the EUR, with a drop below 1.3500 on the cards. Disinflation pressures and relatively soft growth highlight the potential for easier monetary policy. A variety of options for the ECB are on the cards but the EUR will struggle to make headway given expectations of more ECB action. Additionally the EUR appears to be benefiting less from reserves recycling flows, especially given that Asian central bank reserves accumulation has likely to have slowed. The deterioration in speculative positioning reflects the deterioration in sentiment for the currency.

In contrast USD/JPY will struggle too push higher given the drop in US Treasury yields. Additionally weaker Japanese stocks will not help given the correlation between the Nikkei and JPY. The Bank of Japan meeting this week will not give much support for a further move higher in USD/JPY given expectations of an unchanged outcome. Some consolidation around 104.00 is likely over the short term, with upside limited to technical resistance around 104.92.

I fly off to Mumbai tonight for the last leg of our Asia roadshow presentation series. Hopefully my next post can shed some light on the recent stability of the Indian rupee.

Shaky start to the year for equities

Equity markets and risk assets in general are having a decidedly shaky start to the year. Following a 30% increase in the US S&P 500 last year markets are finally looking at whether earnings expectations and economic growth will justify further gains in equities.

Worries ahead of Q4 earnings releases and perhaps concerns about the economy in the wake of the disappointing US December jobs report weighed on US equities overnight. These concerns also fuelled a further drop in US Treasury yields and undermined the USD. In contrast gold prices were buoyed.

The sharp drop in Treasury yields over recent days highlights both the previous extent of bearishness in bonds but also some hope / expectation that the Fed may slow the pace of tapering in the wake of the jobs data. This seems unlikely however, and as indicated by the Fed’s Lockhart overnight the data is highly unlikely to alter Fed policy.

Q4 earnings releases from JP Morgan and Wells Fargo as well as speeches by Dallas Fed President Fisher and Philly Fed President Plosser will be in focus today to provide further direction to markets. On the data front US December retail sales is the main release of note for which a drop in headline sales will be more than compensated by a gain in sales ex autos.

Overall a cautious tone is likely to continue until further clarity on the earnings outlook is revealed but economic data at least should look more encouraging over coming days. Clearly lower US Treasury yields are weighing on the USD but this is likely to prove to be a correction rather than a sustained USD decline.

It is interesting that the EUR has not managed to capitalize on the weakness in the USD. Lingering expectations that the European Central Bank may need to become more aggressive in terms of policy in the wake of soft inflation could be restraining the EUR. A solid reading for November Eurozone industrial production expected to be revealed today is unlikely to help the currency.

GBP was a major loser overnight although there does not seem to be much of a fundamental reason to sell the currency aside from soft November industrial production data released at the end of last week. Perhaps some profit taking on long GBP positioning may be attributable for the drop in the currency but the CFTC IMM data shows that speculative positioning was not overly long. Inflation data today will provide further direction, with GBP likely to remain under short term pressure.

Caution continues

The cautious tone in risk assets was maintained at the turn of this week as equity markets slipped further overnight in the US and recorded mixed performances in Asia. While the rise in risk aversion is unlikely to reflect a major change in market sentiment, it does highlight that risk assets will not repeat the one sided moves recorded in Q4 last year over coming months. US equity valuations for example look far richer compared to historical valuations while earnings expectations are softer, suggesting that equity momentum may not be as robust.

Ahead of the key data and events this week including European Central Bank and Bank of England policy decisions and the US employment report, caution is likely to prevail. Highlights today include flash December Eurozone CPI inflation data, which is likely to show inflation pressures remaining subdued, German December employment data and the US November trade balance.

Disappointing US non manufacturing confidence data released yesterday (53.0 for the ISM non manufacturing survey against expectations of 54.7) has taken the wind out of the USD’s sails although most major currencies look set to gyrate in relatively tight ranges over the near term. JPY will find some support from a generally softer risk tone that has filtered through markets and may struggle to retake the 105 level.

Meanwhile EUR/USD has failed to hold onto recent gains, with sentiment turning less positive as indicated by the latest CFTC IMM data on speculative positioning. Likely soft Eurozone inflation data to be released today will likely undermine the currency further. However, given that it is unlikely that the ECB will sound any more dovish at this Thursday’s policy meeting the downside for the EUR is set to be limited, with technical support around 1.3525.

Cautious start to the year

Happy New Year!

2013 ended with a solid performance by US equities and further pressure on US Treasuries helped by a bigger than expected increase in US December consumer confidence. The S&P 500 ended close to 30% higher over the year while 10 year Treasury yields rose above 3%, registering an overall rise of around 108 basis points over 2013. In contrast commodity prices dropped sharply, with the CRB index recording a sharp drop and ending 5% lower over the year. Meanwhile the USD index ended the year close to where it began although this performance belies some significant volatility over the year, with losses against the EUR and gains against the JPY.

The first trading day of 2014 begins on a more cautious note as a disappointing reading for the December Chinese purchasing managers’ index (51.0 versus 51.2 consensus forecast) will cast a shadow over markets today. Indeed, the data alongside weaker commodity prices will weigh on AUD. Japanese markets will be closed over the rest of the week, while many market participants will not return until next week, suggesting limited activity. Nonetheless, as far as the JPY is concerned the currency is set to remain on the back foot versus USD given the ongoing widening in real yield differentials between the US and Japan.

Meanwhile EUR/USD looks like it will struggle to make much headway over the short term, with only the final reading of the December Eurozone PMI due for release today. The data will likely confirm a relatively healthy looking reading of 52.7, its highest reading since May 2011 but will unlikely provoke much of a market reaction. Instead markets will look ahead to the European Central Bank meeting next week. Recent ECB comments suggest little chance of another rate cut anytime soon despite a very subdued inflationary backdrop. Against this background any EUR slippage in the short term is likely to be limited although further out the relatively inferior Eurozone growth outlook compared to the US, highlights plenty of scope for downside EUR pressure.

Asian currencies will also look somewhat subdued in the wake of China’s softer PMI reading. Additionally a bigger than expected decline in Singapore Q4 GDP release (-2.7% QoQ annualised) will also not bode well although the drop in GDP will be seen as temporary, with official estimates still pointing to growth around 2-4% for 2014. In contrast robust export data from South Korea will be positive for the KRW in line with our view that the currency will be one of 2014’s outperformers along with the TWD and CNH. Elsewhere the THB continues to be hamstrung by political concerns, which are showing little sign of easing ahead of planned elections February 2.