The Good, The Bad And The Ugly

GOOD: Positive earnings. The biggest earnings news of the day was from Goldman Sachs reporting that profits almost doubled in Q1. Apple also beat estimates and its shares surged. 82% of US earnings have beaten expectation so far. There is still a long way to go in the earnings season but the growth/earnings story is helping to maintain the positive bias to risk trades. There will be plenty of attention on earnings, including AT&T, eBay, Morgan Stanley, Starbucks, Boeing and Wells Fargo.

Data releases remain upbeat, with the April German ZEW investor confidence survey beating consensus, whilst central banks delivered hawkish messages across the board including the Reserve Bank of Australia policy meeting minutes, which pointed to another interest rate hike in May. However, the biggest impact came from the Bank of Canada which unsurprisingly left rates at 0.25%, but removed the conditional commitment to keep policy on hold until the end of Q2, leaving a rate hike on June 1 very likely.

The CAD jumped on the back of the outcome, with USD/CAD dropping below parity. I continue to like CAD alongside the AUD and NZD and believe they will be the star performers over the coming months despite lofty valuations.    Near term targets for CAD, AUD and NZD vs USD are 0.9953, 0.9407, and 0.7195, respectively. 

BAD: Talks between Greek officials and the IMF, ECB and EU on the conditions for a EUR 45 billion bailout loan will also be of interest although completion of talks could take weeks and in the meantime the situation is unlikely to improve, with Greece needing around EUR 10 billion to cover obligations by end May. Greek bond yields jumped to fresh record highs around 7.84% yesterday whilst the spread over German bunds also widened. Moreover, although Greece’s sale of EUR 1.95 billion in 13-week paper yesterday was heavily oversubscribed the, the yield was high at 3.65% which was far higher than the 1.67% yield at a similar sale in January.

In contrast to the likes of the CAD, AUD and NZD, the EUR is set to continue to suffer and as reflected in the widening in Greek bond spreads and high funding costs, Greek woes will keep plenty of pressure on the currency, with EUR/USD set to fall to support around 1.3300 in the short-term.

UGLY: UK regulator FSA will conduct a formal investigation of Goldman Sachs. The FSA will work closely with the US Securities and Exchange Commission SEC, which has accused the bank of Fraud though this has vehemently denied by Goldman Sachs. Although the negative market impact of the fraud case has been outweighed by good earnings and data the fallout is spreading. Some European politicians have even called for governments to stop working with the bank.

Q4 earnings and Chinese data

Since the start of the year the market has gyrated from “risk on” to “risk off” and back again. On balance the overall tone has been just about positive, with firmer economic data, most notably in China outweighing sovereign debt concerns in Greece and elsewhere. Although debt concerns are unlikely to dissipate quickly, especially given Greece’s inability to convince markets of its plans to cut its burgeoning budget deficit, the “risk on” tone is likely to win.

“Risk off” may be the tone at the start of the week however, as US equities ended the week on a negative note ahead of the Martin Luther King holidays. The holidays will likely keep trading slow. Data wise the main US events housing starts on Wednesday and the Philly Fed on Thursday. Q4 US earnings are likely to take a bigger share of market attention as the earnings season rolls on. Bank earnings will be a key focus, with Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, BoA, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs set to report this week.

Given the growing influence of Chinese data on markets the monthly data pack from China will capture more attention than usual on Thursday. In particular, GDP and inflation data will be of most interest. GDP data is likely to reveal an acceleration in growth in Q4 YoY to above 10% but given worries about over heating and following last week’s tightening in China’s monetary policy CPI data will be closely scrutinized. Inflation is likely to pick up further maintaining the pressure for further monetary tightening as well as a stronger CNY.

Elsewhere, in the eurozone the main event is the German ZEW survey tomorrow, which is likely to show further signs of flagging, due to Greek concerns. There is also an interest rate decision to contend with; the Bank of Canada is unlikely to surprise markets as it keeps policy unchanged tomorrow. The UK has a relatively heavier data slate, with CPI tomorrow, Bank of England minutes on Wednesday and retail sales at the end of the week.

The UK data kicked off on a positive note this week, with house prices rising 0.4% MoM in January and 4.1% YoY according to UK property website Rightmove, the biggest annual gain in over a year. Moreover, activity on Rightmove’s website reached a record high in the first full week of the year. The data as well as expectations that Kraft will raise its bid for Cadbury will likely help GBP in addition to other GBP positive M&A news. GBP/USD will look to test resistance around 1.6365 this week.

After a slightly firmer start helped by the weak close to US equity markets on Friday the USD is likely to generally trade on the back foot over the week. Speculative sentiment for the USD has definitely soured into the new-year as reflected in the CFTC IMM data which revealed a big jump in net short positions in the week ending 12 January 2010. Net aggregate USD positions shifted from +1.6k to -51.9k over the week, with the main beneficiaries being the EUR, and risk trades including AUD, NZD and CAD.