Corrective Forces Persist

<br /> Corrective Forces Persist – Marc to Market<br />




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The kind of momentum seen throughout the capital market in most of
the fourth quarter last year has yet to return.
  With the lack of new details about
the new US Administration’s economic policies, some are characterizing the
activity as “dump the Trump trade,”
 but that does not seem particularly convincing.  
There is a
recognition that the momentum began flagging in the middle of December. 
 What is missing from this narrative is a recognition
that the move in trends in the capital markets began before the US election and
seemed to end the day after the FOMC decided to hike rates.  The
“dump the Trump trade” narrative, like the one the Wall Street
Journal does not even mention the Fed hike.  
It was clear to
many by last September 2016 that the Fed would raise rates in December.  
The signals from the Fed’s leadership were
unmistakable, and the US economy was
accelerating in what later proved to be a 3.5% pace in Q3.  The Fed’s hike
was preceded by dollar and equity buying
and bond selling.  A day or two after the FOMC decision, profit-taking
ensued, augmented by year-end considerations.  
The
unconventional style of the US President-elect is challenging for investors and
foreign policymakers to get their heads around. 
 However, the bluster and tweet impact has not
diminished.  Clearly, the pharmaceutical sector this week, like the auto
sector recently would not see evidence of that Trump’s impact has diminished.
 Nor has Mexico experienced a waning influence of the next US President.
 
The US has a
trade treaty with Mexico. 
 A treaty has among the highest legal
statuses.  The treaty says that output in Mexico counts as domestic
content for the US.  Between threatening individual car companies, to
promising to build a fence between the two countries, and the sometime derogatory characterization of Mexican
immigrants into the US, it is as if the President-elect has declared an
economic war against Mexico.  It has been a significant drag on the
Mexican peso, which counting this week has five
weeks in a row and nine of the past 12 weeks.   Interest rates have risen
sharply.  The tension with the US may deter global companies from
expanding operations in Mexico.  
The highlight from the US session today will be the December
retail sales report. 
 A strong report is expected.  Auto sales and higher
gasoline prices are expected to lift the headline 0.7%.  If so, retail sales
would appear to have risen more in Q4 than Q3.  However, retail sales account for about 40% of US consumption
expenditures, and consumption appears to have slowed a little in Q4.
  
The University
of Michigan’s consumer confidence report is not often a market mover, but
today’s report may draw more attention than usual.  
At last month’s FOMC meeting, officials
characterized the survey-based measures of inflation expectations as stable.
 However, a few days after the meeting, the University of Michigan revised
lower its survey results and the 5-10 year inflation expectation slipped to a
new low of 2.3%.   A market-based measure, the 10-year breakeven
(conventional yield minus the 10-year TIPS) has been stable since early
November around 2.0%.  
After a flurry
of Fed officials yesterday, only Harker returns to the podium today. 
 There are two takeaways from yesterday’s official
comments.  First, Yellen’s comments at a town
hall meeting suggest the Fed’s chair’s economic assessment has not
changed over the past month.  Second, a more importantly, the three
regional Fed Presidents that spoke (Bullard, Kaplan,
and Harker) all suggested that the central bank begins
discussing when and how to reduce the Fed’s balance sheet.  There almost
$200 bln of US Treasuries that the Fed owns that will mature this year and more
than twice as much next year.  Some of the advisers to the President-elect
have also pushed along these lines for an exit strategy.   
Also during the
North American session, Moody’s will announce the results of its review of
Portugal’s credit rating.  
It currently stands at Ba1, which is comparable to S&P and
Fitch.  The outlook is stable.  No change is expected, but if there were to be a surprise, it would be to put
Portugal on credit review with negative implications.  Fitch reviews
Portugal next month, and S&P in
March.  However, it is DBRS’s review in April that may be critical.
 DBRS is the only rating agency recognized by the ECB that recognizes
Portugal as an investment credit.  If Portugal were to lose this, its
bonds would no longer be acceptable to the ECB.  
The news stream
today has been light. 
 China’s trade figures were the main
feature.  Rather than expand as economists are
expected, China reported a 10% reduction in its trade surplus.  The
$40.8 bln surplus is the smallest since April and
contrasts with the $44.6 bln surplus in November and expectations for a $47.5
bln surplus.  For all of 2016, China’s trade surplus fell to about $513
bln from nearly $594 bln in 2015.  It is the first decline in China’s
trade surplus since 2011.   Exports fell 6.1%, while imports rose 3.1% in
December year-over-year.  Exports to the US rose 5.1% and to 8.3% to South Korea, but fell 4.7% to the EU.
 Imports rose 3.1%.  
The euro and
yen are trading within yesterday’s ranges. 
 After reaching $1.0685 yesterday,
the euro pulled back to almost $1.06 where new bids were found.  The dollar, which had fallen to a little below
JPY114 yesterday poked above JPY115 today before being pushed back down.
 Like yesterday, the intraday technical readings suggest the greenback may
have a better showing in North American activity.  Sterling finished on
its lows yesterday and saw some, albeit limited, follow through selling in
Asia, but managed to resurfaces above the $1.22 level, which had been violated
to the downside at the start of the week for the first time since last October.
 It may struggle to rise through $1.2250 now, and it may be dragged lower
if the greenback recovers against the euro and yen, perhaps on the back of the
retail sales report.   

The dollar-bloc
is consolidating this week’s gains. 
 The Aussie is the best performer
this week, with a 2.6% advance (just below $0.7500).  It is the third
consecutive weekly advance.  The $0.7540 area is the next objective.
 The New Zealand dollar is up 2.4% this week (near $0.7125).
 Securing a foothold above $0.7130 could set the stage for a run at
$0.7200.  The Canadian dollar has been the laggard with a 0.7% gain this
week.  Still, it has risen in 10 of the last 15 sessions, and it is the third consecutive weekly gains and five of
the past seven.  The US dollar had fallen to near CAD1.3030 yesterday, the
lowest level since October, but recovered smartly and closed a big figure
higher.  A move, and especially a close above CAD1.3180 could lift the
tone into next week.  

Disclaimer


Corrective Forces Persist
Corrective Forces Persist

Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on

January 13, 2017


Rating: 5

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