Marketmind: Irksome inflation won't die down
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[February 28, 2023] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
As investors mull what looks like a new year re-acceleration of the
world economy, the narrative of steady disinflation has been ripped up
and interest rate markets are still scrambling to re-price.
Friday's latest U.S. inflation surprise was matched in Europe on
Tuesday, with French and Spanish headline inflation rates unexpectedly
rising again in February - making for an uncomfortable final day of a
transformative month for markets.
The dramatic rethink of the macro and inflation picture since early
February has seen implied peak policy rates for both the Federal Reserve
and European Central Bank climb half a percentage since the start of the
month - to 5.4% and 3.9% respectively.
That's some move from the current 4.50-4.75% and 2.5% levels. Just as
important, any thought of rate cuts this year has evaporated.
And worryingly, market-based measures of inflation expectations are
rising sharply again too.
U.S. two-year 'breakeven' inflation rates, taken from
inflation-protected Treasury securities, have jumped 80 basis points
this month to 2.8% - wiping away the prior assumption that inflation
would return to the Fed's 2% target over two years.
While 10-year 'breakevens' have been a bit steadier at just under 2.5%,
the Fed target remains elusive. In Europe, the five year, five-year
forward inflation linked swap has jumped 20bps to a 9-month high just
under 2.5%.
The message from central bankers is rates both have further to rise and
are not coming down quickly.
ECB chief economist Philip Lane told Reuters on Tuesday that euro zone
inflation pressures were showing some signs of easing but there would be
no end to rate hikes until the ECB was more confident of hitting its
target.
Asked how long rates could stay in a territory that restricts economic
growth, Lane said: "It could be quite a long-lasting period, a fair
number of quarters."
Stock markets steadied after early losses, with U.S. futures only
slightly in the red ahead of the open and month end.
The dollar was mixed too, rising against the yen but falling back
against the yuan and sterling. The pound continued its advance on this
week's breakthrough in Brexit talks between Britain and the European
Union.
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A shopping cart is seen in a supermarket
in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., June 10, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly/File Photo
Geopolitical tensions simmered in the background as Russian troops
attempted to encircle the eastern Ukraine city of Bakhmut and
investors fretted about China possibly providing Moscow with
military support - a move U.S. government officials have said would
come at a cost to Beijing.
Concern over Taiwan also was front of mind in markets.
China says the United States is overstretching the concept of
national security, abusing state power to suppress foreign companies
after the White House gave government agencies 30 days to remove
Chinese-owned app TikTok on federal devices.
In company news, staffing firm Adecco said its hiring activity had
weakened modestly at the start of 2023 after it reported
weaker-than-expected earnings.
British asset manager abrdn fell to a full-year pretax loss and
reported a slide in client funds for 2022, as global markets turmoil
and runaway inflation weighed on its finances.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on
Tuesday:
* U.S. February consumer confidence, Chicago PMI business survey,
Richmond Fed business survey, Feb Dallas Fed services sector survey,
U.S. January wholesale, retail inventories, goods trade balance,
U.S. December house prices
* Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee speaks; Bank of
England Chief Economist Huw Pill and BoE policymaker Catherine Mann
speak
* Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko in Beijing to meet
China's President Xi Jinping
* U.S. corp earnings: AutoZone, Agilent, HP, First Solar, AMC
Entertainment, Monster Beverage, Sempra Energy etc
(By Mike Dolan, editing by XXXX mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com.
Twitter: @reutersMikeD)
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