Morning Bid: Markets reel on Fed cut doubts, ECB up next
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[April 11, 2024] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
It may seem like an over-reaction to an inflation miss of less than a
tenth of a percentage point, but the heated March consumer price update
has jolted markets into doubting any U.S. interest rate cut before the
November election.
After much trepidation ahead of the report, the monthly rise in U.S. CPI
rise was 0.359% - rounded up to 0.4%, compared to the 0.3% forecast. The
rounded print would have been in line with expectations had the number
come in less than one basis point lower.
To be sure, the narrative quickly focussed on stubborn rent rises and
shelter inflation, spiky insurance costs and the third month in a row of
a rounded 0.4% monthly gain in 'core' CPI inflation that kept annual
core inflation stuck at 3.8%.
But the market reaction was dramatic - some might say over the top.
Futures markets virtually wiped the chances of a June Federal Reserve
rate cut off the map, see less than a 50% chance of move in July and now
doubt there will be any more than one rate cut this year - despite Fed
policymakers indicating as many as three only last month.
Minutes of that Fed meeting released later on Wednesday did little to
calm the horses.
Perhaps most pointedly for those watching the political calendar, a
first quarter-point Fed rate cut is now not fully in futures prices
until the Nov 7 meeting - days after this year's White House and
Congressional elections.
With the political optics around a first cut in September likely tricky
for the Fed, futures only see about an 80% chance of a move then.
The CPI news knocked Wall St stock benchmarks almost 1% and triggered
the biggest one-day jump in 2-year Treasury yields and biggest one-day
jump in the dollar index since March last year.
The dollar move was exaggerated by the yen slicing through presumed Bank
of Japan intervention barriers around 152 per dollar to hit its weakest
since 1990 above 153 on Thursday - significantly without any sign of BOJ
purchases.
And the fact that markets still see a 75% chance of a June rate cut from
the European Central Bank - which is meeting on Thursday - despite the
Fed futures wipeout, triggered the biggest one-day drop in over a year
in the euro/dollar exchange rate too.
The fundamental reasons for the dollar move were pretty clear and it was
the biggest daily surge in 10-year Treasury borrowing rates since 2022.
Coming in a week of heavy new debt sales at the long-end of the Treasury
curve didn't help. And some $22 billion of 30-year bonds are up for
grabs later on Thursday.
Investors will now focus on Thursday's producer prices report for a
clearer picture of March inflation - looking at components in there that
may give more clues on how the Fed's favored PCE inflation gauge is
evolving.
A stream of Fed speakers will, perhaps literally, be watched like a
hawk.
But whatever you think is driving the renewed inflation angst, it's
certainly not happening in China.
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People walk around the Financial District near the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., December 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/FILE PHOTO
China's annual consumer inflation cooled more than expected in March
to just 0.1%, while producer price deflation persisted, maintaining
pressure on policymakers to launch more stimulus there as demand
remains weak.
Overall, Wednesday's market selloffs seem to calm a bit on Thursday.
Treasuries hogged Wednesday's closes, even though Wall St stock
futures were in the red again ahead of the bell - as were Asia and
European bourses earlier.
More worrying for inflation-watchers was the overnight geopolitical
developments.
Oil prices pushed higher again on Middle East tensions.
The German airline Lufthansa on Thursday extended the suspension of
its flights to Tehran, with the region on alert for Iranian
retaliation for a suspected Israeli air strike on Iran's embassy in
Syria.
An Iranian news agency had published an Arabic report on the social
media platform X saying all airspace over Tehran had been closed for
military drills, but then removed the report and denied issuing such
news.
The region and the United States have been on alert for a
retaliatory attack by Iran since April 1, when Israeli warplanes
were suspected of bombing the Iranian embassy compound in Syria.
Markets are also trying to focus on the start of the first quarter
earnings season and a trio of big banks- JPMorgan, Citigroup and
Wells Fargo - are slated to post results on Friday.
Analysts expect aggregate S&P 500 earnings in the first quarter to
grow 5.0% from last year, according to LSEG data. That is lower than
the 7.2% annual earnings growth for the quarter forecast on Jan. 1.
Key diary items that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on
Thursday:
* European Central Bank policy decision and press briefing
* US March producer price index, weekly jobless claims
* Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Susan Collins, New York
Fed President John Williams, Richmond Fed chief Thomas Barkin and
Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic all speak
* US Treasury sells $22 billion of 30-year bonds
* US corporate earnings: Constellation Brands, Carmax, Fastenal
* Eurogroup finance ministers meet in Brussels
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Christina Fincher, mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com)
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