Showing posts with label Week Ahead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week Ahead. Show all posts

Monday, January 17, 2011

Fundamental Week Ahead: business sales gained to their highest levels since September 2008, a positive sign of future economic growth.

Among the handful of economic news Friday, *business inventories grew*
in November as sales rose, according to the Commerce Department. The
figure was a little less than analysts had expected as business sales
gained to their highest levels since September 2008, a positive sign
of future economic growth. *December retail sales rose less than
expected,* while sales for all of 2010 gained almost 7% from a year
ago, the Commerce Department reported. And the consumer price index
saw its biggest increase since June 2009, largely because of an 8.5
percent gain in the gasoline index, the Labor Department reported. And
the consumer price index saw its biggest increase since June 2009,
largely because of an 8.5 percent gain in the gasoline index, the
Labor Department reported. Meanwhile, Thomson Reuters/University of
Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 72.7 in December, as *rising
gas prices dampened the mood of consumers.* Industrial production
numbers for December rose more than expected, as utility output jumped
due to cold weather.

!! The Week Ahead: !!
*MONDAY:* Martin Luther King Jr. Day—All Markets Closed,
Philadelphia Federal Reserve President speaks.
*TUESDAY:* Empire state manufacturing survey, Treasury international
capital, housing market index. Also, earnings before-the-bell from
Citigroup, TD Ameritrade; earnings after-the-bell from Apple, IBM.
*WEDNESDAY:* Weekly mortgage applications, housing starts, Obama hosts
Chinese President Hu; earnings before-the-bell from Goldman Sachs,
Wells Fargo; earnings after-the-bell from eBay.
*THURSDAY:* Weekly jobless claims, existing home sales, leading
indicators, Philadelphia Fed survey, oil inventories; earnings
before-the-bell from Morgan Stanley, Fifth Third, Huntington Bank,
Southwest Airlines, United Health, Union Pacific; earnings
after-the-bell from Advanced Micro, Capital One.
*FRIDAY:* Dodd-Frank rulemaking deadline; earnings before-the-bell
from Bank of America, GE, BB&T, Schlumberger and Sun Trust.
Source: Fxstreet.com
READ MORE - Fundamental Week Ahead: business sales gained to their highest levels since September 2008, a positive sign of future economic growth.

The Weak, I mean, Week Ahead : Recent US data flow has been a little disappointing after what had been a fairly strong run of figures up to Christmas.

Recent US data flow has been a little disappointing after what had
been a fairly strong run of figures up to Christmas. Adverse weather
may well have played its part. Consumer confidence in the ABC weekly
sentiment index has recovered now that the situation has improved and,
as a result, I looked for University of Michigan sentiment to rise as
well, but consumer confidence dropped unexpectedly in January, as the
current conditions index fell to 79.8 from 85.3, offsetting a better
reading from the outlook component. 1-year-ahead inflation
expectations also picked up from 3.0% to 3.3%, though the 5-year
expectation held steady for the fourth consecutive month at 2.8%. On
top of this, business inventories grew only a meagre 0.2% m/m in
November, from an expected 0.7%. Destocking by the auto sector was the
principal cause (also notable in weak production figures in the IP
survey), but could also mark the start of an anticipated inventory
slowdown. Whilst this could weigh on GDP growth in the 4Q10 and 1Q11
figures, it is likely to be substantially offset by weaker imports.

All the decline in the headline was due to an inexplicable 5.5-point
drop in the current conditions index, which usually just moves more or
less in line with jobless claims and should now be in the low 90s
rather than January's 79.8. Anything can happen month-to-month, though
and I expect a clear rebound in February. Expectations, meanwhile, did
not rise as much as I had hoped but the trend is clearly upwards and
we expect modest steady gains over the next few months. Anecdotally,
retail activity has performed well since Thanksgiving and this should
translate into a healthy retail sales report, but the December retail
sales release was a little disappointing, rising 'only' 0.6% m/m,
and there were downward revisions to earlier releases. Stripping out
autos and petrol, retail sales were up a moderate 0.4% m/m. Not bad,
but not too exciting either. The subcomponents of this series were
unusually volatile, and conflicting, with strong rises in motor
vehicles, furniture, building materials health and personal care,
sporting goods and non-store retail offsetting outright declines in
electronics, food and beverages, clothing, general merchandise and
miscellaneous. Difficult to read too much into these figures, and bad
December weather might be a disruptive factor. However, not all parts
of the US economy are doing quite as well. On the one hand, I expect
residential construction activity to continue bumping along the
bottom. US existing home sales, on the other hand, may turn out above
5.0m for the first time since June last year. The NAR's pending home
sales index showed another uptick in November, so I look for a modest
gain in the pace of December re-sales (+2.6%). I will update my
estimate if regional sales figures (often reported ahead of the
national data) contain any notable surprises.

As we began Week #2 of 2011, markets remained on the thin side which
probably explains some rather odd price action. Many moves of the
first week in January were reversed this week, most notably the
EUR/USD exchange rate from a low at $1.2860 to $1.3458, taking EUR
crosses up with it, gaining most against the AUD from A$1.2900 to
$1.3500. Eastern European currencies are at their strongest against
the USD in 6 weeks, while the EUR/SWK at 8.8300 is at its best level
since September 2003. Stock indices have been very mixed indeed, each
working off its own dynamics. The Nikkei and US indices inched to yet
new recent highs, most European ones held unsteady at December's
highs, with big regional variations; Spain's Ibex index at one point
managed to rally 10.5% in just 3 days - welcome probably, but surely
raising questions. Mumbai's Sensex lost 9.0% this fortnight and at
one point this week Bangladesh's Dhaka General Index lost 15.5%,
closing the exchange and causing violent street protests which were
broken up by the police. Interest rates also not moving in tandem:
Schatz at 1.17% highest in almost a year, likewise Polish 5-year
(5.80%), though most 10-year Treasury yields while up a little on the
week remain within December's ranges at/around 4.30%. Baltic Freight
Rates have dropped considerably since November.

Father Christmas delivered no presents to Eurozone central bankers and
finance ministers; sovereign debt problems are back with a vengeance,
spreads over 10-year Bunds at new records for Belgium (143 bps), Italy
(201 bps) and Spain (275 bps). A subsequent massive collective sigh of
relief and narrowing of spreads as Portuguese and Spanish T-Bond
auctions found adequate bids. German 2010 GDP grew at 3.6%, best since
unification after plunging in 2009, underlining the difference between
the weak and the strong. UK Manufacturing grew 5.5% y/y to November
keeping it at some of the highest levels in 3 decades. The ECB and
Bank of England kept rates unchanged at 1.00% and 0.50% respectively,
but in surprise moves the Central Banks of South Korea and Thailand
upped theirs by 25 bps to 2.75% (the Kospi at a new record 2,109) and
2.25% respectively. The PBoC raised bank reserve requirements by 50
bps. They, like Mr. Trichet, are a 'little rattled' by above
target inflation, though the latter did boast of a 'remarkable track
record' where Eurozone CPI was 1.97% in the 12 years since the
single currency's introduction. Mervyn King has no such luck,
December Input PPI running at +12.5% y/y, caused in large part by a
weaker GBP, something the MPC so happily embraced earlier hoping it
would prompt to an export-led recovery. Instead, as any sensible
person could have told them, it has caused a record £8.74bn trade
deficit. Euribor and Short Sterling futures 30-60 bps off highs;
Eurodollars flat.

Blizzards, unseasonable snow, floods, volcanic eruptions, small
earthquakes, 1000s of birds falling out of the sky. The worst La Nina
since 197/74 continue until March so let's hope any further damage
can be contained while helping those in need. Monday is a US holiday
with Japan December Consumer Confidence and UK January Rightmove House
Prices early on. Tuesday busy with an ECOFIN meeting too: Japan
December Department Store Sales, UK Nationwide Consumer Confidence,
RICS House Price Balance, CPI, November DCLG House Prices, US TICS
Flows, January NAHB Housing Market Index, Empire State Manufacturing
Survey and German ZEW Survey plus the Bank of Canada decides on rates
(unanimously expected unchanged at 1.00%). Wednesday Tokyo December
Condominium Sales, November Tertiary Industry Index, Eurozone Current
Account, UK Average Earnings, ILO Unemployment, December Jobless
Claims, EZ16 Construction Output, US Housing Starts and Building
Permits. Thursday Japan December Convenience Store Sales, German PPI,
US Existing Home Sales, Leading Indicators, January Philadelphia Fed
Survey and UK CBI Industrial Trends. Friday Japan November All
Industry Activity Index, UK December Retail Sales and German January
IFO. Sunday are Portuguese presidential election.

In the UK, data out Tuesday are expected to show annual CPI climbed to
a 7-month high of 3.4% in December, from 3.3% in November and 3.1% in
September. This would take CPI further above the Bank's target rate of
2.0%. Core consumer price inflation is seen remaining at 2.7% in
November. I expect higher oil and commodity prices to have had an
upward impact on CPI in December, while food prices remain elevated.
Petrol prices rose in December and utility bills increased. The
evidence also suggests the severe weather in December did not push
retailers into offering significantly more discounts and promotions to
try to boost sales. Specifically, the British Retail Consortium
reported that overall shop price inflation rose to 2.1% in December
from 2.0% in November. Food price inflation was stable at 4.0% in
December, while non-food inflation rose to 1.1% in December from 0.9%
in November.

Consumer price inflation looks likely to 'touch' 4.0% over the
next few months (I currently forecast a peak of 3.8%) because of
higher oil and commodity prices, as well as elevated food prices.
Furthermore, VAT rose from 17.5% to 20.0% in early January, although
this may not actually push the annual inflation rate up, given there
was also a VAT hike in January 2010 (to 17.5% from 15.0%). CPI will
hopefully move below 3.0% late in 2011 as the upward impact from VAT
developments, higher energy, commodity, and food prices, and GBP's
past sharp depreciation wanes. Meanwhile, underlying inflationary
pressures should be 'limited' by appreciable excess capacity,
likely muted growth in 2011, strong competition on the high street,
and high unemployment. Inflation will hopefully dip below 2.0% early
in 2012 as the impact of the January 2011 VAT hikes drops out and the
UK housing market 'stalls'.

I expect UK house prices to trend down gradually to lose around 10%
from their peak 2010 levels by the end of 2011. This implies that
house prices are likely to fall by a further 6–7.0% during 2011.
High (and likely to rise) unemployment, muted wage growth, an
increasing fiscal squeeze, low consumer confidence, difficulties in
getting a mortgage, a housing supply/demand balance currently firmly
in favour of buyers, and a house price/earnings ratio above long-term
norms are a poor combination of factors for house prices. Low interest
rates and the current stamp-duty holiday for first-time buyers on all
properties costing up to £250,000 only partially offset these adverse
factors—especially as it is difficult for many people to get a
mortgage. I continue to 'busk' the trend and feel convinced that
the Bank will NOT raise rates until Q4.

On Monday and Tuesday there will be important meetings of European
finance ministers, discussing the possible next steps in the
Eurozone's crisis management. Even if the German government is
officially still reluctant to change the 'rules of the game', an
increase in the size and scope of the EFSF has become likely. Like the
US, adverse weather may have influenced some (recent, mixed) UK
reports but with fiscal austerity, tight credit conditions and
negative real household disposable income growth we are less
optimistic on the UK's prospects than consensus. Even though
inflation should pick up further in months ahead (I look for 3.4% this
week on CPI), I doubt medium-term inflation pressures are sustainable
and favour no change to monetary policy until 'at least' Q4 at the
earliest.. The impact of the harsh winter will also be reflected in
German confidence indicators.

In Japan, political tensions will receive attention this week. Expect
politicians to 'put pressure' on the BoJ to ease policy further,
given DPJ officials will not want the economy to be in recession
during April's local elections. Brazil's monetary policy committee
(COPOM) meets on Wednesday with Alexandre Tombini at the helm for the
first time. Considering the worrying inflation dynamics in the context
of continued domestic demand strength, I expect a new round of rate
hikes. I expect 3 consecutive hikes of 50 bps, bringing the SELIC rate
to 12.25% by April. The Bank of Canada also convenes this week, with
no change to policy expected once again, given the impact further
divergence from Fed policy would have on the already strong CAD. The
quarterly report is released the following day, which will be keenly
eyed for updated projections and risks to the outlook
Although Turkey's December inflation caused market players to expect
another rate cut at this week's meeting, I do not agree with this
view as December's inflation did not signal any improvement in the
inflation outlook. I think that the CBT will 'watch and await' the
effects of previous month's decisions a bit longer before taking
further actions. Conversely, in Poland the MPC has left little doubt
that there is going to be a rate hike this week, most likely by 25
bps. The key releases in Russia will be 2010 federal budget
performance and inflationary data, including weekly CPI (to reflect a
rise in regulated retail tariffs for electricity and natural gas) and
Dec PPI. In Ukraine, industrial and retail sectors should see strong
growth in both m/m and y/y terms in Dec on the back of recovering
domestic demand since the middle of 2010.

China will dominate headlines for its 4Q10 GDP, December inflation
data and President Hu's visit to the US. I view the PBoC's lower
CNY fixings in the last 3 days as a political gesture ahead of Hu's
visit. I have not altered my view that renminbi appreciation is not
going to be part of the PBoC's disinflation policy
Source: Fxstreet.com
READ MORE - The Weak, I mean, Week Ahead : Recent US data flow has been a little disappointing after what had been a fairly strong run of figures up to Christmas.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The Week Ahead: Medium-term fiscal situation as the key-driver of financial markets

The general environment of the markets has not changed dramatically
from the end of last year. However, the weights assigned to various
components are changing. This is especially the case in the US where
short-term growth prospects take the lead over concerns about the
medium-term fiscal situation as the key-driver of financial markets.

The recently positive signals coming from labour data tend to
"limit" the risk of any unpleasant surprises on the household
confidence and spending front.

The first week of the new year ended with somewhat of a 'shock'!
December payrolls rose 103,00, well below the consensus, 150 000 and
my initial 'guesstimate of 160,000, and far short of the 297,000 ADP
number. The net revision was +70,000, though. Unemployment fell
unexpectedly to 9.4% from 9.8%, and hourly earnings rose 0.1%;
consensus was 0.2%. This is a cold(ish) shower after the excitement
generated by ADP; private payrolls rose 113,000, below the 128,000
average for the previous 3 months. And 44,000 of the jobs were in
education, while temp job growth slowed sharply. The underlying trend
is accelerating, but progress is quite slow. With jobless claims now
dropping more quickly I expect better payrolls over the next few
months. The drop in unemployment reflects a 297,000 rise in household
employment and a 260,000 drop in the labour force; both are hugely
volatile. The unemployment trend is about flat.

The December US labour report is an utter mess, and it is becoming
increasingly hard to see why markets focus so much on these numbers.
The non-farm payrolls total rose by a disappointing 103,000, with some
positive net revisions, failing to dispel the sense that this was a
soft figure relative to what was seen more likely in the 180,000
region by consensus, following the recent strong ADP report. But the
household survey of employment reversed a 175,000 fall last month to
register a 297,000 rise - bang in line with the ADP numbers. As a
result of this, and a 260,000 decline in the size of the civilian
labour force (if things were as good as the household survey suggests,
why are so many people giving up the search for work?) the
unemployment rate has declined from 9.8% to 9.4% - the lowest since
May 2009. In spite of this good news, the median duration of
unemployment continues to rise, and now stands at 22.4 weeks, up from
21.7. So those getting jobs have typically not been unemployed for
very long.

Treasuries ended the past week sharply mixed – little change at the
front end, modest further gains in the intermediate part of the curve
on top of the prior week's outperformance, and substantial losses at
the long end – after a BIG rally Friday in response to the
disappointing employment report reversed significant losses across the
curve seen through Thursday on better economic news through the first
part of the week and pressures from record corporate issuance. The
December employment report wasn't terrible, but after the surge in
the ADP employment report added to widespread signs of accelerating
labour market improvement, including claims, the Challenger and
Manpower surveys, and strong recent individual tax receipt growth,
seeing payrolls at +103,000 come in below the October/November average
and other details of the establishment survey (flat average workweek,
only minor gains in aggregate hours worked and average earnings, small
rise in aggregate earnings that will be negative in real terms) show
little improvement was certainly a letdown. And the much more positive
0.4% drop in the unemployment rate to 9.4% was discounted since it
came to a significant extent from a sharp decrease in the labour force
that is unlikely to be sustained. On top of the boost from the
softer-than-expected employment results, a significant renewed
deterioration in sentiment towards peripheral EMU sovereign credit and
increasing signs of contagion into core Euroland, which flowed through
into significant worsening in US municipal bond CDS, and associated
pressure on European bank debt, provided a flight to safety boost to
Treasuries late in the week. Prior to the employment report, economic
data released during the week were more positive but, setting aside
the misleading ADP report, also mixed. Both ISM surveys posted strong
results, with the nonmanufacturing index exceeding the manufacturing
index for the first time in the recovery, a positive indication of a
broadening expansion. Motor vehicle sales rose more than expected to
extend the best three-month run since 2008, but chain store sales
growth significantly decelerated in December and a very strong start
to holiday shopping in November, pointing to a slowing in underlying
retail sales. As a result I have 'trimmed' my Q4 consumption
forecast to +3.8% from +4.1% and GDP to +4.3% from +4.5% Earnings data
were on the stronger side, with the hourly wages number rising to 1.8%
y/y from 1.6%, its highest since July. This would be more in keeping
with the strong household figure than the 'mediocre' payrolls
report. This data is a mess. My best guess is that the labour market
is recovering more in line with what the household survey is telling
us than the payrolls figures. But the market still tends to focus on
the non-farm payrolls numbers. Consequently, the market response to
this figure will be one of disappointment – despite the genuine
elements of good news it contains.

Barring any Eurozone sovereign debt shocks, the improving news flow on
the US labour market will continue to drive risk appetite over the
next couple of weeks. With growing evidence that jobs growth is
picking up, as highlighted in the ADP payrolls numbers and initial
jobless claims data, Friday's US December labour report showed
non-farm payrolls jumping by over 100,000. This should boost consumer
sentiment and in an environment of improving credit conditions,
loooooow interest rates with the added bonus of a mini fiscal
stimulus, I am increasingly optimistic on the prospects for consumer
spending. However, those looking for a swift decline in the
unemployment rate are likely to be disappointed given that more jobs
will encourage previously disillusioned workers who withdrew from the
labour force to return. Consequently, we are likely to see rising
employment and a rising workforce, which I believe will keep the
unemployment rate close to 10% through this year (my initial call is
for a year-end rate close to 8.8%). Other US data includes retail
sales, which should be strong based on evidence from the retailers
themselves post the Thanksgiving holiday. Meanwhile, headline CPI will
be boosted by gasoline prices, but underlying inflation should remain
very benign at just 0.8% y/y. Given the Federal Reserve has suggested
it wants to see the unemployment rate in a 5.0-6.0% range and the core
personal consumer deflation nearer to 2.0%, there is little prospect
of monetary policy tightening in the near term. Indeed, I doubt rates
will be raised before 1Q 2012 at the earliest especially after the
Bernanke headlines from late Friday afternoon before the Senate Budget
Panel.

* May take 4 to 5 years for job market to "normalize"
* Recovery likely to be moderately stronger in 2011
* Inflation "likely to be subdued for some time"
* Persistent high unemployment could threaten recovery
* Progress is likely to be slow in meeting Fed's dual mandate
* Fed is committed to price stability and says the Fed has "tools
it needs" to smoothly" exit QE
* Labour market "improved only modestly at best"
* Housing sector remains "depressed"
* Failing to curb deficits could lead to higher rates

In Europe, ECB and Bank of England policy meetings will be in focus
although no change to policy is likely. Both Eurozone and UK inflation
are above target and in an environment of strengthening global demand
the hawks on the respective committees are becoming more vocal.

However, given spare capacity, fiscal austerity measures and high
unemployment, I still favour 2012 as the starting point for policy
tightening. German annual GDP growth data and the first estimate for
the fiscal deficit should confirm an excellent growth performance in
2010. With a fiscal deficit close to the Maastricht-threshold of 3.0%
of GDP, Germany remains the showcase of the Eurozone, not only in
terms of growth but also in terms of public finances.

The lagged effects of a strong JPY, moderation of foreign demand and
the withdrawal of government stimulus continue to weigh on the
Japanese economy. Machinery orders have been unusually weak in recent
months though should recover in the coming months. With food inflation
pressures finally abating in Brazil, the monthly IPCA inflation index
should drop in December but that should not stop the index from
printing a high 5.9% rate for 2010 as a whole, markedly higher than
the 4.5% target. As a result, the central bank has signalled in its
latest inflation report that policy rate hikes are likely later this
month. A 50 bps hike is likely, which will probably be followed by two
additional hikes of the same magnitude, bringing the SELIC to 12.25%
by April. In Poland, with CPI likely to have climbed above 3.0% y/y in
December even dovish MPC members are openly talking about rate hikes.

The vote is next week. With no deterioration seen in new orders the
y/y growth of exports may have returned above 20% in the last 2 months
of 2010, and the 1Q11 outlook is also positive. In the Czech Republic,
I assume IP again reached saw double-digit growth, driven by strong
export performance, while retail sales returned to positive growth in
the same month. CPI likely broke the 2.0% target of the central bank
in December, driven by higher food and fuel prices, but demand-pull
inflation remains weak, supporting the wait-and-see stance of the CNB
policymakers.

However, the return to macro fundamentals does not draw a completely
rosy picture. First of all in Europe, all the economic surveys show
further divergence across countries, with confidence going up in core
ones and down at the peripheral. Whatever the current relative calm in
sovereign debt markets, the lack of growth at the South of the
continent suggests that problems can resurface at any time as long as
the EU partners have not proposed an effective resolution of State'
solvency crises. With further optimism about growth expectations,
mostly in the US, inflation is increasingly becoming a key theme and
recent events call for vigilance. Commodity prices are still on the
rise; in the UK the hike in VAT and fuel excise have contributed to
growing inflation expectations; within the Eurozone, the y/y increase
of consumer prices was 2.2% last December, so over the 2.0% ECB
threshold for the first time in 2 years. Even if the importance of
unused capacities in both the US and Europe (a still large negative
output gap) and the low levels of core measures of inflation send a
clear message about the current limited risk of any inflation
acceleration, markets may remain vigilant and could even overreact
occasionally.

The data flow for next week will mainly focus on the US. The general
message would likely confirm a gradual improvement in the economic
situation. December retail sales likely posted a solid broad based
0.8% gain, while the preliminary University of Michigan consumer
sentiment index for January should continue to improve. This more
optimistic tone would be confirmed by the Fed's Beige book. December
CPI is expected to have moved up 0.4% m/m, in relation with energy
prices. The core index would have edged up only 0.1% on the month and
0.8% over the year. This is much lower than the FOMC's preferred
range of 1.6-2.0% and highlights the Fed's concerns regarding
subdued inflation.

For its first Governing Council meeting of the year, the ECB looks set
to remain firmly 'on hold' for now despite early signs of a
pick-up in various inflation gauges. The statement should mention
these recent developments, while further highlighting the downside
risks to growth in the medium-term, despite a recent run of positive
data. For now, the ECB has plenty of arguments left to justify the
status quo. Core inflation remains much lower than the headline (I
look for a modest increase to 1.2% y/y in December). Constraints on
bank lending remain both on the supply and the demand side. And the
improvement in any measure of "Eurozone average" in terms of GDP,
CPI and thus of an appropriate policy rate, has been accompanied by a
strong and rising divergence across countries. In the near-term, the
ECB will likely carry on with its very cautious and gradual approach,
avoiding any disturbing signal for the weakest Eurozone countries
while keeping the Securities Market Programme "ongoing". That
said, JC Trichet is also set to make clear once again that it is up to
the national governments to solve the fiscal crisis, not to the ECB.

Regarding non-standard policy measures, any exit decision will be
announced at the March meeting. Finally, the ECB is likely to welcome
the December EU summit decisions in general, and the announcement that
new bank stress tests will be re-conducted in the coming months in
particular.

BoE also would not alter its policy and I do not expect a change in
the key policy rate and the APF programme next week. Although
inflation is above target and is likely to even edge higher in the
near term, an interest rate hike would be premature given the
headwinds, both internal and external which the economy is facing
(budgetary spending cuts, uncertain prospects for consumer spending,
euro-area tensions). Recent macroeconomic data points towards
reasonably strong growth in the Q4 and makes another APF extension
unlikely.

The Eurozone government bond markets for the core markets would be
confronted to opposite factors in the next few days. On the one hand,
the trend for long-term rates would stay upward in the US in relation
with a friendly growth data flow. On the other hand, the persistence
of doubts about the peripheral sovereigns' financial situation and
the importance next week of the issuances from Portugal, Spain and
Italy should plead in favour of enlarged spreads and so of downward
pressures on core rates. At the end, I expect no major shift in rates
for core markets. As mentioned earlier, the US muni bond market also
came under significant renewed pressure as the sovereign credit
worries in Europe intensified. 5-year CDS spreads for Ireland (+35 bps
on the week to 650 bps) and Portugal (+45 bps to 545 bps) ended the
week at new closing highs, though Spain (+8 bps to 358 bps) held
'steady'. Peripheral worries continued to spread into the softer
Euroland core, with Belgium (+35 bps to 252 bps) hitting a new wide as
its political crisis showed no signs of resolution and Italy (+17 bps
to 255 bps) weakening notably. Contagion is even starting to become
more evident in the harder core, with France (+9 bps to 110 bps) also
moving to a new wide. Spillover from European sovereign credit
concerns drove the 5-year muni bond MCDX index 20 bps wider to 237
bps, its worst level since July.

With the growing optimism about the US economy, the USD must stay on
the 'front foot'. However, a likely asymmetric behaviour of the
market should be kept in mind. A shortfall is likely to have a more
pronounced impact than any upside surprise. The difficulty is that, at
least in the next few days, any pull-back in the USD is likely to lack
conviction and could be even perceived as an opportunity to increase
the long positions.
Source: Fxstreet.com
READ MORE - The Week Ahead: Medium-term fiscal situation as the key-driver of financial markets

Monday, December 13, 2010

Week Ahead: Thoughts on the global economy and FX markets

As markets make the last strides towards year end it appears that currencies at least are becoming increasingly resigned to trading in ranges. Even the beleaguered EUR has not traded far from the 1.3200 level despite significant bond market gyrations. Even news that inflation in China came in well above expectations in November (5.1% YoY) and increased prospects of a rate hike is likely to prompt a limited reaction from a lethargic market.
At the tail end of last week US data provided further support to the growing pool of evidence indicating strengthening US economic conditions, with the trade deficit surprisingly narrowing in October, a fact that will add to Q4 GDP growth, whilst the Michigan measure of consumer confidence registered a bigger than expected increase in November to its highest level since June.
The jump in consumer confidence bodes well for retail spending and highlights the prospects that US November retail sales tomorrow are set to reveal solid gains both headline and ex-autos sales driven by sales and promotions over the holiday season. Other data too, will paint an encouraging picture, with November industrial production (Wed) set to reveal a healthy gain helped by a bounce in utility output. Manufacturing surveys will be mixed with a rebound in the Empire manufacturing survey in December likely but in contrast a drop in the Philly Fed expected.
The main event this week is the FOMC decision tomorrow the Fed is expected to deliver few surprises. The Fed funds rate is expected to remain “exceptionally low for an extended period”. Despite some recent encouraging data recovery remains slow and the fact that core inflation continues to decelerate (CPI inflation data on Wednesday is set to reveal a benign outcome with core CPI at 0.6%) whilst the unemployment rate has moved higher means that the Fed is no rush to alter policy including its commitment to buy $600 billion in Treasuries including $105 billion between now and January 11.
In Europe there are also some key releases that will garner plenty of attention including the December German ZEW and IFO investor and manufacturing confidence surveys and flash purchasing managers indices (PMI) readings. The data are set to remain reasonably healthy and may keep market attention from straying to ongoing problems in the eurozone periphery but this will prove temporary at least until the markets are convinced that European Union leaders are shifting away from “piecemeal” solutions to ending the crisis. The EU leaders’ summit at the end of the week will be important in this respect. A Spanish debt auction on Thursday will also be in focus.
Assuming the forecasts for US data prove correct it is likely that US bond markets will remain under pressure unless the Fed says something that fuels a further decline in yield such as highlighting prospects for more quantitative easing (QE). However, following the tax compromise agreement last week this seems unlikely. Higher relative US bond yields will keep the USD supported, and as I have previously noted, the most sensitive currencies will be the AUD, EUR and JPY, all of which are likely to remain under varying degrees of downward pressure in the short term. The AUD will also be particularly sensitive to prospects of further Chinese monetary tightening.
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Week Ahead: The U.S. trade deficit shrank more than 5%

Highlights

Tax Deal
President Obama announced a bipartisan fiscal agreement for the next two years. The deal extends the expiring Bush tax cuts for all income bracket rates, as well as the Earned Income Tax Credit, the Child Tax Credit, and the American Opportunity Tax Credit. It also avoids tax rate hikes on estates and reduces the payroll tax by 2pp for employees, which substitutes the expiring Making Work Pay (MWP) tax credit. In addition, the deal extends the unemployment insurance benefit for another 13 months and will allow businesses to write off 100% of their investment in 2011, instead of 50% proposed back in September. In total, these measures add up to around $800bn or 5% of GDP. The size of this agreement is similar to the American Recovery and Reconstruction Act of 2008 and 5 times the size of the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008. Lower tax rates and tax credits have a positive fiscal multiplier effect that will boost GDP growth in 2011-12. According to our estimates, the impact on GDP growth could be around 0.3 to 0.9% for 2011, and 0.2 to 0.6% for 2012. However, the proposal increases fiscal deficit and debt levels; complicates future fiscal consolidation.
Wholesale Inventories
The U.S. Census Bureau announced that wholesale inventories hiked 1.9% in October, significantly higher than market expectations and revised wholesale inventories in September from 1.5% to 2.1%. The report also revealed that the sales of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, increased by 2.2% in October and jumped 13.4% in the last 12 months. The inventories-to-sales ratio was flat (1.18) in October. Although the ratio is higher than its historical low level of 1.13, it is still lower than its historical average of 1.25. The ratio reached its highest level, 1.42, in January 2009. Last month the Bureau of Economic Analysis announced that private inventories contributed 1.3pp of the 2.5% annualized growth in 3Q10 and the October wholesale inventories report indicates that the positive contribution of inventories to the economic recovery is likely to continue in 4Q10.
Week Ahead
Retail Sales, ex auto (November, Tuesday 08:30 ET)
Forecast: 0.7%, 0.6% Consensus: 0.6%, 0.7% Previous: 1.2%, 0.4% Week Ahead
Retail sales increased by 1.2% in October. Auto sales were one of the main drivers of this increase which jumped 4.4% from the previous month. The U.S. Commerce Department previously announced that auto sales in the U.S. increased only 0.1% in November after increasing strongly by 2.4% and 4.4% in the previous two months. Furthermore, the ICSC/UBS Retail Chain Store Sales Index rose 1.1% in November following a three consecutive month fall and personal consumption expenditures are strong in the last couple months. Therefore, we expect retail sales continue to increase significantly.
CPI, core (November, Wednesday 08:30 ET)
Forecast: 0.2%, 0.1% Consensus: 0.2%, 0.1% Previous: 0.2%, 0.0%
U.S. consumer prices increased by 0.2% in October, slightly lower than expected. The increase in headline consumer prices was mostly driven by an increase in energy prices, whereas the rise in the gasoline index accounted for almost 90% of the increase in headline prices. In October, the increases in food prices slowed down and rose only 0.1% compared to 0.3% in the previous month. In the last 12 months, consumer prices have risen 1.2%. Core inflation was flat for the third month in a row and dropped to its lowest level on a YoY basis. Core consumer prices increased only by 0.6% over the last 12 months in October. We expect deflationary pressures to remain in the short- and mid-term.
Industrial Production (November, Wednesday 09:15 ET)
Forecast: 0.3% Consensus: 0.3% Previous: 0.0%
Industrial production (IP) was flat in October and disappointed market participants who were expecting a 0.3% increase. IP dropped 0.1% in the previous month. Although manufacturing production has been increasing steadily in the last four months by 0.4% on average, economic activity in the utilities sector continued to decrease. In the last three days, the utilities production index declined by 2.2% on average. Therefore, while the total capacity utilization rate remained at 74.8%, the capacity utilization rate in utilities declined 2.8pp to 76.6% in October. We expect modest growth in the IP index in November.
Housing Starts (November, Thursday 08:30 ET)
Forecast: 545K Consensus: 550K Previous: 519K
Housing starts are expected to remain low in November due to weak demand for new homes. Even though the decline in new home sales has stabilized, the market has not experienced the same renewed demand as that of existing homes. Although new housing inventory is at its historical minimum, the low level of the Confidence Housing Market Index suggests that home builders are not willing to increase the supply of new housing yet. However, we expect housing starts to improve slightly in November.
Market Impact
A very busy week is ahead. Flat consumer prices and a drop in IP (after two months of weak IP data) in November would imply that the current deflationary prices are stronger-than-expected and would increase anxiety about deflation.
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