BoJ Funo: Necessary to maintain low rates for prolonged period, but no need to ease further

    BoJ board member Yukitoshi Funo said it’s necessary to maintain current ultra-loose monetary policy. However, he saw no need to ramp up stimulus for now.

    Funo said, “given price growth and inflation expectations aren’t heightening much, it’s necessary to maintain sufficiently low rates for a prolonged period to achieve the BoJ’s price target.” However, he’s also optimistic that “we can expect Japan’s economy to recover in the latter half of this year”. And, “as such, I see no need to ease policy further now,”

    He also noted the forward guidance is already leaving open the possibility of the BoJ maintaining current policy for long. “We say ‘at least’ until spring 2020 because there’s a good chance current low rates will be maintained beyond spring next year.”

    ECB Liikanen assures no abrupt sudden changes when QE ends

      ECB Governing Council member Erkki Liikanen spoke on monetary policy today:

      • “We have been careful in our communication,” and “we said we’re extending net asset purchases until September and beyond if needed.”
      • “And our monetary policy is and will be data dependent. So we must follow fresh incoming data every time,”
      • “A gradual tightening of monetary policy will rest on a more solid basis when indications of inflation rates to potentially temporarily exceed two percent become more prominent in inflation expectations,”
      • “The euro area inflation rate is sustainable when the ECB’s price stability objective can be met even without an exceptionally accommodative monetary policy,”
      • ” If the economy will be stronger and more convergence will take place, the role of the net asset purchase program will be smaller. And at the same time the other three elements will gain more importance especially forward guidance.”
      • But, “there will be no abrupt sudden changes even if one day the net purchases will be finished.”
      • “Downside risk is mainly political. We must follow that attentively,”

      Fed Clarida: Baseline outlook positive, with growth at or slightly above trend

        Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida maintained his view that the US economy is “in a good place in terms of lower unemployment rate and the inflation rate a little bit below our 2% objective”. Also, the baseline outlook “continues to be a positive one”. That is, the committee “sees growth at or slightly above trend, sees the unemployment rate remaining low and the inflation rate rising gradually toward 2%.”

        Though, he also noted that with the Beige Book survey, “we are hearing increasing references and mentions of uncertainty about policy, and particularly uncertainty about the outlook for trade negotiations, having a potential impact on business investments”.

        Clarida also noted uncertainties from trade, global growth and business investments. Also, his fellow central banks saw stronger case for policy easing relative to just two months again. He reiterated Fed’s stance that “we will certainly act as appropriate to put in place policies that sustain the economic expansion, and the strong labor market and price stability.”

        New Zealand BusinessNZ manufacturing dropped back to 50.7 on lockdown return

          New Zealand BusinessNZ Manufacturing PMI dropped sharply to 50.7 in August, down from 59.0. Looking at some details, productions dropped form 61.8 to 51.1. Employment improved from 46.9 to 49.0. New orders tumbled from 67.5 to 54.0.

          BusinessNZ’s executive director for manufacturing Catherine Beard said, “After two months of playing catch-up, the level 3 lockdown placed on New Zealand’s largest population and economic region meant the sector would experience another hit.  While results in other parts of the country led to the national result keeping its head above water, the latest results show how fragile and short the recovery can be.”

          BNZ Senior Economist, Doug Steel said that “an outcome above the 50 breakeven mark – indicating a modicum of growth occurred in the month – is arguably a commendable result given more than a third of the country moved into alert level 3 for more than half of the month.”

          Full release here.

          EU Barnier: Concrete plan needed to asssess reason and usefulness of Brexit extension

            EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier demands concrete plan from the UK so that EU leaders can make a decision on approving an extension.

            He said “Does an extension increase the chances of ratification of Withdrawal Agreement? What would be the purpose and outcome? How can we ensure that, at the end of a possible extension, we are not back in the same situation as today?”

            “If Theresa May requests an extension before the European Council on Thursday, it will be for the 27 leaders to assess the reason and usefulness… EU leaders will need a concrete plan from the UK in order to be able to make an informed decision,” he added.

            Into European session: Euro lower after ECB, commodity currencies recover

              Entering into US session, European majors are the weakest ones today. Euro dips notably after ECB left interest rate unchanged and revised forward guidance. It will now keep interest rates at present level through the end of 2019, prolonged from summer of 2019. Also a new round of quarterly TLTRO-III is announced. These are actually not surprising given the deterioration in Eurozone outlook. Focus will turn to ECB President Mario Draghi’s press conference and new economic projections. Sterling in the currency markets, Sterling is the weakest as there is sign of any breakthrough in Irish backstop impasse. Commodity currencies are generally higher even though outlook for BoC, RBA and RBNZ are all dovish.

              In Europe, currently:

              • FTSE is down -0.29%.
              • DAX is down -0.19%.
              • CAC is down -0.06%.
              • German 10-year yield is down -0.0165 at 0.113, heading back to 0.1 handle.

              Earlier in Asia:

              • Nikkei dropped -0.65%.
              • Hong Kong HSI dropped -0.89%.
              • China Shanghai SSE rose 0.14%.
              • Singapore Strait Times rose 0.21%.
              • Japan 10-year JGB yield dropped -0.0062 to -0.001.

              France PMI composite rose to 30.5, activity still in decline from already low base

                France PMI Manufacturing improved to 40.3 in May, up from 31.5, above expectation of 40.3. PMI services rebounded notably to 29.4, up from 10.2, just missed expectation of 30.0. PMI Composite rose to 30.5, up sharply from 11.1.

                Eliot Kerr, Economist at IHS Markit said: “As anticipated, the latest France Flash PMI results pointed to a much slower contraction in business activity during May, with some companies reopening as lockdown measures are cautiously pared back. However, despite some firms beginning to resume operations, the private sector as a whole posted another sharp decline in activity, falling further from an already low base set in April. The data highlights the difficulties economies may face in the recovery from this crisis, as firms continue to lay-off workers amid a persistently uncertain outlook. Given the sharp contraction in first quarter GDP caused by only two weeks in lockdown, the latest PMI data suggest that we are set for colossal reduction in economic activity during the second quarter.”

                Full release here.

                China PPI rose to 9.0% yoy in Jul, CPI slowed to 1.0% yoy

                  China’s PPI accelerated to 9.0% yoy in July, up from 8.8% yoy, above expectation of 8.8% yoy. “The price increase of industrial products expanded slightly in July as prices of crude oil, coal and related products rose sharply,” said senior NBS economist Dong Lijuan.

                  CPI slowed to 1.0% yoy, down from 1.1% yoy, above expectation of 0.8% yoy. Core CPI, excluding food and energy prices, rose 1.3% yoy. Pork prices dropped -43.5% yoy, dragging down food prices down -3.7%. Non-food prices, on the other hand, rose 2.1% yoy.

                  UK PM May insisted her Brexit plan’s the right one, ready to see through leadership challenge

                    Sterling recovers mildly today but remains the weakest one for the week on political turmoil in the UK. Four ministers, including Brexit Minister Dominic Raab resigned in protest to Prime Minister Theresa May’s draft Brexit agreement. But May insisted in a press briefing that “I believe with every fibre of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people.” She added that “I am going to do my job of getting the best deal for Britain and I’m going to do my job of getting a deal that is in the national interest.”

                    ERG leader Jacob Rees-Mogg has formally requested a no-confidence vote on May. And for now, at least 14 Conservative MPs had openly said they had joined in the call. Four-eight letters are needed to trigger a leadership challenge. May’s response regarding the challenge was “Am I going to see this through? Yes.”

                    Even if May can survive the leadership contest, it remains very doubtful if she can get enough votes through the parliament. Conservative Brexit-supporting MP Mark Francois, put it this way. “It is … mathematically impossible to get this deal through the House of Commons. The stark reality is that it was dead on arrival.”

                    China PMI services rose to 55.0, composite rose to 54.2

                      China Caixin PMI Services rose from 52.9 to 55.0 in February, above expectation of 54.7. That’s also the highest reading since April 2021. PMI Composite rose from 51.1 to 54.2, highest since May 2021.

                      Wang Zhe, Senior Economist at Caixin Insight Group said: “Both manufacturing and services activity recovered gradually. Production, demand, including external demand, and employment all grew, with services activity showing a stronger recovery than manufacturing output. Input costs and prices charged remained stable, and business owners were highly optimistic.”

                      Full release here.

                      Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence rose to -8.7, negative momentum weakening

                        Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence increased from -11.1 to -8.7 in April, surpassing the expected -14.0. The Current Situation index experienced its sixth consecutive rise, moving from -9.3 to -4.3, reaching its highest level since March 2022. The Expectations index, however, remained unchanged at -13.0.

                        Sentix commented on the data, stating, “There is no doubt that the Eurozone economy has come through the winter months better than many feared in the autumn.” However, when considering the future, investors are less optimistic, citing “still considerable uncertainty about the further course of the Ukraine war, concerns about a lasting burden on the energy-intensive industrial sector, and – new – question marks about the state of the US economy.”

                        Despite these concerns, the Sentix Theme Barometer indicates that negative expectations regarding inflation and central bank policy have noticeably decreased. While not an all-clear signal, the negative momentum seems to be weakening.

                        Full Eurozone Sentix release here.

                        US durable goods orders dropped -0.2%, ex-transport orders rose 0.9%

                          US durable goods orders dropped -0.2% in January to USD 246.2B, better than expectation of -1.5% decline. Ex-transport orders rose 0.9%, above expectation of 0.2%. Ex-defense orders rose 3.6%.

                          The second estimate of US Q4 GDP showed 2.1% annualized growth, unrevised, unchanged from Q3’s reading. PCE price index was revised down from 1.6% to 1.3%. PCE core index was also revised down from 1.3% to 1.2%.

                          Germany industrial production rose 3.2% in Oct, but Ifo said expectations deteriorated

                            Germany industrial production rose 3.2% mom in October, above expectation of 1.8% mom. Production was down -3.0% yoy on the same month a year ago. Compared with February, before coronavirus restrictions, production was down -4.9%.

                            However, separately released, Ifo said the industrial production expectations for the coming months have deteriorated, falling to 5.5 pts in November. “The consumer-oriented industries in particular are catching their breath, while the pharma industry is seeing a surge,” says ifo expert Klaus Wohlrabe.

                            No revision in UK GDP, EURGBP slightly higher

                              UK Q1 GDP was left unrevised at 0.1% qoq meeting market consensus, but probably not BoE Governor Mark Carney’s expectation. Index of services rose 0.3% mom in March. BBA mortgage approvals rose to 38.0k in April.

                              EUR/GBP jumps slightly after as German Ifo came in slightly higher than expected. But it’s limited well inside near term falling channel. There is no clear sign of a breakout yet. And price actions could remain choppy and relatively directionless.

                              Japan PMIs: Growth continues with strong services but struggling manufacturing

                                Japan PMI Manufacturing rose from 47.7 to 48.6 in March, slightly above expectation of 48.2. PMI Manufacturing Output rose from 45.3 to 47.4. PMI Services ticked up from 54.0 to 54.2, the best reading since October 2013. PMI Composite improved from 51.1 to 51.9.

                                Japanese private sector firms experienced growth for the third consecutive month, with the services sector witnessing a notable improvement. Demand conditions strengthened, as government support and the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions in mainland China led to increased activity and new orders.

                                However, the manufacturing sector continued to face challenges, with output and new orders still contracting, albeit at a slower rate than February. Manufacturers reported ongoing supply chain normalization, as supplier delivery times lengthened at the slowest pace since October 2020.

                                Full Japan PMI release here.

                                ECB’s Wunsch awaits core inflation and wage growth to come down

                                  In an interview with Financial Times, ECB Governing Council member Pierre Wunsch mentioned that the central bank is waiting for both wage growth and core inflation to decrease in conjunction with headline inflation before considering a pause.

                                  Wunsch stated, “I would not be surprised if we had to go to 4 percent at some point.” He emphasized that ECB aims for a soft landing, and “nobody is going to err on the side of destroying the economy for the sake of destroying the economy.”

                                  “But I have absolutely no indication that what we are doing (on interest rates) is too much,” he added.

                                  Regarding rate hikes, Wunsch clarified, “I’m not a fetishist. I’m not going to hike rates even in a recession just because we have 2.3 percent or 2.1 percent inflation in the two-year forecast. But I’m not seeing inflation numbers going in the right direction yet.”

                                  He also pointed out that if wage agreements persist around a 5 percent growth for an extended period, inflation may not return to 2 percent on a structural basis.

                                  Follow up on AUD/CAD long strategy

                                    Following up on AUD/CAD long strategy here. The cross rose as expected and hit as high as 0.9924 so far today. There is still a bit of distance from our target at 61.8% retracement of 1.0241 to 0.9553 at 1.0066.

                                    Looking at the action bias table, 6H action bias remains consistently upside blue, which support our bullish trade. The question is, from H action bias, there seems to be not enough upside momentum as AUD/CAD comes out of a consolidation.

                                    So, we’d hold the long position, with target still at 1.0066, but raise the stop to 0.9860, slightly below 0.9862 support. This is for locking in some profits if the current rise is a false break.

                                     

                                    UK PMI services dropped to 53.9, Brexit worries continue to dominate the outlook

                                      UK PMI services dropped to 53.9 in September, down from 54.3 and matched expectations. The key points are “growth of business activity eases only slightly since August”, “job creation edges up to seven-month high”, “higher fuel prices lead to sharp rise in input costs”.

                                      Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey:

                                      “The service sector continued to report solid steady business growth in September which, alongside news of sustained expansions in both manufacturing and construction, suggests the UK economy expanded by just under 0.4% in the third quarter.

                                      “The data therefore add to signs that the economy has enjoyed robust growth since the rocky start to the year, when extreme weather disrupted business.

                                      “Brexit worries continue to dominate the outlook, however, keeping business optimism firmly anchored at levels which would normally be indicative of an imminent slowdown. Clarity on Brexit arrangements is therefore needed as soon as possible to help sustain growth.

                                      “In a month during which oil prices spiked higher, it was no surprise to see cost pressures intensify, meaning consumer price inflation will have likely continued to run at a pace above the Bank of England’s 2% target in September, and will likely remain closer to 3% than 2% in coming months.

                                      “The steady economic expansion and intensification of cost pressures will add to views that the next move in interest rates will be another hike. However, with Brexit uncertainty intensifying in recent weeks, any rise seems unlikely prior to the scheduled March 29th exit from the EU.”

                                      Full release here.

                                      US retail sales rose 0.5%, ex-auto sales rose 0.4%. Sharp upside revision in May figures

                                        The batch of economic data from the US is mixed. Dollar recovers slightly but remains in red for today in general.

                                        Headline retail sales rose 0.5% mom in June, above expectation of 0.4% mom. Prior month’s figure was revised sharply higher from 0.8% mom to 1.3% mom.

                                        Ex-auto sales rose 0.4% mom, matched expectations. Prior month’s figure was also revised sharply higher from 0.9% to 1.4%.

                                        Empire state manufacturing index, general business conditions, dropped to 22.6 in July, down from 25.0 but beat expectation of 20.3. Expectations six months ahead dropped -7.8 to 31.1.

                                        Looking at the details of current indicators:

                                        • New orders dropped -3.1 to 18.2.
                                        • Shipments dropped -8.9 to 14.6.
                                        • Unfilled orders dropped -9.3 to 0.0.
                                        • Delivery time dropped -7.2 to 6.0.
                                        • Inventories dropped -9.7 to -4.3.
                                        • Price paid dropped -10 to 42.7.
                                        • Price received dropped -1 to 22.2.
                                        • Number of employees dropped -1.8 to 17.2.
                                        • Average employee workweek dropped -6.4 to 5.6.

                                        BoC hikes 50bps, interest rates will need to rise further

                                          BoC raises overnight rate by 50bps to 1.50% as widely expected. The bank rate and deposite rate are now at 1.75% and 1.50% respectively. The central bank also maintains tightening bias. It said, “with the economy in excess demand, and inflation persisting well above target and expected to move higher in the near term, the Governing Council continues to judge that interest rates will need to rise further.”

                                          Full statement below.

                                          Bank of Canada increases policy interest rate by 50 basis points, continues quantitative tightening

                                          The Bank of Canada today increased its target for the overnight rate to 1½%, with the Bank Rate at 1¾% and the deposit rate at 1½%. The Bank is also continuing its policy of quantitative tightening (QT).

                                          Inflation globally and in Canada continues to rise, largely driven by higher prices for energy and food. In Canada, CPI inflation reached 6.8% for the month of April – well above the Bank’s forecast – and will likely move even higher in the near term before beginning to ease. As pervasive input price pressures feed through into consumer prices, inflation continues to broaden, with core measures of inflation ranging between 3.2% and 5.1%. Almost 70% of CPI categories now show inflation above 3%. The risk of elevated inflation becoming entrenched has risen. The Bank will use its monetary policy tools to return inflation to target and keep inflation expectations well anchored.

                                          The increase in global inflation is occurring as the global economy slows. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, China’s COVID-related lockdowns, and ongoing supply disruptions are all weighing on activity and boosting inflation. The war has increased uncertainty and is putting further upward pressure on prices for energy and agricultural commodities. This is dampening the outlook, particularly in Europe. In the United States, private domestic demand remains robust, despite the economy contracting in the first quarter of 2022. US labour market strength continues, with wage pressures intensifying. Global financial conditions have tightened and markets have been volatile.

                                          Canadian economic activity is strong and the economy is clearly operating in excess demand. National accounts data for the first quarter of 2022 showed GDP growth of 3.1 percent, in line with the Bank’s April Monetary Policy Report (MPR) projection. Job vacancies are elevated, companies are reporting widespread labour shortages, and wage growth has been picking up and broadening across sectors. Housing market activity is moderating from exceptionally high levels. With consumer spending in Canada remaining robust and exports anticipated to strengthen, growth in the second quarter is expected to be solid.

                                          With the economy in excess demand, and inflation persisting well above target and expected to move higher in the near term, the Governing Council continues to judge that interest rates will need to rise further. The policy interest rate remains the Bank’s primary monetary policy instrument, with quantitative tightening acting as a complementary tool. The pace of further increases in the policy rate will be guided by the Bank’s ongoing assessment of the economy and inflation, and the Governing Council is prepared to act more forcefully if needed to meet its commitment to achieve the 2% inflation target.

                                          Information note

                                          The next scheduled date for announcing the overnight rate target is July 13, 2022. The Bank will publish its next full outlook for the economy and inflation, including risks to the projection, in the MPR at the same time.