Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Summary: Equity markets finished January with a flourish as the US market squeezed nearly two percent higher on the day. The rally off the lows has cut the losses from the top at the start of the year in half. Overnight, the Australian RBA provided surprisingly dovish guidance even as it ended its QE purchases. Today sees the release of the January US ISM Manufacturing survey, as the pace of improvement in the US economy looks set to decelerate significantly this quarter.
What is our trading focus?
Nasdaq 100 (USNAS100.I) and S&P 500 (US500.I) - Nasdaq 100 futures rose 3.3% yesterday with our bubble stocks basket gaining 9.6% as traders brought stocks that had been selling off hard this year. These types of moves are typical during correction periods and are technical and flow based, and as such these moves can quickly be faded again. The two-day gain in Nasdaq 100 futures is 6.6% the biggest gain since early November 2020 when the first successful Covid-19 vaccines were announced. The natural gravitational anchor is the 200-day moving average which sits around 0.8% above yesterday’s close in Nasdaq 100, so if we see a continuation in the risk-on then this is the next target.
EURUSD - the pair squeezed violently higher yesterday as the US dollar came under pressure, but with isolated euro strength proving a significant driver, particularly in the wake of a far hotter than expected German CPI print, but potentially also on end-of-month rebalancing. The buying took the price action back well above 1.1200, but a more robust reversal of the recent sell-off wave might require a quick spring up to 1.1300-50 area. The ECB meeting on Thursday and whether these latest hot inflation prints (France will report Jan. Flash CPI today, Euro Zone Jan. Flash CPI tomorrow) will see the ECB pulling forward the potential time horizon for a rate hike will be critical, as will risk sentiment.
AUDUSD – Australia’s central bank refused to provide guidance that matches market expectations for a string of rate hikes in this calendar year, as discussed in the RBA decision wrap below. The AUDUSD pair avoided any significant downside on this development only due to very strong risk sentiment and a weak US dollar, but this is an important signal from the RBA and could make for tough slogging for the Aussie from here in the crosses and against the US dollar if risk sentiment reverts back to the defensive. The 0.7000 area is a critical line in the sand for the pair if a new sell-off develops and could open for a run significantly lower. RBA Governor Lowe will speak tonight.
Crude oil (OILUSMAR22 & OILUKMAR22) trades near a seven-week high as the forward curves signal tight market conditions. Continued tensions over Ukraine and a blast of icy US weather which may freeze oil and natural gas production areas also attracting some attention ahead of Wednesday’s OPEC+ meeting. While the group is expected to raise the official target by another 400k barrels per day, the market is more interested in finding out how much the group can deliver after more than half of its members struggled in recent months, thereby supporting a continued rally.
Gold (XAUUSD) trades higher with yields and the dollar trading softer after Fed officials dialed back on some of the hawkish rhetoric from last week's FOMC meeting. With $1780 support holding, selling from traders caught with longs above $1830 has faded. Institutional investors meanwhile have taken the latest dip as an opportunity to add exposure with total holdings in bullion-backed ETF’s rising to a four-month high. Our bullish medium-term outlook has not changed, with the flattening US yield curve potentially signaling the risk of a policy mistake as the FOMC starts hiking rates into a slowing economy. However, a break above $1809 and $1825 is needed to signal an end to the current weakness.
Bitcoin (BITCOIN_XBTE:xome) and Ethereum (ETHEREUM_XBTE:xome) – Cryptocurrencies rallied overnight, and the price of Bitcoin and Ethereum went up by 4 % and 9 %, respectively. A report from CoinShares shows a net inflow to digital asset investment products last week, primarily driven by Bitcoin. The Ethereum-focused funds, however, have experienced eight consecutive weeks of net outflow.
US Treasuries (IEF, TLT). After last week’s FOMC meeting, more bear-flattening of the yield curve is to be expected. The Federal Reserve is looking to use interest rate hikes as primary tool to tighten the economy. It means that the front part of the yield curve will continue to rise as the Fed’s becomes more aggressive while long-term rates will remain compressed due to growth fears. The yield curve is close to inverting between seven and ten years. The market’s focus is on Friday’s nonfarm payrolls, which will pave the way for a rate hike in March.
Italian BTPS (BTP10). Sergio Mattarella has been elected president of the republic for a second mandate, leading to a political status quo that appeals to foreign investors. Therefore, we can expect the BTP-Bund spread to tighten this week to reflect a decrease in the country’s political risk. However, as volatility will continue to remain high in the rates market, we can expect the BTP-Bund spread to resume its widening.
European sovereigns (VGEA). European government bond yields rose yesterday, as the market expects the ECB to acknowledge the risks coming from high inflation on Thursday, which might lead to a first rate hike by the end of the year. Ten-year Bund yields broke above 0% for the second time since 2019. However, this might be the week negative Bund yields will become a memory, as a hawkish Fed together with an aggressive BOE will inevitably sustain European sovereigns above this level and drive them higher.
Gilts (IGLT). The market is expecting a 25bps interest rate hike this week from the BOE, which could lead to the beginning of QT in March. Therefore, we could see the yield curve shifting higher across maturities on the back of the monetary meeting. At the same time, we could see the Gilt-Bund spread widening further to pre-Brexit levels to reflect the divergence between BOE and ECB.
What is going on?
The euro area is back to its pre-pandemic GDP level. According to the preliminary flash estimate from Eurostat, the euro area GDP increased by 0.3 % in Q4 2021, and 4.6% compared with Q4 2020. Not all countries are already back to the pre-pandemic GDP level, however. Think Spain and Germany. Expect GDP growth to slow down in Q1 2022 as millions of people were de facto in quarantine in early January in several countries because of restrictions measures introduced to fight the Omicron variant. In other news, Spain January HICP decreased less than expected, at 6.1 % year-over-year versus anticipated 5.5 %. In Germany, January HICP stood at 5.1 % year-over-year, from 5.7 % in December. The base effects from the VAT reversal no longer show in the year-over-year print. But inflation remains elevated due to the services component and notably packaged holidays and leisure. At Saxo Bank, we consider that inflation is structural
Australia’s RBA ends QE, but guidance dovish. The RBA was expected to end its QE purchases at the meeting and did so, but expressed uncertainty on whether inflation and especially wages would be sustained at sufficiently high levels to require a shift to hiking rates any time soon, thus requiring patience before further policy moves. Most explicitly dovish, the new monetary policy statement said that “Ceasing purchases under the bond purchase program does not imply a near-term increase in interest rates.”
UBS beats Q4 net income expectations. The Swiss-based investment bank delivered Q4 net income $1.35bn vs est. $916mn and plans to buy back $5bn of shares in 2022. The bank says that it sees higher client activity in Q1 vs Q4.
What are we watching next?
US-Russia tensions: Today, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov will discuss ongoing tensions over the telephone as UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set to visit Ukraine and the US and UK have said that they would sanction Russian oligarchs with close ties to President Putin, were Russia to invade Ukraine.
Hearings for three Fed nominees for the Board of Governors on Thursday – these include Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson, two economists thought to hold dovish views on policy and Sarah Bloom Raskin, who is nominated for the role of Vice Chair of supervision at the Fed. The US Chamber of commerce recently sent an article to the Senate warning of Raskin’s views on oil and gas as she has called for cutting off access to support for the oil and gas industry from the federal governments. This was an unprecedented move.
China’s market closed all week for Chinese Lunar New Year Holiday while Hong Kong will reopen on Friday.
Earnings Watch. Large US earnings reports expected today with PayPal, UPS and AMD being the most watched ones while Exxon Mobil will also attract some attention given that the company said yesterday that it will move its headquarters to Houston and streamline several business lines to cut costs.
Economic calendar highlights for today (times GMT)
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