Weekly Market Outlook (18-22 November) 0 (0)

UPCOMING
EVENTS:

  • Monday: US NAHB Housing Market Index.
  • Tuesday: RBA Meeting Minutes, Canada CPI, US Housing
    Starts and Building Permits.
  • Wednesday: PBoC LPR, UK CPI, Eurozone Wage Growth.
  • Thursday: Canada PPI, US Jobless Claims.
  • Friday: Australia/Japan/EU/UK/US Flash PMIs, Japan CPI,
    UK Retail Sales, Canada Retail Sales.

Tuesday

The Canadia CPI
Y/Y is expected at 1.9% vs. 1.6% prior, while the M/M figure is seen at 0.3%
vs. -0.4% prior. The focus will be on the underlying inflation measures with
the Trimmed Mean CPI Y/Y expected at 2.4% vs. 2.4% prior, while the Median CPI
Y/Y is seen at 2.4% vs. 2.3% prior.

The BoC is now focused
on growth as inflation has been inside the target band for several months while
economic activity slowed down. The market is pricing a 35% chance of another 50
bps cut in December, so lower than expected inflation readings will likely
raise those probabilities.

Wednesday

The PBoC is
expected to keep the LPR rates unchanged at 3.1% for the 1 year and 3.6% for
the 5 year. Deflationary forces remain in place and the market continues to
signal that they need to do more.

The PBoC pledged
more monetary policy support with another cut in the reserve requirement ratio
to accommodate additional government bond issuance likely coming by the end of
the year. The central bank should do much more though as real interest rates
are still too high.

The UK CPI Y/Y is
expected at 2.2% vs. 1.7% prior, while the M/M figure is seen at 0.5% vs. 0.0%
prior. The Core CPI Y/Y is expected at 3.2% vs. 3.2% prior. Last time, the UK inflation data missed expectations by a big margin with
services inflation dropping to 4.9% from 5.6% in the prior month.

In the meantime,
we’ve also got a soft labour market report and a lower than expected GDP
print. The market is currently pricing just a 22% probability of another 25 bps
cut in December, but that should increase if we were to get another miss in the
CPI data.

Thursday

The US Jobless
Claims continues to be one of the most important releases to follow every week
as it’s a timelier indicator on the state of the labour market.

Initial Claims
remain inside the 200K-260K range created since 2022, while Continuing Claims
after a spike to the cycle highs in the last couple of weeks due to distortions
coming from hurricanes and strikes, are now turning around.

This week Initial
Claims are expected at 223K vs. 217K prior, while there’s no consensus for
Continuing Claims at the time of writing although the prior reading saw a
decrease to 1873K vs. 1884K prior.

Friday

Friday is going to
be the Flash PMIs Day for many major economies. The market is going to focus
majorly on the Eurozone, UK and US PMIs as they are likely to influence the
interest rate expectations:

  • Eurozone Manufacturing PMI: 46.0 expected vs. 46.0
    prior.
  • Eurozone Services PMI: 51.5 expected vs. 51.6
    prior.
  • UK Manufacturing PMI: 49.9 expected vs. 49.9
    prior.
  • UK Services PMI: 52.0 expected vs. 52.0 prior.
  • US Manufacturing PMI: 48.8 expected vs. 48.5
    prior.
  • US Services PMI: 55.3 expected vs. 55.0 prior.

The Japanese Core
CPI Y/Y is expected at 2.2% vs. 2.4% prior. Inflation isn’t really an issue for
Japan as the underlying measures are basically at target. Nonetheless, the
probabilities for a rate hike in December increased to 55% recently as the
Japanese Yen continued to depreciate non-stop due to the rally in Treasury
yields. One of the main reasons why the BoJ hiked rates last time was the fast
depreciation of the JPY.

This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at www.forexlive.com.

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Newsquawk Week Ahead: UK data; RBA Minutes; Japanese CPI 0 (0)

  • Mon: G20
    (Brazil)
  • Tue: NBH
    Policy Announcement; RBA Minutes (Nov); EZ Indicator of Negotiated Wage
    Rates (Q3), EZ HICP (Final), US Building Permits/Housing Starts (Oct),
    Canadian CPI (Oct)
  • Wed: UK
    CPI (Oct), German PPI (Oct)
  • Thu: CBRT
    & SARB Policy Announcements; UK PSNB (Oct), US Initial Jobless Claims
    (w/e 16th Nov), Philadelphia Fed (Nov), Existing Home Sales (Oct), EZ
    Consumer Confidence Flash (Nov), Japanese CPI (Oct), Australian Flash PMIs
    (Nov)
  • Fri: UK
    GfK (Nov), Retail Sales (Oct), EZ, UK & US Flash PMIs (Nov), Canadian
    Retail Sales (Sep), US Uni. of Michigan Final (Nov)

Note: Previews are listed in day-order

RBA Minutes (Tue):

The minutes as usual will be dissected for any
commentary regarding potential policy steps ahead, whilst it was already
telegraphed that the Board did not actively consider a rate hike or cut – just
as in September. As a reminder, the most recent meeting saw a lack of fireworks
from the RBA meeting, where it opted to keep the Cash Rate unchanged for the
8th consecutive meeting which economists had unanimously forecast. The rhetoric
provided little fresh insight as it reiterated that the board will continue to
rely upon the data and evolving assessment of risks, as well as noted that
inflation remains too high and is not expected to return sustainably to the
midpoint of the target until 2026. Furthermore, it stated that policy will need
to be sufficiently restrictive until the board is confident that inflation is
moving sustainably towards the target range and it repeated that the board is
not ruling anything in or out. The latest quarterly Statement on Monetary
Policy noted that core inflation remains elevated with service inflation
expected to decline only gradually and that policy in Australia is not as
restrictive as in most peer countries, even after recent rate cuts abroad,
while the RBA lowered its GDP, household consumption, trimmed CPI and core
inflation forecasts. The post-meeting press conference also provided little in
the way of fresh clues as RBA Governor Bullock stated that the last part of
bringing inflation down is not easy and rates need to stay restrictive for the
time being, while she thinks there are still risks on the upside for inflation
but noted they will be ready to act if the economy turns down more than
expected. Furthermore, she said they have the right settings at the moment and
there were no discussions on specific scenarios for rate
changes, as well as stated the current Cash Rate path priced by the market is
as good as any.

Canadian CPI (Tue):

The Canadian inflation data will be used to
confirm the BoC’s victory on inflation with focus now turning to supporting
growth, hence their 50bps rate cut in October. It also noted that inflationary
pressures are no longer broad based, and they are seeing business and consumer
inflation expectations largely normalised. The BoC largely believe they can
continue with the easing process and keep inflation within the BoC’s 1-3%
target range, noting the timing and pace will be guided by incoming information
and the assessment of implications for the outlook, noting decisions will be
made meeting by meeting. Looking ahead, the latest forecasts saw the 2024 and
2025 CPI forecasts lowered while the 2024 Q4 forecasts saw Y/Y CPI ease to 2.1%
from 2.4% and core inflation rise to 2.1%. Money markets are currently pricing
in 33bps of easing for the next meeting in December, which implies a 66%
probability of a 25bps rate cut, but with a 33% probability of another 50bps
rate cut. A hot inflation report could see money markets start to unwind the
pricing of another 50bps move, but with focus shifting to economic growth, GDP
and labour market data will also be eyed.

UK CPI (Wed):

Expectations are for the Y/Y to tick up to 2.2% from
1.7% while the core figure is seen moderating slightly to 3.1% from 3.2%. As a
reminder, the prior release showed headline Y/Y CPI in September fell to 1.7%
from 2.2%; below target for the first time since April. Furthermore, core Y/Y
declined to 3.2% from 3.6% and the all-important services metric slowed to 4.9%
from 5.6%. This time around, Pantheon Macroeconomics looks for a pick-up in
headline inflation to 2.2% on account of Ofgem’s 9.5% hike to the energy
utility price cap, combined with “last October’s utility price cut dropping out
of the inflation calculation”. Note, an outturn of 2.2% would be 40bps below
the last MPC forecast with Pantheon suggesting that most of the discrepancy
will likely be on account of falling petrol prices. On services inflation, the
consultancy expects an uptick to 5.0% which would match the MPC’s November MPR
forecast. For policy, the release will be scoured to see if there are any
elements which could bring a December cut back into contention, or further pare
expectations for a move, with markets currently ascribing less than a 20%
chance of a 25bps cut in December; as a reminder, November’s CPI will be
published the session before the BoE rate announcement.

CBRT Announcement (Thu):

The Turkish Central Bank is expected to
maintain its One-Week Repo Rate at 50.00%. Desks were split on a December cut,
but recent CPI data topped expectations and did not slow as much as had been
hoped, whilst the CBRT in its final inflation report of the year raised its
2024 inflation forecast to 44% (prev. 38%), raised its 2025 forecast to 21%
(from 14%) and raised its 2026 forecast to 12% (from 9%) – implying a delay in
Türkiye’s disinflation process. That being said, analysts at ING suggest that
“While addressing structural challenges related to food and rent inflation, the
CBT’s relatively positive assessment of the October data and projected
inflation path suggests that a rate cut in December should not be fully ruled
out if we see more benign data releases in November. That said, economic
activity may be headed for a further slowdown given the significantly tight
financial conditions, and a deeper-than-expected impact could also be a key
factor in the timing of the cutting cycle.”

SARB Announcement (Thu):

Expected to deliver a 25bps cut, bringing
its interest rate down to 7.75% from 8.00%, according to 20/22 respondents to
the Reuters survey; the remaining two look for a 50bps move. The median
forecasts then point to further cuts in January, March & May taking the
rate to a 7.00% trough. As a reminder, headline annual inflation slowed to 3.9%
in September vs the prior 4.4%; which is below the mid-point of the Bank’s
target range; paving the way for further easing. Analysts at Standard
Chartered, wrote that “we think the SARB will want to proceed cautiously,
monitoring global risks and any consumption boost from South Africa’s recent
Two Pot Pension Reforms”. In terms of the prior meeting, the SARB delivered a
25bps cut for the first time since COVID; a unanimous decision which matched
analyst expectations. The accompanying statement noted that „as long as
headline inflation stabilises at lower levels, we anticipate further progress
in re-anchoring expectations around the middle of our target range“.

Japanese CPI (Thu):

There are currently no expectations for the
Japanese CPI data, whilst the preceding Tokyo CPI release saw Core CPI above
consensus but still down from the prior month. ING suggests in their view, “the
BoJ is likely to take a closer look at yen movements. The yen has depreciated
by almost 4.5% against the dollar over the past month, raising the possibility
of higher import costs and a subsequent overshooting of inflation. As for the
Bank of Japan raising interest rates, we believe it is only a matter of time
and that this should materialise in either December or January. We see a
slightly higher probability of a December hike than a January hike, as we
expect the JPY depreciation to continue for a while and for upcoming inflation
data to provide more evidence of growing inflationary pressures. If this is
confirmed, the Bank of Japan is likely to hike 25bp in December.” The next BoJ
announcement is scheduled for December 19th.

UK Retail Sales (Fri):

Expectations are for October’s M/M figure to
come in at -0.2% (prev. 0.3%) though the consensus is subject to a wide
forecast range of -0.6% to 0.2%. In terms of recent retail indicators, BRC
retail sales for October rose 0.3% Y/Y (prev. 1.7%) with the accompanying
release noting “After a good start to Autumn, October’s sales growth was
disappointing. This was in part driven by half term falling a week later this
year, depressing the October figures, and November sales will likely see more
of a boost. Uncertainty during the run-up to the Budget, coupled with rising
energy bills, also spooked some consumers”. Elsewhere, the Barclaycard consumer
spending report observed “Overall Retail spending increased by 0.7% in October
2024, a third consecutive month of growth as the sector continues its recovery.
In particular, spend at General Retailers & Catalogues increased by 6.0%,
the highest growth for the category since February 2024 (6.9%), whilst spend at
Department Stores increased by 4.7%, as consumers were incentivised by
retailer’s promotional activities”.

EZ Flash PMI (Fri):

November’s Flash PMIs will be one of the first
reads into the bloc post-Trump’s victory in the US Presidential election. Thus
far, we have seen November ZEW for the bloc and Germany, with metrics for the
regions coming in markedly shy of expectations. For Germany specifically,
attached commentary highlighted that „economic expectations for Germany
have been overshadowed by Trump’s victory and the collapse of the German
coalition“ with the release clarifying that US political developments were
likely the primary cause of pressure in sentiment indicators. As such, market
consensus looks for the manufacturing print to remain at 46.0 while Services is
seen slipping to 51.5 from 51.6, which would push Composite back into a
contraction at 49.9 from 50.0. However, some of the pressure could be offset by
a boost in orders/stockpiling ahead of potential tariffs, a point raised by
Pantheon’s Vistesen, who adds and reminds that tightening supply side
developments can actually bolster the PMI, as seen during COVID.

UK Flash PMI (Fri):

PMIs are seen printing in-line with October’s
figures after several months of pressure, though there are numerous factors in
play. As a reminder, the prior release showed the October services PMI decline
to 51.8 from 52.4, manufacturing slip into negative territory at 49.9 vs. prev.
50.3, leaving the composite at 51.7 vs. prev. 52.6. The accompanying release
noted “The early PMI data are indicative of the economy growing at a meagre
0.1% quarterly rate in October“. This time around, focus will be on what
impact respondents expect the victory of US President Trump to have on the UK,
with the narrative potentially different to that for the EZ; irrespective of
this, the passing of political uncertainty around the election will be a
positive. On politics, respondents will have had more time to digest the recent
UK budget and thus may have formed more concrete views on the
short/medium/long-term implications of it. Overall, Oxford Economics expect the
PMIs to stabilise close to October’s figures after declining in the last few
periods.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk

This article was written by Newsquawk Analysis at www.forexlive.com.

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Fed’s Goolsbee says rates will be a lot lower „as long we keep making progress toward“ 2% 0 (0)

There is movement at the Federal Reserve, as indicated by Powell on Thursday, when he could get word in on policy:

Goolsbee spoke on Friday:

trying to revert to dove mode:

  • interest rates will be “a lot” lower over the next 12-18 months

but having to throw in the strong caveat:

  • “As long we keep making progress toward the 2% inflation goal“

He spoke later on Friday also:

  • thinks interest rates will come down along the lines seen in the recent dot plot projections
  • said the current rate of inflation is “too high” to stay where it is for an extended period

He added that strong economic growth is not necessarily signalling the economy is overheating, citing productivity gains over the last year. Said that this rising productivity allows for faster economic growth without generating additional inflation“

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.

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Credit Agricole: 2025 will not be a repeat of the USD’s 2018 rally 0 (0)

Credit Agricole argues that despite similarities, 2025 will not be a redux of the USD’s 2018 rally driven by Trump-era policies. Differences in economic conditions, monetary policy, and the USD’s current strength suggest that the dynamics underpinning the dollar’s movement will differ significantly from 2018.

Key Points:

  1. Divergent Economic and Monetary Conditions:

    • In 2018, strong US growth and rising inflation prompted the Fed to hike rates by 125bps.
    • In contrast, 2025 is expected to see slowing US growth and inflation, leading to further Fed rate cuts, which could temper USD strength.
  2. Potential Stagflationary Impact:

    • The combination of trade tariffs and fiscal stimulus in 2018 supported growth, inflation, and higher US yields.
    • In 2025, this same mix could result in stagflationary pressures, complicating but not halting the Fed’s expected easing cycle.
  3. Stronger USD Starting Point:

    • The USD is significantly stronger now than it was in 2018, which could constrain further gains.
    • A sharp EUR/USD decline closer to parity could limit the ECB’s ability to ease further, reducing divergence-driven USD upside.

Conclusion:

Credit Agricole acknowledges that Trump’s policy agenda has added upside risks to the USD, but a repeat of 2018’s rally is unlikely. Slower US growth, stagflation risks, and the already strong USD limit the potential for another broad-based surge, suggesting a more nuanced outlook for 2025.

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This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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