OECD raises global growth prospects amid strengthening US outlook 0 (0)

  • 2024 global growth forecast seen at 2.9% (previously 2.7%)
  • 2024 US growth forecast seen at 2.1% (previously 1.5%)
  • 2025 US growth forecast seen at 1.7% (unchanged)
  • 2024 Eurozone growth forecast seen at 0.6% (previously 0.9%)
  • 2025 Eurozone growth forecast seen at 1.3% (previously 1.5%)
  • 2024 UK growth forecast seen at 0.7% (unchanged)
  • 2025 UK growth forecast seen at 1.2% (unchanged)

Of note, they also left the China growth forecast unchanged for 2024 and 2025, seen at 4.7% and 4.2% respectively. OECD also adds that if the Red Sea situation persists, that could add 0.4% to CPI in a year’s time.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

Eurozone December PPI -0.8% vs -0.8% m/m expected 0 (0)

  • Prior -0.3%

On the year itself, producer prices declined by nearly 9% but it owes largely to a drop in energy prices i.e. base effects. Looking at the details, only the prices for intermediate goods (-4.9%) declined alongside energy prices (-27.5%) last year. Instead, price increases were recorded for capital goods (+2.8%), durable consumer goods (+3.0%), and non-durable consumer goods (+3.2%).

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

Eurozone Sentix February investor confidence -12.9 vs -15.0 expected 0 (0)

  • Prior -15.8
  • Expectations -5.5
  • Prior -8.8

Eurozone investor morale rises for a fourth straight month to its highest since last April. The expectations index also improved for a fifth straight month to its best since February last year. While the recovery process is slowly gathering pace, Germany remains in a „precarious“ situation according to Sentix.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

Dark days are coming for US commercial real estate and the banks holding the loans 0 (0)

Empty office building CRE crisis

The banking worries in the US this week were triggered by:

  • New York Community Bancorp cutting its dividend on higher capital rules and commercial strain
  • A Japanese bank reporting unexpected losses on US commercial real estate
  • Deutsche Bank highlighting losses on US commercial real estate

Despite all the economic data this week, it was those headlines that left US 10-year yields 14 basis points lower on the week.

There are echos of subprime here as no one really knows the size of the problem, who is holding the losses and how it could be managed. What’s clear is that office real estate is severely impaired because of work-from-home changes following the pandemic. Vacancies are high and tenants have incredible leverage in asking for lower rents.

Banking rules require taking impairments once losses are reasonably foreseeable but that hasn’t really happened yet, in part because it’s still not clear how many workers will be called back to the office and how many companies will move out.

Under any circumstances, it’s fair to say that losses will be high. How high? Goldman Sachs estimates $1.2 trillion of commercial
mortgages are scheduled to mature this year and next, or about a quarter of all outstanding commercial mortgages, and the highest
recorded level going back to 2008.
The biggest single holders are banks
with a 40% share. Other estimates put the „maturity wall“ as high as $1.5 trillion, according to Reuters.

„The office market has an existential crisis right now,“ Barry Sternlicht, CEO of Starwood Capital Group ($115b AUM) told
the Global Alts conference. „It’s a $3 trillion asset class that is
probably worth $1.8 trillion. There’s $1.2 trillion of losses spread
somewhere, and nobody knows exactly where it all is
.“

To illustrate, the entire size of the subprime US mortgage market in 2007 was $1.3 trillion.

There are two things that make this a particularly precarious situation:

  • Small/regional banks hold much of the losses and they don’t have the ability to take much pain
  • Due to hold-to-maturity bond market losses, raising new capital is prohibitively expensive and in many cases, impossible

There’s a reason the bond market got very skittish, very quickly this week.

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

Go to Forexlive

Fed Chair Powell speaking Sunday evening US time, Globex & Asia FX markets will be on edge 0 (0)

I posted this on Friday but ICYMI, Federal Reserve Chair Powell recorded an interview on Thursday with US TV show 60 minutes. He was questioned on inflation risks and the economy, the timeline for cutting rates, and more.

The interview will air at 7pm US Eastern time, which is midnight (0000) GMT.

Asia FX will be trading when the interview airs, it’ll be

  • 11am in Sydney,
  • 9 am in Tokyo,
  • and 8 am in Singapore, Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Globex will be open for the Sunday evening session.

I doubt there will be anything much to surprise us, Powell spoke on Wednesday and was clear on no March rate cut. However, there could well be something in what he says to move markets around and keep at least the scalpers happy.

Like I said, the interview was recorded Thursday, prior to the bombshell jobs report, but, did Powell know the number?

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

Go to Forexlive

Forexlive Americas FX news wrap 2 Feb: Super-duper jobs report sends yields and stocks up 0 (0)

The week ended with a bang as the US jobs data came much stronger than expectations.

  • Non-farm payroll rose by 353K much higher than the 180K estimate (and the ADP rise of 107K released earlier this week). T
  • Unemployment rate came in at 3.7% versus 3.8% expected
  • Average yearly earnings rose by 0.6% versus 0.3% expected MoM
  • Average yearly earnings rose by 4.5% versus 4.1% expected YoY
  • The average workweek in hours and fall to 34.1 hours from 34.3 hours last month (that was the estimate too).

Looking at the jobs by sectors, Private education and health services led the way with a gain of 112K. Professional and business services rose by 74K. Both sectors, are relatively high-paying jobs . Manufacturing advanced by a solid 23K (another high paying sector). Leisure and hospitality – a proxy for service economy – was relatively subdued at 11.0K

The stronger-than-expected jobs data put the wheels in motion in all markets:

The US bond yields moved higher:

Looking at the yield curve for the day:

  • 2- year yield 4.372% +17.8 basis points.
  • 5-year yield 3.985% +18.9 basis points.
  • 10-year yield 4.023% +16.1 basis points
  • 30-year yield 4.223% +12.0 basis points

Those are big moves to the upside, but for the week yields were moving lower until today and apart from the two year yield for the other part of the yield curve moved lower. That included a Fed which said a March cut was not likely and an non farm payroll that surges 353K (with large revisions too). For the week, the:

  • 2-year yield rose 1.9 basis points
  • 5-year yield fell -5.2 basis points
  • 10-year yield fell -11.5 basis points
  • 30-year yield fell -14.7 basis points

The USD surged to the upside.

Looking at the strongest to the weakest of the major currencies, the USD was the runaway winner in the rankings. The JPY was the weakest followed by the NZD.

The US stocks moved higher:

Stocks were a different story. Normally, you might expect stocks to move lower given the surge in yields and the higher USD. However, stocks moved sharply to the upside helped by

  1. A feeling that a strong economy is good for earnings. Who cares if the Fed holds off on lowering rates, if inflation can remain steady/not move higher/move marginally lower, that is good for stocks.
  2. Meta and Amazon earnings were gangbuster good. Microsoft earnings earlier this week were also good but the market still sold off their shares. For Meta, their shares rose over 20% on the day. Amazon shares were up nearly 8% but had to take a backseat.

For the day,

  • Dow industrial average rose 134.58 points or 0.35% at 38654.43
  • S&P index rose 52.44 points or 1.07% at 4958.62
  • NASDAQ index rose 267.30 points or 1.74% at 15628.94.

For the trading week, the gains today in the index turned a negative weed into a positive week. The major indices rose for the fourth consecutive week:

  • Dow Industrial Average +1.43%
  • S&P index +1.38%
  • NASDAQ index +1.12%

Looking at some of the other markets:

  • Crude oil fell $-1.40 percent or -1.95% to $72.38. The price decline despite the strong economy, concerns about the breakdown of the cease-fire rumors in the Middle East, and also the story of retaliatory bombings by the US in response to the killing of US servicemen.
  • Gold prices moved sharply lower by -$15.01 or -0.73% to $2039.54 as it reacted to higher rates and the higher USD.
  • Bitcoin is trading at $42,987.

Over the weekend, an interview with Fed Chair Powell will be broadcast on the Sunday evening news program 60-Minutes. The comments will be the first from the chair after the FOMC rate decision. It is unsure if the interview was before the stronger jobs data was reported.

On Tuesday morning in Australia (evening on Monday in the US), the RBA will announce its most recent rate decision. The expectations are for no change in policy 4.35%. Also on Tuesday Cleveland Fed Pres. Mester will be speaking.

On Wednesday, Feds Kugler and Barkin will both be speaking. On Wednesday the morning in New Zealand, employment statistics for the quarter will be released

China CPI will be released on Thursday morning in China (Tuesday night in the US).

Canada employment statistics will be released on Friday.

On the earnings calendar next week:

Monday:

  • Caterpillar
  • McDonald’s
  • Palantie

Tuesday:

  • Lilly
  • BP
  • Toyota
  • Ford
  • Chipotle
  • Fortinet

Wednesday:

  • Alibaba
  • Uber
  • CVS Health
  • Paypal
  • Disney

Thursday:

  • Conoco Phillips
  • Pinterest
  • Expedia

Friday:

  • Pepsico

Thank you for all your support. Have a good and safe weekend.

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

Stocks roar with the Nasdaq/Meta leading the way 0 (0)

It sucks to be Amazon and have to take a backseat when your stock soars by 7.67% on the day. However, it was Meta and Mark Zuckerberg’s day to roar, and roar they did. Share’s of Meta moved up $80.21 or 20.32% after beating expectations, announcing a first ever dividend, and announcing a $50B buyback of shares.

Overall, all the major indices moved higher and all three closed higher for the week as well. It is the 4th week in a row higher after starting the year with a sharp fall. The S&P index in the Dow Industrial Average“ levels today.

The final numbers are showing:

  • Dow Industrial Average is up 134.56 points or 0.35% at 38654.41
  • S&P index is up 52.44 points or 1.07% at 4958.62
  • NASDAQ index is up 267.30 points or 1.74% at 15628.94

For the trading week:

  • Dow Industrial Average rose 1.43%
  • S&P index rose 1.38%
  • NASDAQ index rose 1.12%

The small-cap Russell 2000 did not like the sharp rise in yields after the stronger-than-expected US jobs report. As a result,that index fell -11.68 points or -0.59% to 1962.73. For the week, the Russell 2000 fell by -0.788%

The regional bank KRE ETF did advance today by 0.25 points or 0.52% to $48.40, but still closed down by -7.16% in trading this week.

For the trading week which saw 5 of the Magnificent 7 announce earnings (Microsoft, Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Amazon, announce earnings):

  • Meta rose 20.51%
  • Alphabet-6.44%
  • Microsoft rose 1.80%
  • Apple-3.39%
  • Amazon, rose 7.99%

The other two of the 7, Tesla and Nvidia rose this week. Today Nvidia soared by 4.97%:

  • Tesla rose 2.54% despite falling -0.50% today (already announced earnings on January 24)
  • Nvidia rose 8.40% (won’t announce earnings until February 21).

One of the biggest high flyers this week Super Micro Computer gave back some of its gains with the decline of – $-3.87 or -0.66%. For the trading week, shares were up 22.25%.

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

First US retaliatory strikes underway in Syria – report 0 (0)

It’s no surprise but bombs are reportedly falling in Syria right now in response to the US soldiers killed last weekend.

Earlier this week there were reports that Biden had authorized strikes in Iraq and Syria in response. So long as no bombs fall in Iran, I don’t think this will matter for markets, including oil.

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

Go to Forexlive

GBPUSD breaks lower but stalls at a key support floor Will the downtrend continue? 0 (0)

For those who have seen my daily posts/videos on the GBPUSD (any of them), the pair has been trading in an up-and-down trading range going back to December 14. That range is between 1.2600 and 1.2800.

Today, the price moved sharply lower after the stronger US jobs report, and the price move to a lower swing area between 1.2602 to 1.26137. The low price today reached 1.26147 – just above the high of that swing area – and has bounced. The bounce has taken the price up to around 1.2640.

What next?

There is some resistance at 1.2647 area. If that level holds, then we should see a move back down to retest the low extreme target.

If it moves below 1.2602, the next key target comes in at the 200-day MA at 1.25607. The price of the GBPUSD has not traded below the 200 day MA since November. On a test, I would expect buyers to lean on the first look (with stops on a break below).

If the price does move above 1.2647, there could be some disappointment on the failure to get outside of the range. Be aware.

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive

It’s a slow walk so far until we get to the non-farm payrolls release 0 (0)

The snapshot now is not that much changed from the start of the session, as traders lack any real appetite in European morning trade. That isn’t surprising as we are awaiting the main event later today. It is all about the US jobs report with no other distractions so far on the session.

After the Fed has said put out the narrative that March isn’t the base case for rate cuts, it is now time to walk the talk. And the non-farm payrolls release today will be the first key hurdle in that sense. Here’s a preview: December non-farm payrolls by the numbers

As we await the data, the dollar is just marginally lower with losses more evident against the aussie only. But even so, it isn’t anything too substantial on the week. The other major currencies are little changed after the moves yesterday.

Elsewhere, Treasury yields are slightly higher but that picture could all change once again when we get to US trading later. In the equities space, the rally in tech shares is carrying over to today. S&P 500 futures are up 0.6% and Nasdaq futures up 1.0% on the day. Meanwhile, Dow futures are only seen up 0.1% but at least that helps with keeping a more positive risk mood for now.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

Go to Forexlive