• Interest rate markets were looking for a new short-term equilibrium for the post-Jackson Hole era yesterday. Early in the session, yields tried to build on Friday’s decline as Fed Chair Powel officially rubberstamped the start of a genuine rate cut cycle in September while leaving all options open on the pace of easing. However, with already more than 100 bps of rate cuts discounted for the three remaining Fed meetings of this year, the lows (ex the August 5 spike) held. Unconvincing data were not able to push yields sustainably lower. German Ifo business confidence declined marginally (86.6 from 87.0), confirming last week’s poor PMI reading, but the damage could have been bigger. Headline US durable goods orders were strong (9.9%) but an upswing in Boeing orders masked a mediocre performance of core orders and shipments. In an interview with Bloomberg, San Francisco President Mary Daly repeated the Jackson Hole message from Fed Chair Powell. ‘The time to adjust policy is upon on us.’ Daly didn’t gave guidance of the pace of easing (25 bps or 50 bps). Still, she clearly indicated that the Fed wants to avoid restrictive policy to unnecessary slow growth/the labour market. In case of real labour market weakness, it would be appropriate to be more aggressive. Still the comments also were no game-changer for interest rate markets. At the end of the day, US yields even rose modestly between 2 bps (2-y) and 1.4 bps (30-y). A mild rise in inflation expectations due to higher oil prices (Brent oil jumping to $81+ p/b) probably was also in play. German yields added between 3.0 bps (5-y) and 1.3 bps (30-y). The dollar decline slowed (close DXY 100.85, EUR/USD 1.1161, USD/JPY 144.53) but intraday ‘gains’ were technically irrelevant. Equities ran into resistance as the S&P 500 came within reach of the all-time record (S&P -0.32%, Nasdaq -0.85%).
• Asian markets this morning join yesterday’s momentum in the US with equities mostly showing modest declines (Japan being an exception). US yields are rising marginally. The dollar trades little changed (DXY 110.84, EUR/USD 1.1168). Later today, German GFK consumer confidence, US house price data and US consumer confidence (Conference Board) have intraday market moving potential but probably won’t force a break of key technical levels. Also keep an eye at a $69 bln 2-y sale of US Treasury notes after the recent sharp decline in yields. For now we expect technical support levels in yields to hold with next reality check to be provided by the key US early month data next week (ISM’s, payrolls). Expectations for a further easing of US/global financial conditions will probably keep the dollar in a sell-on-upticks pattern.
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