• Some final input to the Fed policy meeting on Wednesday included February retail sales and the NY’s manufacturing confidence index for March. The former printed mixed, coming in at 0.2% m/m today, missing the 0.6% analyst estimate. In addition, the January print was revised downwards to -1.2%. Core gauges, however, were in line or better than expected. The most important one of them all, the control group (ex. food, gas, building materials and car dealers) used for GDP calculations, rose 1% m/m, the most since September last year and far more than the 0.4% expected. Below the surface, we spot weaknesses in the only services-related category (eating & drinking down 1.5% m/m) while several other categories merely rebounded after a poor January month. The NY confidence gauge for its part fell off a cliff, dropping from 5.7 to -20 (-1.9 expected). The 25.7 point drop came amid falling new orders, shipments and employment. The six-month ahead reading fell for a second-month straight to the lowest in over a year. Prices paid, meanwhile, rose in both series to a two-year (or more) high. It's mounting evidence, after Friday’s consumer confidence, of a potentially stagflationary scenario materializing in the US. This leads to a flatter yield curve with rates up 1.5 bps at the front but 3.5 bps down at the longest maturities (30-yr). The German curve flattens too in a move outperforming Treasuries. Yields at the very long end decline 9.5 bps. Germany’s outgoing parliament officially votes on the huge debt package tomorrow. After securing support from the Greens last week, this should be a non-event. But perhaps markets are closing some Bund-short positions ahead of the deal in a buy the rumour, sell the fact alike move that we in any case don’t expect to go very far. Either way, it’s not hurting the euro, not against the dollar at least. EUR/USD makes another attempt to take out 1.09 with the backing of a risk-on equity climate. Stocks in Europe add 0.7%, Wall Street trades 0.4% higher. The trade-weighted dollar index is holding tight in the very narrow sideways trading range of the last couple of days between 103.37 (November 2024 correction low) and 103.98 (61.8% retracement on the September 2024 – January 2025 rally). Sterling recoups some of Friday’s losses with EUR/GBP 0.84 at stake. JPY underperforms its major peers. USD/JPY rises towards 149. Currencies Down Under are among the top performers today. The AUD (0.635 against USD) and NZD (0.58, highest since mid-December) draw comfort from new stimulus measures announced by China which should support private consumption.
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