• Japanese stock markets outperform this morning (Nikkei +3%) after returning from a long weekend (closed for Mountain Day yesterday). The index now recovered from Monday’s meltdown, but is still 7% below the levels of the July 31 Bank of Japan meeting with set things on fire. The BoJ’s 15 bps rate hike triggered a JPY (and volatility) carry trade unwind with disappointing US manufacturing ISM and payrolls fueling the move. Calm only returned after BoJ deputy governor Uchida assured investors that the central bank won’t be raising rates further as long as market instability persists. That way, he did also put the BoJ in the most undesirable position of handing its autonomy to financial markets. The US recession risk narrative lost steam following a good non-manufacturing ISM. During the second half of last week, market recovered somewhat from the sharp moves early August with the next test arriving this week especially in the form of US inflation numbers.
• US July producer price inflation today serves as an amuse-bouche ahead of consumer prices tomorrow. Consensus expects 0.2% M/M increases for both headline and core readings. Benign inflation prints will be cheered for by stock markets as they enable the Fed to zoom in on the maximum employment part of their dual mandate without having to worry about (additional) price pressure. US money markets are currently split between a 25 bps and a 50 bps lift-off rate cut at the September 18 policy meeting. Official Fed talk doesn’t mention the latter possibility. Fed Bowman over the weekend for example said she still sees upward inflation risks and may not be ready to support an interest rate decrease in September at all. We only think that a 50 bps could come into play in case of disappointing activity/labour market data early September. The downside of the front end of the curve might therefore be protected in the wake of the violent early August repositioning. US Treasuries still outperformed yesterday but that had more to do with haven-flows related to tensions in the Middle East (see News & Views). Daily curve changes varied between -1.8 bps (30-yr) and -5 bps (5-yr). German yields ended the day close to unchanged. The dollar marginally lost out against the euro, closing the day at EUR/USD 1.0939 from a start at 1.0914. USD/JPY set a minor August recovery high at 148.22 (from 146.73). Apart from US PPI data, German ZEW investor sentiment and US NFIB small business optimism are scheduled for release, but these are second tier. Comments by Atlanta Fed Bostic serve as a wildcard.
• UK labour market data this morning started the UK monthly update. Employment rose by 97k in the April-June quarter, beating 3k consensus. The first indication for Q3 (July payrolls) was better-than-hoped as well (+24k vs +10k expected). A significant increase in jobless claims (+135k in July) is the odd one out. Weekly earnings ex bonuses rose as expected by 5.4% annualized in Q2. Sterling in a first move profits with EUR/GBP testing the recent lows around 0.8550. UK inflation numbers (tomorrow), Q2 GDP data (Thursday) and retail sales (Friday) follow later this week.
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