• A rising tide lifts all boats. Or in this case, a rising Chinese stock market lifts global risk sentiment. More fiscal spending, measures to stabilize the property sector, potential capital injections in the largest banks and forceful rate cuts are now also part of the toolkit announced earlier this week. European stock markets closed up to 2.35% (!) higher for the Eurostoxx50 with main US benchmarks extending their record race (+0.4%-0.6%) though closing off the day’s best levels. Most Asian stock markets show signs of some consolidation this morning, apart from China which adds another 5%-7% to an already record-week.
• US eco data included a minor upward revision in the final Q2 print (3% Q/Qa), but especially consensus-beating durable goods orders (August) and lower weekly jobless claims (218k). Although second tier and coming ahead of PCE deflators (today) and ISM’s, ADP employment change and payrolls (next week) they did manage to swing the November Fed pendulum more into balance between a 25 bps and a 50 bps rate cut. Changes on the US yield curve ranged between +7 bps (2-yr) and -0.9 bps (30-yr). Lower oil prices partly help explain the strong curve shift with Brent crude prices dropping from $75/b to $71/b over the past two days. The move is linked to talk that Saudi Arabia is ready to abandon its unofficial $100/b oil price target. The FT reported that they would boost output from December 1st to regain market share. Bullish risk sentiment and lower oil prices balanced out interest rate support for the dollar. The greenback was going nowhere for most of the session and even lost some ground in the final stages of US trading. EUR/USD closed at 1.1177 from a start at 1.1133.
• Today’s agenda contains first national European CPI indications for September (France, Spain, Belgium). Together with already released awful September PMI’s, they are the only input for the ECB in the short intermeeting period between September and October. PMI brough the possibility of a 25 bps rate cut back on the radar from a market point of view. We’re still in favour of a pause. When it comes to inflation numbers, ECB Lagarde at the press conference already “hedged” today and next month’s numbers by saying that they could fall somewhat further now before ticking up into year-end as energy-related base effects turn around. We’d be surprised though if markets pick up that nuance today, suggesting that lower inflation numbers could add to short term easing bets. Any potential euro weakness should remain short-lived going into next week’s big US eco week.
0 Comments