• Fixed income and FX markets yesterday had to cope with a divergent message from EMU and US data. German and Spanish August headline inflation slowed more than expected (German HICP -0.2% M/M and 2.0% from 2.6% vs 2.2% expected, Spain 0.0% M/M and 2.4% Y/Y from 2.9%). This provides some comfort for the ECB as it intends to further reduce policy tightening next month. However, the slowdown mainly came from lower energy prices. The progress in measures of underlying inflation was far less impressive (Spain core 2.7% from 2.8, Germany 2.8% from 2.9%, with still rather robust services inflation 0.4% M/M). Still, the data initially pushed EMU yields lower in a steepening move. However, global bond market momentum changed after the publication of US data. US Q2 GDP growth was upwardly revised from 2.8% Q/Qa to 3.0% due to strong personal consumption (2.9% from 2.3%). Weekly jobless claims also held a relatively low 231k. The Q2 GDP revision is old news but was enough for yields to close 2-3 bps higher across the curve. German yields reversed part of the initial decline though the 2-y yield still lost -2.8 bps. The 30-y added 2.1 bps. After recent dollar weakness, softer EMU CPI data this timed triggered a correction of the euro. EUR/USD dropped from the 1.1140 area to close at 1.1077. DXY rebounded from 101.00 to 101.34, but gains in the likes of USD/JPY (close 145) were modest. Equities initially also enjoyed some reflationary dynamics (EuroStoxx 50 +1.08%). US indices also opened with a constructive momentum, but mostly couldn’t hold on to initial gains (Nasdaq -0.23%). The Dow (+0.58%) finished at a new record. Markets for now apparently embrace a favourable (US) soft landing scenario.
• This morning, Asian equities show broad-based gains with China outperforming. The yuan extends its comeback from earlier this month with USD/CNY testing the end-December low. The yen trades little changed after higher than expected Tokyo CPI data (USD/JPY 144.9). Later today, EMU August flash CPI probably will confirm yesterday trends from Germany and Spain (headline expected at 0.2%M/M and 2.2% Y/Y, core 2.8% from 2.9%, risks for downside ‘surprise’). With 3 additional 25 bps ECB rate cuts at each of the remaining meetings this year still not fully discounted, there is still room for some further decline in yields at the short end of the EMU yield curve. This also might trigger some further euro correction ST. In the US, the July income and spending data and the PCE deflators will be published. For the latter, a 0.2% M/M price dynamics is expected. Even in case of a mild soft surprise, we don’t expect a big market reaction with already 100 bps of cumulative Fed rate cuts discounted for this year. US markets are heading for a long weekend (Labour day). The focus will turn to next week’s key ISM’s and US labour market data. In this respect, we don’t change our call yet for the dollar to stay rather weak in the run-up the September Fed meeting.
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