Sunset

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Daily Market Overview

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Markets

• It’s becoming the week of Minutes. Yesterday’s FOMC Minutes provided the blueprint for the Fed’s balance sheet roll-off. The Fed gives itself three months’ time starting from May to hit a pace of $95/bn month. This consists out of $60bn US Treasuries and $35bn mortgage-backed securities. Months were redemptions don’t reach this number will be complemented with shedding t-bills. Once the roll-off process is up and running, the Fed will contemplate active monthly selling out of its $2.7tn MBS-portfolio, implying that the $95bn figure serves as a floor. The rapid quantitative tightening will be complemented by bigger rate hikes as the Fed slams the breaks to address the inflation problem. Focus turned to ECB March Minutes today. At that meeting, the ECB changed its plans for net asset purchases. In December they suggested to buy a total amount of €120bn in Q2, €90bn in Q3 and €60bn in Q4 while keeping options open for 2023. In March they scaled back the (net) buying plans to €40bn in April, €30bn in May and €20bn in June while adding that they would end, ceteris paribus, in Q3. Minutes now highlighted internal division with some members preferring a firm end date during summer. That would be a stronger signal for a possible rate rise in the light of the deterioration in the inflation outlook. The latter scenario actually developed, making the hawkish call from the March meeting a likely scenario at the April one. Especially as Minutes stress that the economy enters the new crisis (Russian invasion) with better fundamentals than in March 2020. This again hints at additional and earlier room to maneuver on inflation. European bond markets took another scare in a significant bear flattening move. We warned before that a first ECB rate hike could come as early as July. German yields rise by 3.8 bps (30-yr) to 8 bps (3-yr) with the 2-yr yield returning in positive territory. The EU 2y swap set a new cycle high (and high since 2013) at 0.68%. The EU 10y swap rate is testing the 2015 top at 1.37%. The US Treasury yield curve continues its pre- and post-Minutes steepening trend as the Fed’s stealth QT pace leaves the longer end of the curve scrambling to find a new equilibrium. Daily changes vary between -2.5 bps (2-yr) and +4.2 bps (30-yr). The euro switched sides around the 1.09 big figure following ECB Minutes with the pair currently changing hands near 1.0930. EUR/GBP bounces back from an intraday low 0.8314 to currently 0.8360.
 
 
News Headlines

The Hungarian central bank kept the weekly deposit rate stable at 6.15%. Since 2022 it only hiked that rate after raising the base rate at its regular monthly meeting, meaning the status quo was expected. However, some in the market assumed the NBH would act still after the recent slide in the HUF from EUR/HUF 367 to almost 380 in just three days. This was to a large extent the result of the EU triggering the rule of law mechanism against Hungary, potentially blocking billions of funds over the lack of anti-corruption measures and eroding democratic standards. The forint weakened further in the early wake of the NBH’s decision to an intraday low of EUR/HUF 382 before paring losses to trade a tad stronger than yesterday at 378.7.
 
• Serbia’s central bank raised the policy rate from 1% to 1.5%. It’s the first hike in a decade and the central bank joins the worldwide trend of lifting borrowing costs to kill off high inflation. Price rose 8.8% in February, the fastest pace since 2013, double the 3% +/- 1.5 ppt target zone. “Inflationary pressures on the global and domestic markets are stronger and of more enduring character than previously expected,” the central bank explained, adding that additional tightening is on the way. With the hikes, it also seeks to protect the Serbian dinar from straying too far away from the narrow EUR/RSD trading range it favours. The currency in recent weeks suffered from geopolitical woes, causing EUR/RSD to drift north to 117.74 currently.
 

Graphs & Table

EU 2y swap rate sets new cycle high after ECB Minutes

US10-yr yield extends its move higher as Fed plots stealth quantitative tightening

EuroStoxx 50: sell-on-upticks remains in place

EUR/USD rebounds from sell-off low as ECB Minutes hint at firm stop of net asset purchases after June

Note: All times and dates are CET. More reports are available at KBCEconomics.be which you may sign up to.

This document has been prepared by the KBC Economics Markets desk and has not been produced by the Research department. The desk consists of Mathias Van der Jeugt, Peter Wuyts and Mathias Janssens, analists at KBC Bank N.V., which is regulated by the Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA).
These market recommendations are the result of qualitative analysis, incorporating room for past experiences and personal assessments. The views are based on current market circumstances and can change any moment. The most prominent input comes from publicly available data, financial news, economic and monetary policies and commonly used technical analysis.
The KBC Economics – Markets desk has used reasonable efforts to obtain this information from sources which it believes to be reliable but the contents of this document have been prepared without any substantive analysis being undertaken into these sources.
It has not been assessed as to whether or not these insights would be suitable for any particular investor.
Opinions expressed are our current opinions as of the date appearing on this material only and can be opposite to previous recommendations due to changed market conditions.
The authors of this recommendation do not warrant the accuracy, completeness or value (commercial or otherwise) of any recommendation. Neither are the authors liable to those who receive these recommendations for the content of it or for any loss or damage arising (whether in tort (including negligence), breach of contract, breach of statutory duty or otherwise) from any actions or omissions of the authors in reliance on any recommendation, or for any claim whatsoever in respect of the content of, or information contained in, any recommendation. Any opinions expressed herein reflect the judgement at the time the investment recommendation was prepared and are subject to change without notice.
Given the nature of this advice (linked to currencies and interest rates) , the advice is overall not specific in nature.   As such there is no reference to any corporate finance contract and as such there is no 12 month overview based on the different advices.
This document is only valid during a very  limited period of time, due to rapidly changing market conditions.

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