• October CPI inflation was the first really important US data series for release after the Trump/Republican election victory. Concrete policy measures from the new US administration will decide which way activity and in inflation will ultimately go. Data in the meantime will help to define the starting point for Fed policy and the subsequent market reaction function. Ahead of the publication of the US CPI data, the Trump trade already slowed. US yields stabilized and so did the dollar. US equity investors pondered how much good news was already discounted as major indices touched record levels of late. The US CPI report printed exactly in line with expectations (headline 0.2% M/M and 2.6% Y/Y from 2.4% in September; core 0.3% M/M and 3.3% Y/Y, unchanged). Markets apparently were positioned for a potential upward surprise. Given a reflationary Trump agenda, this could have pushed the Fed to a more cautious approach, especially as US activity remains strong for now. Despite the inline outcome services prices remained elevated at 0.4% M/M and 4.7% Y/Y. So were housing related costs (0.4% M/M), fuels and utilities 0.8% M/M, amongst others , also rose. A disinflationary dynamics was seen in non-durables (-0.3% M/M), education and communication (-0.3%) and apparel and footwear (-2.0%). The US yield curve bull steepened after the data release with yields declining between 8.5 bps (2-y) and 4 bps (30-y). The reaction probably tells more about the market position than on the content of the inflation report. The report is seen as leaving the door open for a 25 bps Fed rate cut in December (now 75% discounted vs about 60% before the release). Bunds ‘for once’ underperform Treasuries today, with yields ‘rising’ about 1-2 bp in the 2-10-y sector (gains were up 6.0 bps before the US CPI release). Maybe the bottoming in German/EMU yields was at least partially due to comments for the Christian Democrat leader Herz. He indicated his party is open consider some reforms in the country’s strict borrowing rules, e.g. to finance investments. Recent USD rebound, while still setting minor now ST top levels against some other majors earlier today, already showed tentative signs of losing some momentum. It lost some, admittedly still modest ground, after the CPI release (DXY 105.85 from an intraday top of 106.2, EUR/USD 1.0630 from intraday low near 1.0595). The report & ‘setback’ in yields and the dollar didn’t help European equities (Eurostoxx -0.4%). US equities opened little changed. In a broader perspective, the report created a breather for the post-election phase of the Trump-trade, but is no game-changer.
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