Sunset
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Daily Market Overview
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Click here to read the PDF-version of this report.
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Markets
• There’s still no other place to look today, but to the FX market. The trade-weighted dollar gains a big figure, surging from 103 to nearly 104, the highest level since 2002 and coming from 100 only last week. The test of 103.82 (2017) is ongoing. EUR/USD briefly dipped below 1.05 , being lured by the 2017 bottom at 1.0341. The high stakes energy game between the EU and Russia doesn’t help the euro, but isn’t its biggest issue. Price pressure, de-anchored inflation expectations and an ignorant ECB are. Spanish April headline inflation today fell by 0.2% M/M to 8.3% Y/Y from 9.8% Y/Y as electricity prices came off record levels. It shows that the ECB is right that elevated energy would eventually drop out of the equation. The surge in core inflation from 3.4% Y/Y to 4.4% however highlights the cost of sticking to the transitory narrative for too long. A more or less similar story is true for Belgian inflation numbers (see headline). German April inflation still set a new multiyear high in April (despite fuel duty cuts by the government), rising more than forecast by 0.7% M/M from 7.6% Y/Y to 7.8% Y/Y. Markets greet the new batch of inflation numbers with their by now known vote of no confidence in ECB policy. Apart from the weaker euro, long term bond yields rise by 10bps+. The move is entirely due to a new spike in inflation expectations. After the Swedish Riksbank’s sudden U-turn, the ECB in its policy stance is now only flanked by the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan. The latter decided to even add stimulus this morning. By deploying, daily, unlimited bond purchases they want to keep the Japanese 10-yr yield below 0.25% at any cost. The Japanese yen, you guessed it, again lost more than one big figure, trading temporary at 131 against the dollar for the first time since 2002. • The US eco calendar centered around first quarter GDP numbers. GDP unexpectedly declined by 1.4% Q/Qa while consensus expected a slowdown from 6.9% Q/Qa to 1% Q/Qa. Details painted a more optimistic picture as net exports (imports 17.7% Q/Qa vs exports -5.9% Q/Qa) and inventories deducted headline growth by 4 percentage points. Government spending fell as well (-2.7% Q/Qa) pointing to good consumer spending (2.7% Q/Qa according to Commerce department) and business investments (2.3% Q/Qa). US markets didn’t really respond to the GDP print. It in any case won’t derail the Fed’s hawkish plans. The US yield curve flattens with yields rising by 3.2 bps at the front end and ceding 1 bp at the very long end. News Headlines
• Sweden’s Riksbank raised policy rates for the first time since 2019 by 25 bps to 0.25%. The likes of Ingves took a verbal U-turn over the previous weeks but today’s action still came as a surprise to some. High and way above-target inflation will last for some time. The Riksbank seeks to prevent that from entrenching in price and wage-setting by kicking of a rate hike cycle. It will also start the balance sheet roll-off from the second half of this year. Two or (more probable) three more hikes this year are penciled in. At the end of the policy horizon (2025Q2), the policy rate may have risen to <2% but the current state of (inflation) affairs suggest upside risks. The central bank in any case keeps the option of raising rates faster. The Swedish krona initially appreciated to EUR/SEK 10.25 but couldn’t maintain gains (currently trading near 10.34). Short-term swap yields jump 10 bps in the wake of the decision. • Belgian GDP growth slowed from 0.4% q/q to 0.3% in the first three months of the year. Compared to the same period last year, GDP was up 4.6%. Growth in services (0.5%) and construction (0.8%) was partially offset by a decline in the industrial sector (-0.8%), the NBB reported. It may suggest a first impact from the war in Ukraine. Data from Statbel showed consumer inflation stabilized at 8.31% y/y in April with monthly price dynamics slowing from 0.52% to 0.33%. It’s the first time since January 2021 y/y inflation doesn’t accelerate even as the likes of food showed large price jumps again. Core inflation however still quickened from 3.75% to 4.08%. Services inflation also rose from 3.78% to 3.96%.
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Graphs & Table
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USD/JPY: Bank of Japan accelerates sell-off in JPY after adding monetary stimulus this morning. Euro/ECB, DO YOU COPY?!
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EUR/SEK: first Riksbank rate hike benefits SEK
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EU10y swap rate is back at cycle high as inflation expectations surge further
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Nasdaq tests key support at 12552 (38% retracement on March 2020/November 2021 surge) to 12397 (March 2021 sell-off low)
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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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KBC Sunset Market Commentary 28/04/2022 via Trader Talent
Published by Trader Talent on
Sunset
Daily Market Overview
Click here to read the PDF-version of this report.
• There’s still no other place to look today, but to the FX market. The trade-weighted dollar gains a big figure, surging from 103 to nearly 104, the highest level since 2002 and coming from 100 only last week. The test of 103.82 (2017) is ongoing. EUR/USD briefly dipped below 1.05 , being lured by the 2017 bottom at 1.0341. The high stakes energy game between the EU and Russia doesn’t help the euro, but isn’t its biggest issue. Price pressure, de-anchored inflation expectations and an ignorant ECB are. Spanish April headline inflation today fell by 0.2% M/M to 8.3% Y/Y from 9.8% Y/Y as electricity prices came off record levels. It shows that the ECB is right that elevated energy would eventually drop out of the equation. The surge in core inflation from 3.4% Y/Y to 4.4% however highlights the cost of sticking to the transitory narrative for too long. A more or less similar story is true for Belgian inflation numbers (see headline). German April inflation still set a new multiyear high in April (despite fuel duty cuts by the government), rising more than forecast by 0.7% M/M from 7.6% Y/Y to 7.8% Y/Y. Markets greet the new batch of inflation numbers with their by now known vote of no confidence in ECB policy. Apart from the weaker euro, long term bond yields rise by 10bps+. The move is entirely due to a new spike in inflation expectations. After the Swedish Riksbank’s sudden U-turn, the ECB in its policy stance is now only flanked by the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan. The latter decided to even add stimulus this morning. By deploying, daily, unlimited bond purchases they want to keep the Japanese 10-yr yield below 0.25% at any cost. The Japanese yen, you guessed it, again lost more than one big figure, trading temporary at 131 against the dollar for the first time since 2002.
• The US eco calendar centered around first quarter GDP numbers. GDP unexpectedly declined by 1.4% Q/Qa while consensus expected a slowdown from 6.9% Q/Qa to 1% Q/Qa. Details painted a more optimistic picture as net exports (imports 17.7% Q/Qa vs exports -5.9% Q/Qa) and inventories deducted headline growth by 4 percentage points. Government spending fell as well (-2.7% Q/Qa) pointing to good consumer spending (2.7% Q/Qa according to Commerce department) and business investments (2.3% Q/Qa). US markets didn’t really respond to the GDP print. It in any case won’t derail the Fed’s hawkish plans. The US yield curve flattens with yields rising by 3.2 bps at the front end and ceding 1 bp at the very long end.
News Headlines
• Sweden’s Riksbank raised policy rates for the first time since 2019 by 25 bps to 0.25%. The likes of Ingves took a verbal U-turn over the previous weeks but today’s action still came as a surprise to some. High and way above-target inflation will last for some time. The Riksbank seeks to prevent that from entrenching in price and wage-setting by kicking of a rate hike cycle. It will also start the balance sheet roll-off from the second half of this year. Two or (more probable) three more hikes this year are penciled in. At the end of the policy horizon (2025Q2), the policy rate may have risen to <2% but the current state of (inflation) affairs suggest upside risks. The central bank in any case keeps the option of raising rates faster. The Swedish krona initially appreciated to EUR/SEK 10.25 but couldn’t maintain gains (currently trading near 10.34). Short-term swap yields jump 10 bps in the wake of the decision.
• Belgian GDP growth slowed from 0.4% q/q to 0.3% in the first three months of the year. Compared to the same period last year, GDP was up 4.6%. Growth in services (0.5%) and construction (0.8%) was partially offset by a decline in the industrial sector (-0.8%), the NBB reported. It may suggest a first impact from the war in Ukraine. Data from Statbel showed consumer inflation stabilized at 8.31% y/y in April with monthly price dynamics slowing from 0.52% to 0.33%. It’s the first time since January 2021 y/y inflation doesn’t accelerate even as the likes of food showed large price jumps again. Core inflation however still quickened from 3.75% to 4.08%. Services inflation also rose from 3.78% to 3.96%.
Graphs & Table
USD/JPY: Bank of Japan accelerates sell-off in JPY after adding monetary stimulus this morning. Euro/ECB, DO YOU COPY?!
EUR/SEK: first Riksbank rate hike benefits SEK
EU10y swap rate is back at cycle high as inflation expectations surge further
Nasdaq tests key support at 12552 (38% retracement on March 2020/November 2021 surge) to 12397 (March 2021 sell-off low)
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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