UK PMI construction dropped to 48.4, weakest in 2 1/2 years

    UK PMI Construction dropped slightly from 48.8 to 48.4 in January, below expectation of 49.5. S&P Global noted that residential work had the steepest drop for 32 months. New orders and employment continued to decrease. But business activity expectations rebounded.

    Tim Moore, Economics Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: “A sharp and accelerated decline in house building activity led to the weakest UK construction sector performance for just over two-and-a-half years in January…. However, there were positive signals for longer-term prospects across the construction sector, with business activity expectations staging a swift rebound from the low point seen last December.”

    Full release here.

    EU publishes joint proposals with other members on WTO reforms

      EU published the proposal of reform of the WTO’s Appellate Body today, for presentation on the General Council meeting on December 12. The proposal is a joint effort with other WTO members including Australia, Canada, China, Iceland, India, Korea, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore and Switzerland.

      EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström said in the press release that  “the appellate body function of the WTO dispute settlement system is moving towards a cliff’s edge. Without this core function of the WTO, the world would lose a system that has ensured stability in global trade for decades. Now, together with a broad coalition of WTO members, we are presenting our most concrete proposals yet for WTO reform. I hope that this will contribute to breaking the current deadlock, and that all WTO members will take responsibility equally, engaging in good faith in the reform process.”

      Full press release and the proposal.

      South and North Korea to form combined team in Asia Games

        South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s officials took another solid step in creating peace in the peninsula. South Korean Culture, Sports and Tourism Ministry’s chief delegate Jeon Choong-ryul held a successful meeting with his North Korean counterpart Won Kil U.

        They agreed to hold a joint basketball match in Pyongyang on July 4. More than that, they agreed to form some combined teams at Asian Games in Indonesia in August. They also agreed to march together at the Asian Games as a sign of unity. This is a repeat of what they did in the Winter Olympics in South Korea back in February.

        Yen rises sharply in early European session. An update on EURJPY and GBPCHF short

          Yen surges broadly in the later part of Asian session, early European session. The selloff in Chinese stocks in the final two hours could be a factor driving risk aversion. The Shanghai SSE index closed down -1.27% at 2744.07. European indices open mixed with German DAX slightly down by -0.2% at the time of writing.

          Despite the strong rebound from 128.49, EUR/JPY was limited below 129.52 minor resistance and drops sharply. 128.49 is back into focus and break will resume whole decline from 131.97. Based on the position strategy as our weekly report, we sold EUR/JPY at 128.60 at open this week. We’ll hold on to the short position, with stop at 129.60, slightly above 129.52 minor resistance. 127.13 is the first target but we’d expect at least a test on 124.61 low if things turns out as we expected.

          Also, we’re holding on GBP/CHF short, sold at 1.2971. The development so far is in line with out expectation. We’ll lower the stop to break even at 1.2971. 61.8% projection of 1.3854 to 1.3049 from 1.3265 at 1.2768 as first target. And there is prospect of extending to 100% projection at 1.2460 in medium term.

          BoC hikes 50bps, interest rates will need to rise further

            BoC raises overnight rate by 50bps to 1.50% as widely expected. The bank rate and deposite rate are now at 1.75% and 1.50% respectively. The central bank also maintains tightening bias. It said, “with the economy in excess demand, and inflation persisting well above target and expected to move higher in the near term, the Governing Council continues to judge that interest rates will need to rise further.”

            Full statement below.

            Bank of Canada increases policy interest rate by 50 basis points, continues quantitative tightening

            The Bank of Canada today increased its target for the overnight rate to 1½%, with the Bank Rate at 1¾% and the deposit rate at 1½%. The Bank is also continuing its policy of quantitative tightening (QT).

            Inflation globally and in Canada continues to rise, largely driven by higher prices for energy and food. In Canada, CPI inflation reached 6.8% for the month of April – well above the Bank’s forecast – and will likely move even higher in the near term before beginning to ease. As pervasive input price pressures feed through into consumer prices, inflation continues to broaden, with core measures of inflation ranging between 3.2% and 5.1%. Almost 70% of CPI categories now show inflation above 3%. The risk of elevated inflation becoming entrenched has risen. The Bank will use its monetary policy tools to return inflation to target and keep inflation expectations well anchored.

            The increase in global inflation is occurring as the global economy slows. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, China’s COVID-related lockdowns, and ongoing supply disruptions are all weighing on activity and boosting inflation. The war has increased uncertainty and is putting further upward pressure on prices for energy and agricultural commodities. This is dampening the outlook, particularly in Europe. In the United States, private domestic demand remains robust, despite the economy contracting in the first quarter of 2022. US labour market strength continues, with wage pressures intensifying. Global financial conditions have tightened and markets have been volatile.

            Canadian economic activity is strong and the economy is clearly operating in excess demand. National accounts data for the first quarter of 2022 showed GDP growth of 3.1 percent, in line with the Bank’s April Monetary Policy Report (MPR) projection. Job vacancies are elevated, companies are reporting widespread labour shortages, and wage growth has been picking up and broadening across sectors. Housing market activity is moderating from exceptionally high levels. With consumer spending in Canada remaining robust and exports anticipated to strengthen, growth in the second quarter is expected to be solid.

            With the economy in excess demand, and inflation persisting well above target and expected to move higher in the near term, the Governing Council continues to judge that interest rates will need to rise further. The policy interest rate remains the Bank’s primary monetary policy instrument, with quantitative tightening acting as a complementary tool. The pace of further increases in the policy rate will be guided by the Bank’s ongoing assessment of the economy and inflation, and the Governing Council is prepared to act more forcefully if needed to meet its commitment to achieve the 2% inflation target.

            Information note

            The next scheduled date for announcing the overnight rate target is July 13, 2022. The Bank will publish its next full outlook for the economy and inflation, including risks to the projection, in the MPR at the same time.

            Chinese officials delivered bullish comments, but interest rate and RRR cut said to be underway

              At a financial forum in Shanghai, Chinese Vice Premier Liu He said there are plenty of policy tools to use to deal with the challenges the economy is facing. He also sounded confidence and said major macroeconomic indicators all remain within reasonable ranges. Meanwhile, China will roll out more strong measures on reforms in the near future.

              In the same forum, Pan Gongsheng, head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, said the country’s FX market is largely stable with FX reserves steadily rising. And, China is capable and confident of keeping its currency basically stable. Guo Shuqing, head of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) reiterated there are plans to further open up its banking securities and insurance sectors.

              Separately, the official China Daily said that more money and credit supply adjustment are under way to counter the downside risks of trade war. Measures could include cuts in interest rates or reserve ratio requirements. The newspaper noted the near for stronger measures to maintain liquidity in the financial market and support infrastructure investment

              ECB Lane: We need another 50 basis points in March

                ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane said in an interview, “our assessment of December remains solid, that we needed a sequence of 50 basis point hikes to bring us inside a zone where we would need to think harder about whether rates are sufficiently restrictive to deliver the return of inflation to 2%.

                “The data flow since then suggests that the assessment is solid, that we need another 50 basis points in March,” he said.

                Beyond March, “the overall philosophy is that we will bring rates to a level that is sufficiently restrictive, which depends on where the inflation forecast is, where we are with underlying inflation and where we are with the monetary transmission mechanism.”

                “There is a zone of interest rate paths that the Governing Council will have to assess in March, in May and thereafter, and determine where in that zone we want to be,” he added.

                Without commenting on whether rate will stay at a significantly long plateau, Lane said “I absolutely sign up to the monetary policy philosophy that wherever we get to, we should be slow to come down until we have very strong evidence – not just in the forecast but also in our ongoing assessment of underlying inflation – that we are returning inflation to target.”

                Full interview here.

                Dallas Fed Kaplan: Let’s fight the big threat China, not others

                  Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan trade with Canada and Mexico boosts US employment and competitiveness. And he warned that the US risks losing such competitiveness as the trade spat continues. He emphasized that the real threats come from China. Kaplan noted that “intellectual property rights and technology transfer are very big issues, where China is using the joint ventures to get technology and then compete globally” And, “let’s fight what I think is actually a very big threat, which is the relationship with China.”

                  Regarding monetary policy, he reiterated the view that neutral rate is between 2.50-2.75%. And Fed is “still accommodative” at the current 1.75-2.00%. Kaplan also felt reluctant to dismiss the yield curve signal on recession as it reflections expectations of future growth. Flattening yield curve can also affect behavior of businessmen.

                  US initial jobless claims dropped back to 225k

                    US initial jobless claims dropped -16k to 225k in the week ending November 26, below expectation of 245k. Four-week moving average of initial claims rose 2k to 229k.

                    Continuing claims rose 57k to 1608k in the week ending November 19. Four-week moving average of continuing claims rose 30k to 1539k.

                    Full release here.

                    SNB Zurbruegg: Exchange rate situation still very fragile, current monetary policy has to continue

                      SNB Vice Chairman Fritz Zurbruegg said in a Schaffhauser Nachrichten newspaper interview that when EUR/CHF was at 1.2, there came the ” the impression that everything is solved and the pressure is gone – the franc is no longer a safe haven”. However, then, “you can see that the franc reacts very quickly as long as there are uncertainties.” That showed the “exchange rate situation is still very fragile”. Therefore, SNB policymakers are “convinced we have to continue with our current monetary policy.”

                      Also, he noted the central bank is not considering to reduce its balance sheet yet. He said “there are risks that we have accepted to fight against the over-valuation of the franc, and we can live with that. And, “the size of our balance sheet doesn’t limit our ability to act and we have shown that we are still ready to intervene in the currency markets if necessary.” He added “that’s why there is no talk at present about reducing this portfolio.”

                      US ISM non-manufacturing dropped to 52.5, supplier deliveries surged

                        US ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite dropped to 52.5 in March, down from 57.3, but beat expectation of 48.0 and stayed in expansionary region. Looking at some details, business activity/production dropped -0.8 to 48.0. New orders dropped -10.2 to 52.9. Employment dropped -8.6 to 47.0.

                        Similar to ISM manufacturing, supplier deliveries jumped 9.7 to 62.1, holding the headline index up. Comments from respondents include: “Supplier capacity and shipping has been slowed due to the coronavirus” and “Global supply chain disruptions caused by COVID-19 concerns and the number of manufacturers reliant upon China for raw materials, parts and components.”

                        Full release here.

                        Into US session: Yen strongest, Aussie weakest. Risk aversion lifts gold

                          Entering into US session, Yen remains the strongest one as global stock market rout deepens. Meanwhile, Australian Dollar is the weakest one, followed by Canadian and then Euro. Gold also rides on risk aversion and hit as high as 1236.7 so far. Economic calendar is light in the US session. So major focus will remain on risk sentiments, currently, DOW futures are dropping more than 300 pts. Euro will also be moved by news on European Commission’s reaction to Italy’s reply on budget.

                          In Europe, at the time of writing:

                          • FTSE is down -0.52% at 7006.14
                          • DAX is down -1.55% at 11345.8
                          • CAC is down -1.02% at 50001.79
                          • German 10 year yield is down -0.0204 at 0.431
                          • Italian 10 year yield is down -0.005 at 3.474. Spread with German remains around 300.

                          Earlier today in Asia:

                          • Nikkei dropped -2.6% to 22010.78
                          • Hong Kong HSI dropped -3.08% to 25346.55
                          • China Shanghai SSE dropped -2.26% to 2594.83
                          • Singapore Strait Times dropped -1.52% to 3031.39

                          Nikkei’s fall from 24448.07 high resumed today and the break of 22172.90 support confirmed completion of rise from 20347.49. Near term outlook is rather bearish with prior rejection by 55 day EMA. Further fall is now likely to be seen towards 20347.59 key support level. At this point, we don’t expect a break there yet.

                          Bundesbank slashes 2019 German growth forecasts to 0.6% (down from 1.6%), lacklustre export growth taking a toll

                            Bundesbank sharply slashed German growth forecasts to just 0.6% in 2019 and said the economy is “currently experiencing a marked cool down”. That is “mainly due to the downturn in industry, where lacklustre export growth is taking a toll. Nevertheless, “a more protracted, clear decline in economic output currently seems an unlikely prospect, though.” And, “once foreign demand picks up, German economic growth will be more broadly based again.”

                            Still, risks are tilted to the downside. And, it warned “additional negative external developments could intensify or prolong the downturn in Germany’s strongly export-driven economy.” In particular, the experts warn that an escalation of protectionist measures around the world could place considerable strain on German industry. In addition, they highlight the possibility of a disorderly Brexit as well as uncertainties surrounding the fiscal policy stance of the Italian government as risk factors for economic growth in Germany.

                            On GDP growth:

                            • 2019 at 0.6% (down from Dec projection of 1.6%);
                            • 2020 at 1.2% (down from 1.6%);
                            • 2021 at 1.3% (down from 1.5%).

                            On HICP:

                            • 2019 at 1.4% (unchanged);
                            • 2020 at 1.5% (down from 1.8%);
                            • 2021 at 1.7% (down from -0.1%;

                            Full report here.

                            Also released from Germany, industrial production dropped -1.9% mom in April, much worse than expectation of -0.5% mom. Trade surplus narrowed to EUR 17.0B in April. From Swiss, foreign currency reserves dropped CHF -16B to CHF 760B. Unemployment rate was unchanged at 2.4%.

                            China PPI slowed to 8.3% yoy, CPI rose to 1.5% yoy in Mar

                              China PPI slowed from 8.8% yoy to 8.3% yoy, but still beat expectation of 7.9% yoy. However, the monthly rise of 1.1% mom in PPI was the fastest in five months, driven by surges in oil prices and non-ferrous metals.

                              CPI accelerated from 0.9% yoy to 1.5% yoy in March, above expectation of 1.2% yoy. Core CPI, excluding food and energy, rose 1.1% yoy, unchanged from February’s reading. Prices of some food like flour, vegetable oil, fresh vegetables and eggs rose and were “affected by the rise in international prices of wheat, corn and soybeans and the domestic [coronavirus] outbreaks”, noted senior NBS statistician Dong Lijuan.

                              Australia AiG services dropped to 57.8, question on filling positions to fill orders

                                Australia AiG Performance of Services index dropped to 57.8 in June, down from 61.2. Sales dropped -2.5 pts to 66.1. Employment dropped -2.4 pts to 54.2. New orders dropped sharply by -11.7 to 56.6. Input prices dropped -2.7 to 65.4. Selling prices dropped -9.9 to 53.5. Average wages rose 2.9 to 66.0.

                                Ai Group Chief Executive, Innes Willox, said: “Some adverse impacts on demand and supply chains were associated with the COVID lockdowns and restrictions imposed by other states and territories. Businesses were also constrained by an inability to fill positions required either to maintain existing levels of activity or to expand to meet higher demand. Wages growth accelerated in June and input prices continued to rise although at a more moderate rate than in the previous month. The healthy rise in new orders came on top of the sharp rise in the previous month and points to strong demand over coming months. A key question for many businesses will be whether they can fill positions required to fill these orders.”

                                Full release here.

                                ECB’s Lagarde highlights wage growth as increasingly important inflation

                                  In a European Parliament committee hearing, ECB President Christine Lagarde highlighted that the “ongoing disinflation process” is expected to continue “gradually further down over 2024,” attributing this trend to the diminishing effects of past upward shocks and the impact of tighter financing conditions on inflation.

                                  Lagarde noted a “gradual decline” in core inflation, which excludes energy and food prices, while also pointing out the “signs of persistence” in services inflation.

                                  Significantly, Lagarde identified wage growth as a crucial factor, stating it is becoming an “increasingly important driver of inflation dynamics.” ECB’s wage tracker signals sustained wage pressures, although there’s “some levelling off” observed in the latest quarter of 2023. The direction of wage pressures in 2024 largely depends on “ongoing or upcoming negotiation rounds” affecting a broad segment of the workforce.

                                  Furthermore, Lagarde observed that the influence of unit profits on domestic price pressures is on the decline, suggesting that wage increments are being partly accommodated through “profit margins.”

                                  Full remarks of ECB Lagarde here.

                                  Australia GDP grew 0.5% qoq in Q4, domestic prices grew fastest since 1990

                                    Australia GDP grew 0.5% qoq in Q4, below expectation of 0.8% qoq. Through the year, GDP grew 2.7% yoy. GDP Implicit price deflator (IPD) rose 1.6% qoq and 9.1% yoy. Domestic prices grew 1.4% qoq and 6.6 yoy, highest annual growth since 1990.

                                    Katherine Keenan, ABS head of National Accounts, said, “the 0.4 per cent rise in total consumption and 1.1 per cent rise in exports were the primary contributors to GDP growth in the December quarter…

                                    “Continued growth in household and government spending drove the rise in consumption, while increased exports of travel services and continued overseas demand for coal and mineral ores drove exports.”

                                    Full release here.

                                    USD/CAD dives as BoC sounds upbeat despite growth downgrade, full statement

                                      BoC left overnight rate unchanged at 1.75%. While there was downgrade in 2019 growth projection, the overall tone of the statement remains rather upbeat. And most importantly, BoC maintained tightening bias and said “policy interest rate will need to rise over time into a neutral range to achieve the inflation target.” Nevertheless, “the appropriate pace of rate increases will depend on how the outlook evolves, with a particular focus on developments in oil markets, the Canadian housing market, and global trade policy.”

                                      For 2019, GDP is projected to grow 1.7%, 0.4% slower than October forecast. BoC said it reflects “”temporary” slowing in Q4 2018 and Q1 2019. But is expect indications of demand to show renewed momentum in early 2019. Thus, it will lead to “above-potential growth of 2.1% in 2020.”

                                      CPI inflation ins projected to “edge further down” from 1.7% and stay below 2% “through much of 2019”. But lower level of Canadian Dollar will “exert some upward pressure on inflation”. CPI is projected to return to 2% by late 2019.

                                      BoC also reiterated the concern over fall in global oil prices. However, it also noted that the developments are “occurring in the context of a Canadian economy that has been performing well overall.” And, “looking ahead, exports and non-energy investment are projected to grow solidly, supported by foreign demand, the CUSMA, the lower Canadian dollar, and federal tax measures targeted at investment.”

                                      USD/CAD dives further after the release.

                                      Full release below:

                                      Bank of Canada maintains overnight rate target at 1 Âľ per cent

                                      The Bank of Canada today maintained its target for the overnight rate at 1 ¾ per cent. The Bank Rate is correspondingly 2 per cent and the deposit rate is 1 ½ per cent.

                                      The global economic expansion continues to moderate, with growth forecast to slow to 3.4 per cent in 2019 from 3.7 per cent in 2018. In particular, growth in the United States remains solid but is expected to slow to a more sustainable pace through 2019. However, there are increasing signs that the US-China trade conflict is weighing on global demand and commodity prices.

                                      Global benchmark prices for oil have been about 25 per cent lower than assumed in the October Monetary Policy Report (MPR). The lower prices primarily reflect sustained increases in US oil supply and, more recently, increased worries about global demand. These worries among market participants have also been reflected in bond and equity markets.

                                      The drop in global oil prices has a material impact on the Canadian outlook, resulting in lower terms of trade and national income. As well, transportation constraints and rising production have combined to push up oil inventories in the west and exert even more downward pressure on Canadian benchmark prices. While price differentials have narrowed in recent weeks following announced mandatory production cuts in Alberta, investment in Canada’s oil sector is projected to weaken further.

                                      These developments are occurring in the context of a Canadian economy that has been performing well overall. Growth has been running close to potential, employment growth has been strong and unemployment is at a 40-year low. Looking ahead, exports and non-energy investment are projected to grow solidly, supported by foreign demand, the CUSMA, the lower Canadian dollar, and federal tax measures targeted at investment.

                                      Meanwhile, consumption spending and housing investment have been weaker than expected as housing markets adjust to municipal and provincial measures, changes to mortgage guidelines, and higher interest rates. Household spending will be dampened further by slow growth in oil-producing provinces. The Bank will continue to monitor these adjustments.

                                      The Bank projects real GDP will grow by 1.7 per cent in 2019, 0.4 percentage points slower than the October outlook. This revised forecast reflects a temporary slowing in the fourth quarter of 2018 and the first quarter of 2019. This will open up a modest amount of excess capacity, primarily in oil-producing regions. Nevertheless, indicators of demand should start to show renewed momentum in early 2019, leading to above-potential growth of 2.1 per cent in 2020.

                                      Core inflation measures remain clustered close to 2 per cent. As expected, CPI inflation eased to 1.7% in November, due to lower gasoline prices. CPI inflation is projected to edge further down and be below 2 per cent through much of 2019, owing mainly to lower gasoline prices. On the other hand, the lower level of the Canadian dollar will exert some upward pressure on inflation. As these transitory effects unwind and excess capacity is absorbed, inflation will return to around the 2 per cent target by late 2019.

                                      Weighing all of these factors, Governing Council continues to judge that the policy interest rate will need to rise over time into a neutral range to achieve the inflation target. The appropriate pace of rate increases will depend on how the outlook evolves, with a particular focus on developments in oil markets, the Canadian housing market, and global trade policy.

                                      Information note

                                      The next scheduled date for announcing the overnight rate target is March 6, 2019. The next full update of the Bank’s outlook for the economy and inflation, including risks to the projection, will be published in the MPR on April 24, 2019.

                                      Euro rebounds as formation of eurosceptic Italy government collapsed

                                        Italy is in fresh political turmoil again as the formation of the new eurosceptic government collapsed. Nonetheless, the Euro is lifted mildly higher today as that’s seen as a positive development for the common currency.

                                        President Sergio Mattarella vetoed Paolo Savona as the as economy minister. Savona is an 81-year-old eurosceptic economist who’s a vocal critic of the common currency. Mattarella said in a televised speech that “the uncertainty over our position (on euro) has alarmed investors and savers both in Italy and abroad.” And, he emphasized that “membership of the euro is a fundamental choice. If we want to discuss it, then we should do so in a serious fashion.” Mattarella added that “I asked for that ministry an authoritative political figure from the coalition parties who was not seen as the supporter of a line that could provoke Italy’s exit from the euro.”

                                        Prime Minister-designate Giuseppe Conte promptly abandoned the effort to form a new government. Tthe far-right League and anti-establishment Five Star Movement, accused Mattarella of abusing his authority and working under the orders of European powers. Five Star leader Luigi D Maio even demanded that parliament impeach Mattarella. League chief Matteo Salvini threatened mass protests unless snap elections were called.

                                        Former IMF director of discal affairs Carlo Cottarelli was called in to head a stopgap government. But he’s unlikely to have enough supoort from the parliament. So, that’s only a short-term solution and an election is now likely to be held to solve the political crisis, possibly in September or October.

                                        Italy to target budget deficit at 2.4% of GDP for the next three years

                                          Euro wasn’t too bothered after Italian government confirmed raising budget deficit, which would put them at odds with the EU. After the highly anticipated cabinet meeting, they decided to target budget deficit at 2.4% of GDP for the next three years. That is, Economy Minister Giovanni Tria, an unaffiliated technocrat, conceded his push for lowering deficit to just 1.6% of GDP, and then 2.0% in 2019.

                                          “There is an accord within the whole government for 2.4 percent, we are satisfied, this is a budget for change,” 5-Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio and League leader Matteo Salvini, both Deputy Prime Ministers, said in a joint statement after meetings with Tria.

                                          Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said the budget goals were “considered, reasonable and courageous” and would “ensure more robust economic growth and significant social progress for our country.” He added the budget plan included “the biggest program of public investments ever carried out in Italy.”

                                          While the 2.4% deficit target remains below EU rule of 3.0%, EU might find a lack of commitment on Italy’s side to cut its massive debt.

                                          Euro is trading mixed for the day and the week.