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China Data Disappoints; German GDP Surprise Boosts Euro

Published 11/14/2017, 07:01 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

The euro was already trading firmly before German GDP surprised to the upside, and the report helped lift the single currency through $1.17 for the first time since the ECB meeting in late October. The 0.8% quarterly expansion lifted the workday-adjusted, year-over-year rate to 2.8% from a revised 2.3% in Q2, which is the fastest in six years.

Italian Q3 GDP was also firm at 0.5%, matching its best pace in seven years. The 1.8% year-over-year pace is also the best since 2011.

The euro was also boosted by cross-rate demand after the softer than expected UK and Swedish inflation. The BOE's preferred measure, CPIH was unchanged at 2.8%. Headline and core CPI was also unchanged at 3.0% and 2.7% respectively. The BOE and the market had expected a small rise. The unchanged report means that BOE Governor Carney does not have to write a letter to the Chancellor to explain the overshoot, which is not more than 1%. Although we expect UK inflation to peak here in Q4, it is not clear with today's report that this is it. That fact that food prices rose 4.2% year-over-year, the most in four years, seems to still reflect the echo of sterling's decline from last year.

Sterling is trading in the lower end of yesterday's range and has been confined to about a quarter of a cent on either side of $1.31. On the other hand, the euro has pushed a bit through GBP0.8950 to reach its best level since October 26.

Sweden also reported softer than expected October inflation. The 0.1% decline in October contrasts with expectations for a 0.1% increase. This, coupled with the base effect, saw the year-over-year rate fall to 1.7% from 2.1%. It is the slowest pace since June. The Riksbank has one of the most aggressive monetary policies, with deeply negative deposit rates (minus 1.25%) and repo rates (minus 50 bp) and QE. The euro has rallied to new highs for the year against the krona (~SEK9.8825). The euro had tested SEK9.71 on November 9 before staging an upside reversal. Last year's peak (November 9) was near SEK10.08. This seems to be a bit far, but many short-term traders and medium-term investors may have been caught the wrong way, and the weekly technicals favor the euro.

Against the dollar, the euro is extending the recovery that began last week from about $1.1555 (the lowest level in four months) and is above the 20-day moving average (~$1.1685). We see risk toward $1.1745-$1.1760. We view these euro upticks as corrective in nature and note that the US two-year premium over Germany continues to widen. It stands near 2.43% now, up 40 bp in the past two months.

The US 10-year yield is hovering around 2.40%. The initial push higher in Asia helped extend yesterday's dollar gains versus the yen to almost JPY114.00, before being sold in the European morning back toward the session low near JPY113.55. Meanwhile, profit-taking weighed on Japanese shares for the fourth session. Some reports suggest that the foreign buying spree may be ending. Weekly MOF figures covering last week will be out in a couple of days. The Topix and Nikkei gapped higher on November 1. The attempt to fill the gaps, which are found near the 20-day moving averages (1770 and 22100, respectively) and the uninspired close warns that the downdraft may not be complete.

China's data showed that the world's second-largest economy is slowing. October reading of retail sales, industrial production, and urban fixed-asset investment also slowed sequentially. However, the 19th Party Congress may have had a cooling effect, and it seems premature to jump to any hard conclusions. That said, the emphasis on quality over quantity, the deleveraging efforts, paring excess capacity are all consistent with moderating activity.

There ECB conference that hears from Draghi, Yellen, Carney, and Kuroda among others is not generating much market response. Little new ground appears to have been broken. The event still poses headline risk. The North American session features US PPI, which is not a market-sensitive report. However, economists will look for clues into tomorrow's CPI report. Lower gasoline prices may weigh on the headline CPI, but the core is expected to be unchanged at 1.7%, where it has been since May.

Our calculations put fair value for the December Fed funds contract, assuming a 25 bp rate hike next month, at 1.295%. That is where the contract settled yesterday. However, fiscal policy, i.e., tax reform is overshadowing monetary policy at the moment. The House seems to be moving toward a vote later this week, even though there may still be some last minute adjustments. President Trump is expected to address the House Republicans before the vote. Judging from the tweet storm, POTUS wants the bill to include a repeal of the individual mandate for the Affordable Care Act and wants to cut the top tax rate.

Separately, we note that a bipartisan group of Senators appears to have agreed to the number of US financial institutions regarded as systemically important from 40 to around 12. The regulatory obligations of banks with less than $250 bln in assets will be reduced. The Senate bill is co-sponsored by nine Democrats, suggesting the bill will likely secure the necessary 60 votes.

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