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Marketmind: Dollar swoons in upbeat inflation vigil

Published 07/12/2023, 06:02 AM
Updated 07/12/2023, 06:12 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Vegetables are pictured at a produce shop at Reading Terminal Market after the inflation rate hit a 40-year high in January, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. February 19, 2022.  REUTERS/Hannah Beier

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

World markets leaned positively into another critical U.S. inflation report later on Wednesday, seeding a dollar slide to two-month lows that's revved-up yen and sterling gains.

The importance of the monthly U.S. consumer price report for Federal Reserve thinking and the entire U.S. rates complex is not hard to see. For now, futures are confident of at least one more quarter-point Fed hike this month but still see less than a 50-50 chance of another move by yearend.

And June's CPI readout should be a marker if the consensus forecast for almost a full percentage-point drop in the headline inflation rate to two year lows of just 3.1% is borne out. Perhaps more important for the Fed, however, is how much the now higher "core" rate of inflation recedes - and that drop is expected to be by a more modest 0.3 point to 5.0%.

Still, encouraged by a screed of other positive disinflation signals this week, U.S. markets are relatively buoyant going into the release and still feel the end of the Fed rate rise campaign is nigh.

U.S. stocks climbed for the second day in a row on Tuesday and S&P500 futures are positive ahead of today's open - with more signs of rotation in the outperformance of small cap stocks versus the mega cap tech sector, while banks advanced ahead of second-quarter earnings later this week.

Fed futures haven't shifted much, but Treasury bond yields continue to walk back from last week's peaks and volatility there has ebbed a bit - with one eye on a 10-year Treasury auction later in the session.

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But the dollar's ongoing slide was most notable.

Alongside thoughts of 'peak Fed', speculation seems to be rising once again that the Bank of Japan will gradually wind-down its super-easy monetary policy stance over the coming months. The dollar/yen exchange rate, now almost 4% down from mid-year peaks, skidded to its lowest in almost a month.

Spurred by aggressive expectations of Bank of England interest hikes far above the Fed's, in order to rein in Britain's outlying inflation problem, the pound briefly hit its highest in 15 months on Wednesday before recoiling. UK bank stocks pushed higher on the rates view and a relatively clean bill of health from Wednesday's financial stability report from the BOE.

Other central banks also gave some cause for applause.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand paused its long-running rate rise campaign early on Tuesday. And although the Bank of Canada is expected to raise rates another notch later in the day, the decision will be watched closely for hesitation there too.

Elsewhere, Asia bourses were mixed. Japan's Nikkei dialled back amid the sharp yen gains. Shanghai stocks fell, but Hong Kong added more than 1% on this month's optimistic noises about tech sector regulation and upbeat credit data. European indices were up smartly.

The deals world was enlivened as Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) cleared major hurdles to its plan to buy videogame maker Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI) on Tuesday after a U.S. judge gave a thumbs-up to the $69 billion deal and a British regulator suggested it could reconsider its opposition. Activision shares surged 10% and Microsoft shares rose 64 cents to $332.47.

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Events to watch for later on Wednesday:

* U.S. June consumer price report

* Bank of Canada policy decision

* Federal Reserve issues 'Beige Book' of economic conditions

* Richmond Federal Reserve President Thomas Barkin, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, Minneapolis Fed chief Neel Kashkari and Cleveland Fed boss Loretta Mester all speak

* U.S. President Joe Biden at NATO summit in Vilnius

* U.S. Treasury sells 10-year notes

 

(By Mike Dolan, editing by Nick Macfie mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. Twitter: @reutersMikeD)

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