The 7 most important words: “Time has come for policy to adjust” J. Powell - meaning the first Fed rate pivot in 4 years
WEEKLY TRENDS
The US non-farm payrolls were revised down unexpectedly by 818k from April 2023 through March 2024 (adding exceptionally 2.1m jobs instead of 2.9m) showing a much weaker US labour market which Jerome Powell responded to by indicating the Fed was finally preparing to ease rates for the first time in 4 years (a major switch and the beginning of what should be a new and long easing cycle)
With many participants returning to work, liquidity will also come back, S&P and Nasdaq are both just a few points away from their ATH which most likely will be tested
Focus will be placed on Nvidia’s Q2 earnings release on Wednesday after the close. Reminder: the FED meets on 17/18 Sep, the ECB on 12 Sep, the BOJ on 19/20, and the BOE on 19 Sep.
MARKETS
Equities
Another US stock rotation (Russell +3.5% while Nasdaq/S&P +1.5%)
Q2 earnings releases last week (stock WoW performance):
+++ UK JD Sports (+18%), Danish ALK (+14%), Swiss Huber/Suhner (+15%), US Target (+10%) and Swiss Re (+8%)
- - - US Macy’s (-10%), Norway Salmar (-9%), Danish GN (-10%), French Voltalia (-20%) and Dutch Redcare Pharmacy (-12%)
M&A: Walmart divested its 10% JD.com Chinese e-commerce holding (at an 11% discount for $3.6bn)
Analysts: Melrose (-6%) on UBS downgrade
Defense: Rheinmetall (-5%), Hensold (-8%), Saab (-8%)
Rates
US Treasury yields decreased WoW across the curve
Sep Fed rate cuts expected (-25bps, 2/3 chance, -50bps 1/3 chance) in 2024 (-100bps) in 2025 (a further -100bps)
US
Preliminary August PMI (Manufacturing at 48, the lowest reading in 8 months, Services at 55.2)
EU
Preliminary August PMI (Manufacturing at 45.6, Services at 53.3)
Japan
Before parliament on Friday, BOJ’s Governor Ueda said he will continue to adjust the degree of easing (economic forecasts dependent)
Commodities
Despite a much weaker US dollar (DXY index testing its support at 100) Gold and WTI are not benefitting from it. Silver and Aluminium are performing better, Cacao is up 14% Wow
Nota Bene
300 S&P500 stocks outperform the S&P index so far this quarter
Bank of America Global Fund Manager survey shows an August rotation into bonds, cash and healthcare versus equities (Japan and Eurozone)
US start-ups are going bust 7 times higher than in 2019
CALENDAR
Corporate Q2 earnings: in the USNvidia (28 Aug after close), PDD (26), Salesforce and Crowdstrike (28 Aug), Dell (29 Aug); in EuropeVinci (27), Pernod Ricard (29)
Economic Data releases: US July PCE inflation (30 Aug)
WHAT ANALYSTS SAY
UBS - Chief Investment Office GWM- Forex and Commodities
UBS, 22 August 2024 - The week ahead : Has the USD weakened too much?
• The USD has weakened across the board recently. The latest pullback has pushed the dollar to key support levels and into oversold territory.
• Besides Jackson Hole, next week, activity data out of Europe, the US, and Japan are in focus and should provide valuable clues about the state of the global economy.
• In view of the recent USD pullback that could be followed by a potential consolidation and the longer term negative picture for the currency, we like to sell the downside risks in EURUSD for yield pickup. Alternatively, we like to be long the TWD vs. the IDR.
USD: Testing key support levels
The USD has weakened in recent weeks, with the initial pullback starting after the softer-than-expected US labor market report. However, the real weakness began to unfold as risk-sentiment recovered and investors sought better USD alternatives. EURUSD has broken above 1.10 and GBPUSD above 1.30. Those round numbers seem important, but even more important are the key technical levels, with EURUSD being close to the December 2023 high of 1.114 and GBPUSD to the July 2023 high of 1.314. The USD is close to such important support/resistance levels in many currency pairs. We believe a weaker USD in coming weeks is increasingly likely. Sharper moves are likely when such longterm highs and lows are being tested amid a changing fundamental backdrop.
EUR: EURUSD looking for new ranges
The EUR has stayed in tight ranges against most European currencies in recent weeks but saw bigger moves mainly against the JPY and recently against the USD. Next week’s most important data will be Europe’s inflation prints, starting Thursday with Spain and Germany, followed by the Eurozone inflation figures on Friday. We expect the numbers to decelerate and be within the expected ranges and therefore not affecting the ECB rate-cutting path. In our view, the ECB is on a predefined cycle of 25bps per quarter, and much would need to happen to change that course. With that view, we see a move higher in EURUSD to be driven mostly by US-centric news. Against other European peers, we see the EUR as slightly weaker.
GBP: The September-pause supports the pound
Next week will be light on the UK data front. Recent datapoints have remained rather upbeat, which led to markets to believe that the Bank of England will be the only major European central bank that will not cut rates in September. We agree with that view and expect the Bank of England to leave rates unchanged in September, delivering the next rate cut most likely in November. That stands in clear contrast to the ECB and the Fed, both of which we expect to cut rates in September. Sterling therefore has a good chance to beat the EUR and the USD in coming weeks, with GBPUSD moving further to 1.30 and EURGBP moving to 0.84.
CHF: One more rate cut
In the context of broad USD weakness, the Swiss franc has benefited over the last week with USDCHF grinding lower. As the Fed braces for a first-rate cut in September and fears of a US recession have alleviated with the latest macro data, other more pro-growth currencies have also rallied, leaving EURCHF stable amid better risk sentiment. Next week is light on Swiss data releases, with only the KOF sentiment indicator and the official reserves print due. The Swiss National Bank’s (SNB) potential activity on FX markets remains in focus, although CHF strength has been moderate lately. Despite a solid flash GDP print, we agree with market expectations of a 25bps rate cut from the SNB in September, which should leave the currency unscathed. EURCHF levels north of 0.96 should be used to hedge EUR longs.
JPY: Near-term consolidation
Japan is due to report retail sales and industrial production data next week, which is likely to show an ongoing improvement in economic dynamics. That said, we believe the BoJ is not in a hurry to hike rates in the coming months, which blunts the potential for another round of yen strength. Moreover, speculative positioning in the yen has already turned slightly net-long. This, coupled with the fact that Fed rate-cut expectations are already well priced, implies the USDJPY exchange rate should remain fairly stable in the near term, in a 145-150 range.
CNY: Policy easing likely to remain reactive and Gradual
CNY is spiralling higher against the USD to 7.13 as broad dollar weakening continued and China kept key lending benchmarks unchanged this week. The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has been facing a dilemma—between balancing supporting demand and deflation pressures with rate cuts, and managing currency depreciation pressure with stable interest rates. We expect the Fed's imminent rate-cutting cycle to provide a more favorable time window for the PBoC to ease in Q4. China’s side of the story hasn't changed much—portfolio and direct investment inflows remain weak, while USD demand from Chinese corporates recently reached a record high. Given the attractive rates and macro backdrop, investors can consider diversifying their loan exposure with CNY.
ILS: Bank of Israel to stick with caution
The Bank of Israel is likely to keep its policy rate on hold at 4.50% next week, despite disappointing economic growth in 2Q24. Inflation moved above the 3% target again (July: 3.2% y/y) and risks from the war to the budget and shekel remain dominant. The region is still at risk of an escalation in the ongoing conflict and the shekel remains driven by the security backdrop. The currency’s risk premium is high, and while a ceasefire agreement for Gaza could lead to a partial unwind, this has been elusive so far. Israeli and Hamas leadership have failed to reach common ground, even in the face of diplomatic efforts and renewed pressure in recent weeks. The main downside risk for the shekel remains a multi front war with Hezbollah, Iran, and its proxies.
Crude oil: Trading close to 2024 lows
Oil prices are trading close to the lows of this year and have given up most of the spot price gains seen in 2024. Still, investors that have been long crude this year, have made high-single digit returns thanks to roll gains due to a downward-sloped futures curve and the cash collateral from elevated US interest rates. Recession fears in the US following a weak job market report initiated the sell-off, and ongoing ceasefire hopes in Gaza have lowered crude's risk premium. Lastly, weak Chinese crude imports and refinery activity in July sparked fears of poor Chinese oil demand. China used to be an engine of oil demand growth, so the July weakness likely amplified demand concerns. We continue to expect Brent to recover into a USD 85-90/ bbl range over the coming months. Hence, we continue to recommend risk-seeking investors to sell the downside price risks in crude oil.
US natural gas: Lower prices trigger supply reductions
US natural gas prices temporarily fell again below the USD 2/mmbtu mark in early August, before rebounding to USD 2.1/mmbtu more recently. Congestion fears have dragged prices lower, and the lower prices are finally weighing on natural gas production. The outlook for prices in 2025 under a normal winter remains positive, although a large part of that price appreciation is already anticipated by markets. Still, winter weather remains a risk, particularly if it turns out to be very mild. Higher prices are needed in 2025 to support stronger export demand, in our view. High roll costs remain a drag on performance. Hence, we still recommend investors to stay on the sidelines.
Gold: Million-dollar bars
After reaching multiple record highs this year and outperforming major stock indexes, for the first time ever a single gold bar (400 ounces) is worth USD 1m. We believe gold has more room to run and reiterate our positive outlook, with a target of USD 2,600/oz by yearend and USD 2,700/oz by mid-2025. Key factors in our view include a revival of large inflows to ETFs—something that has been missing since April 2022. We also see a pickup in demand from speculators where net-long positions remain far from extreme. Outside these activities, we see central bank net-buying remaining elevated this year and next, albeit moderating from its record pace in 1H24. With holdings relative to total reserve assets still at modest levels and dedollarization trends persisting, we forecast central banks will buy 900-950 metric tonnes in 2024 (vs. +1,000 metric tons in 2023). Jewelry demand has also moderated, but seasonal tailwinds should rise from 4Q24. Moreover, we believe portfolio hedges, like gold, can help manage heightened uncertainty—about 5% within a USD-balanced portfolio is optimal.
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