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The Dollar for now fails to build on yesterday’s rebound

Markets

More technical, order driving trading for global markets yesterday. An almost empty eco calendar left investors counting down to upcoming data (EMU CPIs today and tomorrow, US PCE deflators on Friday, key early month data next week) and prevented clear directional moves. A $70 bln US Treasury auction was OK, but hardly left any traces on the charts. At the end of the day, US yields rose 1-2 bps across the curve (3.4 bps decline in 2-y yield was due to a benchmark change). German bunds outperformed with yields easing 1.9 bps (2-y) and 3.4 bps (30-y). (US) equities traded cautious ahead of Nvidia results after the close (Nasdaq -1.12%). Results mostly met analyst expectations, but investors apparently had hoped for a stronger forecast/guidance, triggering further (tech-driven) equity losses after the close. After a Fed-driven setback of late, the dollar tried to avoid further deterioration of the technical picture. DXY rebounded off the 100.52/62 area (YTD low/end 2023 low) to close at 101.09. EUR/USD for now also aborted the test of the 1.12 area (close 1.112). Sterling corrected against the overall USD comeback (cable 1.3191) but continued it outperformance against the euro as the BOE is expected to take longer to further join the ECB and Fed easing cycle (next step only seen at the November meeting, unchanged in September).

This morning, Asian equity markets mostly traded with in red, but the damage for the Nvidia setback yesterday on WS remains modest after all. US yields are little changed. Fed’s Bostic in a speech overnight admitted that there is a case for bringing forward the timing of rate cuts, but still wants more evidence as he wants to prevent a scenario where the Fed cut rates and then has to raise them again. The dollar for now fails to build on yesterday’s rebound (EUR/USD 1.1135, DXY 100.95). The yen slightly underperforms (USD/JPY 144.75). Today’s eco calendar is better filled with national August inflation data in Belgium, Spain and Germany. The EC also will release European confidence data. In the US, the second reading of the US Q2 GDP growth, pending home sales and jobless claims will be published. German and Spanish HICP inflation is expected to cool further to respectively 0.0% m/m and 2.0% y/y and 0.2% m/m and 2.5% y/y. ECB’s Lane is scheduled to speak. Easing of headline inflation will cement expectations for a next 25 bps ECB cut in September, but markets will keep a close eye at the underlying dynamics (core, services) to make up their mind on the timing for follow-up action. With the Fed focus now turning ever more to the labour market, jobless claims still might cause some intraday price jitters. In the run-up to next week key US data, we expect core yields to hold near recent bottom levels. We don’t anticipate a protracted USD comeback yet.

News and views

ANZ New Zealand’s Business Outlook soared from 27.1 to 50.6 in August, the highest level in a decade. Especially the forward looking activity outlook improved, rising from 16.3 to 37.1. Experienced own activity rose only very marginally and remains at low levels, from -24.3 to -23.1. It implies that the hurdle for expecting better times ahead is very low. ANZ reported that 41% of firms intended to raise their prices in the next three months. The amount by which they intend to raise them rose from 1.4% to 1.6%. Inflation expectations on the other hand dived below 3% for the first time since July 2021 (2.9% from 3.2%). The survey specifically mentions that the large increases in confidence were already visible in the responses gathered ahead of the RBNZ’s first policy rate cut, though anticipation played as role as well of course. NZD swap rates rose 4 to 5 bps following the release. Kiwi dollar strength takes over from dollar weakness in this month’s. NZD/USD surge with the pair approaching 0.63 (from <0.59 early August) for the first time since early January.

New EU car registrations were nearly flat in Y/Y-terms in July (+0.2%). Seven months into 2024, new car registrations increased by 3.9%, reaching more than 6.5mn units. This is the result of a low comparison base. Batteryelectric (BEV) cars accounted for 12.1% of the EU car market, down from 13.5% the previous year. Hybrid-electric vehicles increased their market share, growing from 25.5% to 32%. The combined share of petrol and diesel cars fell to 46%, down from 50%. Registrations of BEV cars declined by 10.8% to 102.7k units with gains in Belgium (+44.2%!; 30% share), the Netherlands and France unable to offset a steep drop in Germany (-36.8%).

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