Markets
Fed governor Waller was the sole highlight of yesterday’s uninspiring, holiday-thinned (Columbus Day in the US) start of the trading week. The man touted as current chair Powell’s successor said the “totality of the data” favours “more caution on the pace of rate cuts than was needed at the September meeting”. He called the latest above-consensus inflation reading disappointing. Those came after a blow-out September payrolls report. Waller did note the October edition could show a payroll reduction of more than 100k due to recent hurricanes and the Boeing strike. But all in all He “continue[s] to judge that the U.S. economy is on a solid footing, with employment near the FOMC's maximum employment objective and inflation in the vicinity of our target” and that “if the economy continues in its current sweet spot, this [removing the considerable extent of policy restrictiveness] will happen gradually.” US stock markets were unlike bond markets open for business and rose to new record highs (DJI, S&P500). European equities struggled at first before closing higher as well. The German yield curve bear flattened with changes varying between +0.2 bps and 2.2 bps. French and Belgian bonds underperformed a bit following the rating outlook downgrades over fiscal sustainability concerns. The US dollar held the upper hand in currency markets. EUR/USD tested the 50% retracement on the April-September 2024 rise around 1.09. The trade-weighted dollar attacked parallel resistance at 103.34.
US markets are back in full swing today but won’ have an awful lot guidance from the eco calendar. Waller’s speech barely left a mark on the bond cash markets’ reopening this morning. The dollar is better bid. The abovementioned technical levels are intensively tested and risk being broken. This kind of chart-based trading will continue through the day. The US Empire Manufacturing index is due later today but isn’t a market-defining variable. Meanwhile, the (financial) earnings season steams ahead. The UK kicked off its economic update with the labour market report this morning. The outcome was a tad stronger-than-expected with the unemployment rate dropping from 4.1% to 4% and employment (in the three months through August) rising by 373k compared to a 240k estimate. A preliminary September reading showed a 15k drop but came with a downward revision of the month before. Earnings growth came in line and was with 4.9% (3M/YoY) the first sub 5% reading since mid-2022. So far this doesn’t suggest Bailey’s getting the more activist approach he’d like to have but there are still CPI numbers and retail sales due later this week. EUR/GBP in late European dealings slipped towards 0.835 and hovers near these levels after today’s report.
News and views
September CPI Inflation in India accelerated faster than expected from 3.65% Y/Y in August tot 5.49%. According to the Ministry of Statistics, the increase in September was likely due to a high base effect and whether conditions. The rise was nevertheless sharper than the 5.1% consensus expectation. Food price inflation which counts for almost half of the of the CPI basket, accelerated from 5.66% tot 9.24%. In a monthly perspective, headline inflation rose 0.62% with food prices rising 1.18% compared to August. Price rises for the likes of clothing and footwear (2.71% Y/Y) and housing (2.78% Y/Y) were more modest. Fuel and light prices even declined 1.39% compared to the same month last year. The faster than expected rise in inflation comes as the Reserve Bank of India at last week’s policy meeting shifted to a more neutral stance as it expects inflation to again cool after an uptick this autumn. The RBI has an inflation target of 4.0% and has its policy rate currently at 6.50%. Higher than expected inflation data question the room for the RBI to start gradual policy easing by the end of this year. At INR/USD 84.00+, the rupee trades near record low levels.
Oil remains under pressure in Asia this morning with Brent trading below $75 p/b. OPEC yesterday indicated that it sees lower global demand of oil during 2024. In addition, the oil price declined further on headlines from an article in the Washington Post that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu had told the US government that he intends to strike miliary targets in Iran rather than oil or nuclear facilities, easing some of the supply concerns and reducing the risk-premium on oil.
This non-exhaustive information is based on short-term forecasts for expected developments on the financial markets. KBC Bank cannot guarantee that these forecasts will materialize and cannot be held liable in any way for direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this document or its content. The document is not intended as personalized investment advice and does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold investments described herein. Although information has been obtained from and is based upon sources KBC believes to be reliable, KBC does not guarantee the accuracy of this information, which may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute a KBC judgment as of the data of the report and are subject to change without notice.
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