Markets

US September inflation printed hotter than expected and contained some important hawkish details such as rising food prices and accelerating supercore services inflation (to an annualized 3mMA of around 4%). Several Fed officials including NY’s Williams, Chicago’s Goolsbee and Richmond’s Barkin were not too worried and focused on the broader picture in which inflation is moving in the right direction. Bostic was the odd one out. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, the Atlanta Fed president said he was comfortable with skipping a meeting if the data say that’s appropriate. Coming shortly after a strong ISM, stellar payrolls and yesterday’s CPI, Bostic’s comments briefly sparked an uptick in yields and the dollar. The former finished lower nonetheless, unable to ignore the sharp jump in weekly jobless claims to the highest in more than a year (256k). North Carolina and Florida alone make more than 12k of the net 33k advance from the week before. Both states were hit by hurricane Helene. Net daily changes in US yields varied between -6.4 bps (2-yr) to +1.8 bps (30-yr). Underperformance of the long end was way more significant before an excellent 30-yr bond auction called off an intraday yield sprint of almost 7 bps (30-yr). The German yield curve’s shift was similar though much less sizeable (-2.7 bps to +0.6 bps). A fragile risk environment and proper gains in oil (Brent +3.7%) provided a cushion for the dollar. EUR/USD ended slightly lower (1.0934). DXY tested the 103 big figure for the first time since mid-August. Today’s economic calendar is a meagre one (Michigan consumer sentiment) and the US has a long weekend coming (Columbus Day on Monday). We don’t expect markets to move much in such an environment. The October US yield rally lost some steam, especially at the front where the 4% mark serves as a difficult-to-break resistance level. The dollar’s recent recovery may therefore ease a little as well. EUR/USD 1.0907 (50% retracement on the April-September EUR/USD rise) serves as first support. The financial start of the Q3 earnings season serves as a wildcard. We’d also mention a highly anticipated stimulus announcement of the Chinese finance minister tomorrow. It’s seen as a second chance after the country’s economic planning agency underwhelmed investors on Tuesday. Hopes this time around are for a massive CNY 2tn package.

News and views

“The French economy is holding up, but our public debt is colossal. It would be both cynical and fatal not to see it, say it and recognize it.” And so French Finance Minister Armand yesterday evening unveiled a 2025 budget which delivered a combined €60.6bn in spending cuts (2/3) and tax hikes (1/3) which should reduce the deficit from 6.1% of GDP to 5% next year. The aim is to get below the 3% deficit threshold by 2029, two years after the official EU goal. The debt ratio is projected to hit 114.7 of GDP from 112.9% this year. The government uses 1.1% growth and 1.8% inflation in its calculations. In the proposal, spending cuts zoom in things like medical costs, unemployment and reducing the number of public servants. Temporary levies on large companies (revenue > €1bn) should raise around €12bn over the next two years. Company stock buybacks would be subject to an exceptional tax when the shares are canceled. A 20% tax rate floor will be introduced for individuals earning €250k annually or couples earning double the amount to counter tax shelter effects. A controversial measure is delaying the indexation of pensions until July 1. The budget bill will be discussed in parliament starting next week and needs to be adopted by the end 2024. The government’s lack of parliamentary majority makes it extremely vulnerable to obstructions and confidence votes.

The Bank of Korea lowered its policy rate a first time this morning, from 3.5% to 3.25%, after keeping it level since January 2023. The central bank expects inflation to stabilize at the 2% target level and growth to moderate further. Growth uncertainties increased though due to the delayed recovery in domestic demand. Regarding financial stability, housing prices in the Seoul area and household debt growth are anticipated to gradually slow due to the effects of tightened macroprudential policies. The Board will thoroughly assess the trade-offs among variables such as inflation, growth, and financial stability, and carefully determine the pace of further policy rate cuts. Five members want to keep rates steady over the next three months, with one in favor of keeping the door open for a cut. Governor Rhee’s view are not disclosed. The Korean won barely manages to gain ground this morning with USD/KRW holding near recent highs around 1350.

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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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