Tag Archives: 2016

All to play for

Sceptical FX and rates markets looking at Fed (and world) through dovish-tinted spectacles 

The US Federal Reserve (Fed) has cried wolf many times in the past nine months, preparing the market for a rate hike only to then back down and further cut its estimate of the appropriate policy rate. As a result, the sceptical US rates and FX markets’ natural tendency is to look at US and global data and events through decidedly dovish-tinted spectacles, giving weight to “negatives” while seemingly discounting all but the most compelling evidence pointing to a December hike. The past eight days are a case in point. Read more

It’s a Fed hiking cycle Jim, but not as we know it

Tomorrow’s Fed policy meeting decision is unlikely to throw up any surprises, with the market having priced out any chance of a hike. The real focus will be on the language of the accompanying statement.

The market has arguably already priced in the possibility of a slightly less dovish Fed, with US yields at a one-month high. The US labour market remains robust, inflation expectations have ratcheted up, as have house prices. Chinese economic activity has picked up and global equities and commodity prices have surged in the past couple of months.

But the Fed is also likely to reiterate its concerns about slowing global growth, US business investments and exports and the headwind to US growth from the manufacturing sector. This nuanced picture is summarised in the heat-maps in Figures 5 & 6.

Moreover, the Fed has made clear it would look beyond potentially temporary developments and could well play down the recent rebound in global energy prices and in major economies such as China.

I therefore expect the Fed to be constructive enough tomorrow to keep US yields in reasonably narrow ranges but to stop short of encouraging a significant repricing for a June hike.

This remains a challenging balancing act for the Fed as equity markets and non-commodity currencies have been flat-lining recently. If the Fed intensifies its dovish warnings, markets could start looking more closely at what is keeping the Fed from delivering only its second hike in a decade. Conversely, a more hawkish stance could spook a market attuned to dovish Fed rhetoric.

My core scenario remains for the Fed to hike rates once or twice this year, which would be sufficient to expose the soft under-belly of EM currencies. Read more

What to expect in 2016 – same, same, but worse

Trading on Fear

It is clear that markets so far this year are trading on sentiment, more specifically fear, with hard-data playing second fiddle. Or more accurately, price action suggests that markets are focusing on disappointing December numbers (e.g. US ISM) or even reasonably uneventful data (Chinese manufacturing PMI) and ignoring strong data such as U.S non-farm payrolls, Chinese services PMI and exports (see Figure 1).  The hit-and-miss approach of Chinese policy-makers to stabilise equity markets (and ultimately growth) have done little to restore confidence. I nevertheless flag in Figure 37 some of the key data and events to focus on this year. Read more