Ueda explained When NIRP disappears, ZIRP is His view of the world
“Even if we end minus rates, the accommodative financial conditions will likely continue.” This was the key comment from Kazuo Ueda’s testimony in parliament last night, which followed a similar comment from BOJ Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida on Thursday. It should be no surprise that this is the case as the recent data from Tokyo, notably the inflation data, has been softening quickly and reducing the need for tighter policy. After all, for two decades the BOJ has been trying to overcome a generational view that deflation is a given and instill an inflationary mindset in the populace there. If inflation readings are falling, they will definitely not be in a hurry to raise interest rates.
It appears, from these comments, that while the BOJ may lift the key deposit rate from its current -0.10% level, it would be a mistake to look for very much movement. My money is on either 0.00% or +0.10% as the peak. It should also be no surprise that the yen has suffered further on these comments with USDJPY having traded as high as 149.55 overnight, although it has since slipped back to unchanged at 149.40. There remains a great deal of belief that the BOJ is highly focused on 150.00 as a line in the sand to prevent further weakness. Personally, I think their line in the sand is higher, at least at 152.00 and perhaps even higher than that. They are very consciously making dovish comments while listening to every Fed speaker reiterate higher for longer and no rate cuts in the US anytime soon. They know the yen will fall further and are already prepared for that outcome; I assure you.
The talk of the market today Is whether revisions display That CPI’s recent Decline is so puissant Or if tis a ‘flation doomsday
It should not be that surprising that in a market bereft of serious data, traders and analysts are turning over every stone to find something on which to hang their hat. Today’s story is the annual CPI revisions that are due from the Bureau of Labor Statistics at 8:30 this morning. The reason this is getting so much play is that last year, the revision was dramatic, adjusting the annualized rate up to 4.3% from its pre-revision level of 3.1%, and casting doubt on just how much progress the Fed had actually made in their inflation battle. But last year was a dramatic outlier with respect to revisions as historically, the average adjustment is something like 3 basis points, so the different between 3.10% and 3.13%. In other words, nothing.
However, the concerns come from the fact that ever since Covid changed so much in the economy, measuring the data has become far more complex leading to potentially larger revisions. I have no way of knowing what will happen here, and I suspect there is an equal chance of the revisions showing CPI has actually been lower than reported, but the point is, this obscure data adjustment has become the topic du jour on an otherwise quiet day.
What we can do is game out how markets may respond to a surprisingly large adjustment in either direction. If, like last year, the revisions show inflation is running hotter than previously reported, I would look for bonds to sell off further, especially the 2-year, as it would push the probability of a rate cut further into the future. This would likely weigh on stocks and support the dollar overall. Oil has been in its own world, rallying on the increased middle east tensions, but metals would suffer, I think. And if the revision is substantially lower, just turn around all those movements. Any large revision will be a binary event.
But really, those were the major discussion points overnight. Turning to the markets, after another set of records in the US (although the S&P 500 couldn’t quite make 5000), Japanese equities rallied further on the interest rate story from above, setting new 34-year highs and approaching the 1989 bubble peak. Chinese shares are closed for a while now, but the Hang Seng, in a half-day session, managed to slide another -0.8%. However, the rest of Asia was in the green. In Europe, there is very little net movement this morning as we continue to hear from ECB speakers that rates will not be cut soon, although it is not clear anybody believes them given the overall economic weakness. Lastly in the US, futures are a touch higher at this hour (7:45), but only about 0.2%.
In the bond market, yields continue to edge higher with Treasuries up 2bps, and most European sovereigns higher by just 1bp. Interestingly, despite the Ueda comments overnight, JGB yields have crept 2bps higher along with everything else. It is hard to know if bond investors are more concerned with sticky inflation or massive issuance, but something has them uncomfortable this morning.
Oil, which has rallied all week is unchanged this morning as the market digests the fact that there will be no cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, and the Houthis continue to fire missiles into the Red Sea. As to the latter, given that ship traffic has fallen to near zero, that seems like a waste of ammunition, but so be it. Metals markets, meanwhile, are a touch softer this morning with copper the underperformer (-0.5%) although precious metals have edged lower as well.
Finally, the dollar continues to perform well overall, as we have already discussed the yen, but are also seeing it edge higher against most of its counterparts in the G10. The exception is NZD (+0.6%) which seems to believe that the RBNZ, after having paused in their rate hiking cycle, may raise rates yet again. On the EMG side, the most noteworthy mover is ZAR (-0.35%) suffering from metals weakness although we are seeing a bit of strength from the LATAM bloc with both MXN and BRL edging higher this morning.
And that’s really it today. Not only is there no additional data, but no Fed speakers are scheduled either. Next week will see a number of holidays around the world as Carnival begins alongside the Chinese New Year. Really, Tuesday’s CPI is the next key data point for us all. Until then, I expect that traders will want to close the S&P over 5000 but do not see an explosive move higher coming. As to the dollar, there is no reason for it to cede its recent gains.
Good luck and good weekend
Adf
I admit, I had to look it up.