Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Summary: The USD eased overnight although some of the gains returned in Asia, but commodities were on a firmer footing as EU gas supply threat looms. ECB and BOJ meetings to take the center stage this week as Fed remains in a blackout, and RBA minutes confirmed a hawkish stance. Hiring and spending alerts have started to come in from key companies, and this will likely be the theme of the current earnings season as cost pressures reign. EURUSD’s move higher from parity has limited legs with headwinds from gas supplies and Italy’s political crisis adding to ECB’s woes.
US stocks move from gains to losses, with S&P 500 (US500.I) and Nasdaq 100 (USNAS100.I) both falling over 0.8%, erasing half of Friday’s gains for two key reasons. Firstly, corporate earnings results and outlooks weighed on sentiment. And secondly, inflationary pressures rose up again; with the oil price jumping 4.7% to $102 on fears Russia will keep capping gas supplies to Europe, while a lower US dollar supports oil moving up, along with other commodities as they trade in the USD.
Recession fears are likely to pick up again as earnings season gathers pace into the next week. The hiring and spending freeze from Apple and the hiring slowdown from Goldman Sachs is a precursor for what’s to come. But US equity futures pointed slightly higher with commodities on the front foot again, which helped Japan’s Nikkei 225 (NI225.I) to open the week with gains of 0.7%. Singapore’s STI (ES3) was down over 0.3% as Genting Singapore led the drop. China equities, meanwhile, failed to catch a bid from property sector support measures, and CSI 300 was down 0.5% while HIS declines close to 1%.
Australia’s ASX200 trades 0.2% lower, but holds an eight-day high, supporting by the coal price surging to a record and moving coal stocks higher. The Energy and Materials (mining) sectors are higher following the fall of the USD and the push up with commodity prices, while also stocking positive sentiment into commodities is that China’s property sector might get band aid stimulus. Total mortgages of $296 billion have been stalled as many people don’t want to pay their mortgages. Chinese lenders may be approving mortgage payments be paused, on properties with stalled projects. The Iron ore price (SCOA, SCOQ2) moved back above $100, attempting to make gains for the second day. The market is also parsing through quarterly results from BHP (BHP), energy company Ampol (ALD) and as well as digesting better than expected results from electronics seller JB Hi-Fi (JBH), who reported online revenue surged 50% in FY22. And finally, the market is factoring in the hawkish tone from the RBA minutes which reiterated further increases in interest rates will be made.
EURUSD turned back lower from 1.0200 after its run higher from parity. This week is key for EUR with three key catalysts. One, EU gas supplies remain under threat with Gazprom declaring force majeure on flows to a number of European buyers. This will further boost inflation in the coming months and drag on growth. Meanwhile, the ECB remains stuck between a hard and a rock place as a 25bps rate hike which the consensus expects this week will be too little too late. Eurozone June CPI is due today and a new fresh high will likely be printed at 8.6% y/y from 8.1% y/y previously. Moreover, now Italy's political uncertainty is also adding to the mix of headwinds for the EUR.
The yen is seen in range amid caution over monetary policy meeting in Japan this week, but also as the USD has softened and recession concerns eased. USDJPY bounced off 138 level overnight but traded below 138.50 in Asia. While the Bank of Japan will likely maintain its stimulus at this week’s meeting, the BoJ's Outlook Report will garner greater attention as it is expected to show a downgrade in its growth forecast for FY2022 and an increase in its inflation forecast.
Oil prices are softer in early Asia, after climbing above $100 a barrel overnight following last week's steep losses. While the broader oil market was firmer due to a softer dollar, oil also got a push higher due to EU gas supply issues and Saudis declining to make any promises on future output increases following President Biden's visit. Near-term market focus will be on the next OPEC+ meeting, which is scheduled for August 3.
After a record decline last week, Copper found some support overnight mostly due to a softer dollar but also some news about China adding support measures for its real estate sector. China is encouraging lenders to extend loans to qualified real estate projects, and also allowing homeowners to temporarily stop mortgage payments on stalled property projects without penalties in order to keep the confidence in the property sector intact. Supply issues also remain in focus, especially from Peru.
Goldman Sachs (GS) reported better than expected revenue, but it is the third major bank giving tepid signals ahead with the GS CFO saying the bank will slow hiring. Unlike JPMorgan, GS is not planning to pause buybacks. But it may bring in job cuts, like Wall Fargo and JPMorgan have laid off some home-lending workers. Apple (AAPL) added to concerns the Fed’s tightening will land the US in a recession with the company looking to limit spending and job growth at some divisions. This cautious stance mimics Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft, which are all reducing spending. Sor far this earnings season 40 of the S&P500 companies shared Q2 results/ guidance levels. Average earnings growth is negative, (-15%), while most companies are guiding for a slowdown in revenue and higher costs.
While the Fed is in a blackout period ahead of the July 26-27 FOMC meeting, the consensus has settled for another 75bps hike to 2.5% and that will probably give room to the Fed to keep its future options open. But, the doors for a 100bps rate hike are still not completely shut. US housing starts are due today, and will be key as Fed's Waller mentioned it as a factor when considering whether tightening needs to be accelerated to 100bps. Also, the Atlanta Fed GDPNow estimate is -1.5%, and this will also get a final update today before the GDP data is released next week.
Russia's Gazprom has told customers in Europe it cannot guarantee gas supplies because of 'extraordinary' circumstances. The letter from the Russian state gas monopoly said it was retroactively declaring ‘force majeure’ on supplies dating from June 14. The news comes as NordStream 1, the key pipeline delivering Russian gas to Germany and beyond, is undergoing annual maintenance meant to conclude on Thursday, and reports suggest that supplies are unlikely to be restored. Force majeure is standard in business contracts and spells out extreme circumstances that excuse a party from their legal obligations. Meanwhile, demand is picking up as EU faces a heatwave.
Chinese authorities have announced more measures to support the ailing property sector after reports suggested that homebuyers were boycotting mortgage payments. Authorities are providing emergency funding for uncompleted residential construction projects, or even "buy" the projects to make sure completion will be faster. In addition, past due mortgage payments for uncompleted projects could avoid paying interest penalties for a period of time (to be decided by banks and local governments). This is aimed to calm down mortgage borrowers.
The Italian Prime minister Mario Draghi will tell lawmakers Wednesday if he’ll resign. Draghi’s resignation will mean a new political hurdle for Italy and the EU which is already facing gas supply threats and a growth-inflation conundrum which the ECB may find hard to address. According to the latest polls, the Five-Star Movement would get crushed. A center-right tie-up led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy would win if its members stick together. This would be very bad news for the Eurozone at the worst time ever (lower growth, fragmentation risk, low market volumes and risk of energy crisis this winter). Expect a faster rise in Italian yields if this should happen. The European Central Bank should nonetheless refrain from intervening since this is related to political uncertainty and not “unwarranted” tightening.
As Ole Hansen pointed out in Saxo’s recent commodity update, we have been watching the brent spread (the difference between physical spot oil and the Brent futures contract) trade at a record high, despite the oil price losing 20%. This means, physical buyers are paying a record premium for cargoes due to tight supply. While paper traders are selling oil futures contracts to hedge recessionary concerns. Saxo’s view is the oil price could stay range bound for the next few months, trading between $95 to $115.
The RBA made it clear it will make more hikes in the coming months, while making larger hikes and hikes between meetings, potentially. What gives the RBA room to do this is; the economy has strong momentum, with record high retail sales, and record low unemployment. The RBA also wants to cool inflation and see inflation getting worser in the near term, before peaking later in 2022. While global factors are also pushing up prices, strong local demand and a tight labour market are also contributing upward pressure on prices. Floods in east coast of Australia and floods in July will also add to inflation persisting for a longer period of time according to the RBA. Governor Low previously warned the benchmark rate may go to 2.5%, but today, interest rate futures pricing implies the means the cash rate will be 3.2% at the end of the year. This raised the concern the economy may well slip into a recession. AUDUSD rose to a third day high, 0.6826, but it still remains bearish at two-year lows. We see the hawkish tone of the Fed being stronger than the RBA, and this supports the USD. So we expect selling pressure to return to the AUDUSD.
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