The special context and market backdrop of this CPI release. Market energy is rather low here coming into this release, and EURUSD, for example, has been stuck in a tight range, having failed to stray more than 100 pips from the sticky 1.1000 level for nearly an entire month, while USDJPY has coiled around after the big pump-and-dump reaction to the Bank of Japan meeting on the Friday before last. The market feels comfortable with its expectations that the Fed will pause its tightening cycle from here, with a small minority even expressing the view that the Fed will be ready to cut at the July FOMC meeting and a 25 basis point cut almost fully priced for the September meeting and December priced over 70 basis points (-0.7%) below the current Fed Funds rate.
To see a significant volatility injection into this market, we’ll likely need to see a surprise in the core data, preferably the M/M expectations (0.3% in this case.). An upside surprise is USD positive, while a negative surprise should play USDJPY negative and generally JPY positive, particularly if long US treasury yields dip. Whether a soft release (presumably a -0.1% miss) proves more broadly USD negative will depend on whether risk sentiment posts an enthusiastic reaction. Given that the market has already priced the end of the Fed tightening cycle and the beginning of rate cuts just over four months from now, with significant further cuts in 2024 we almost need a soft print to justify market expectations. It is far more difficult to ponder the reaction function to a hot release, which the market may try to look through, but the knee-jerk would probably be for a spike in USDJPY higher, risk-off (particularly in Nasdaq 100) and for higher US 2-year yields. The key in all cases is to watch the treasury market for confirmation of anything – without a move that sticks outside of the recent range in 2-year and/or 10-year yields, this CPI release may just be that much more short term noise. And note the split reaction last month (read as positive for sentiment, but then the market closed negative, while FX was less affected by the change in temperature).
Table: FX Board of G10 and CNH trend evolution and strength.
The most notable development over the last five days is the mark-down in the Euro relative to its former top-dog status together with CHF. Without more positive buzz surrounding the China re-opening story or at least follow through higher in global risk sentiment, the NZD out-performance is beginning to look a bit stretched.