Macro: Sandcastle economics
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Summary: The S&P 500 surged to a fresh record high with tech stocks being the key driver, as UoM survey pointed to soft landing with strong sentiment and easing inflation expectations, and these hopes could be bolstered this week as we get US GDP and PCE. On the earnings front, focus shifts to Netflix and Tesla. China pessimism on watch as loan prime rate announcement is due today, and focus will shift to Bank of Japan tomorrow. Dollar ended the week higher.
The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events.
US Equities: The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 surged 2%, reaching a record high at 17,314 on Friday. The broader market benchmark, S&P500 Index gained 1.2% to 4,840, marking a new all-time high closing level. Semiconductor stocks led, with the PHLX Semiconductor Index surging 4%, led by strong gains in AMD, Broadcom, Rambus, Lam Research, Qualcomm, and Nvidia, among others, all rising over 4%. The upbeat outlook from TSMC, the Taiwan-based global chip manufacturing giant reported last week propelled the sentiment of the semiconductor space. This week, Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble are releasing results before the market opens, followed by Netflix after the close on Tuesday. Tesla and Lam Research are reporting on Wednesday and Intel is announcing results on Thursday. A surge in ahead of upcoming mega-cap earnings in the coming weeks and persistent anticipation of a March rate cut by the Fed is likely to underpin the renewed strength of the U.S. equity market in the near term.
Fixed income: The Treasury yield curve twisted on Friday, with the 2-year yield rising 3bps while the 10-year yield declined 2bps from the previous day amid the strongest University of Michigan consumer sentiment reading since July 2021 partly due to falling short-term and long-term inflation expectations. Over the week, the 2-year yields went up by 24bps while the 10-year yield rose by 18bps in the midst of strong data and hawkish Fedspeak, particularly Governor Waller who stressed that rate cuts would be gradual and executed “methodically and carefully” and played down the risk of potential stress in the repo markets. Fed officials are in blackout this week ahead of the January 30-31 FOMC meeting. On economic data, the focus will be on the GDP first estimate on Thursday and the PCE deflator on Friday.
China/HK Equities: Negative sentiment dominated the Hong Kong and mainland China stock markets. The Heng Seng Index fell 0.5% to end the week 5.9% lower at 15,309 while the CSI300 Index registered a 0.2% daily loss or a 0.4% weekly loss. The Hong Kong stock market benchmark plunged 10.2% in the first three weeks of the year while the CSI300 dropped by 4.7% during the same period. Historical low valuations bring little buying interest as the economic recovery in China fails to gather momentum and businesses are lacking confidence. Foreign investor selling and index derivative products hedging added to the woes. Meanwhile, Reuters reported on Friday that China ordered some highly indebted local governments to halt infrastructure projects. During the week, Premier Li Qiang ruled out “massive stimulus” for “short-term growth while accumulating long-term risks”. Investors who are hoping for policy stimuli, will very likely, in our opinion, continue to be disappointed and the market is still in the process of finding a bottom.
FX:The DXY index, reflecting the dollar moves, pushed lower on Friday as S&P 500 moved to a new record high, but was higher for the week. Support at 103 will be on watch as this week could bring focus back on soft landing hopes with US GDP likely to remain strong while core PCE is expected to soften, while Fed speakers enter a quiet period ahead of Jan 31 meeting. EURUSD still remained short of a move above 1.09 after turning higher from 200DMA last week. USDJPY still above 148 with eyes turning to BOJ meeting on Tuesday. CAD and NOK outperformed, with AUDUSD still attempting a break above 0.66 while NZD underperformed. China’s loan prime rate decision due today, and USDCNH could target a move below 7.20 with rates expected to be left unchanged.
Commodities: Crude oil continued to struggle to find a direction last week as Mideast risks persisted and macro volatility also underpinned with Fed speakers trying to pushback on market’s rate cut expectations. Meanwhile, IEA said that oil markets could remain well-supplied in 2024. Natural gas slumped as traders looked forward to the end of winter while storage remained abundant. Metals rose as dollar softened, with copper also finding support from supply side issues.
Macro:
Macro events: China PBoC LPR (Jan), US Leading Index (Dec)
Earnings: Brown & Brown, Equity Lifestyle, United Airlines, Zions Bancorp
In the news:
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