US equities suffered a weak session yesterday on the Apple sales warning and that market cap giant dropped some 10% on the session. As well, much was made about the US ISM Manufacturing registering its largest drop in a decade in December, with ISM reporting that some manufacturers may be held back by concerns that the next round of US-China tariffs will hurt business.
But let’s recall another likely source of the slowdown: weak oil prices. A large percentage of US manufacturing activity is linked to the oil patch and oil prices crossed below important support starting in early November, sliding some 40% from top to bottom. Back in December 2014 the ISM Manufacturing survey dropped over two points to 54.7 and for several months afterward, as oil prices were in a freefall that arguably started in October of that year, slid all the way to well below 50 by early 2016.
The low coincided with the very month the oil price was bottoming out below 30 dollars per barrel. More indicative of a US slowdown would be a weak ISM Non-manufacturing survey, which represents the dominant services sectors of the US economy and over the last quarter has registered an unprecedented three months in a row above 60. A bit too early to price in a Fed reversal, in other words, which the market is increasingly doing as the odds of a rate cut from the Fed by December of this year have risen to almost 50/50 odds.
Calming nerves somewhat overnight, Japan managed to cut a significant portion of session losses as of this writing and the Caixin Dec. Services PMI registered a positive surprise, while Hong Kong stocks brushed off the negative mood and rallied strongly from new local lows.
Looking ahead to today’s US jobs report, the risks point to upside surprises triggering the most volatility as sentiment is very much in the dumps to start the year – perhaps excessively so. Yesterday’s very strong ADP payrolls growth (+274k) may or may not be indicative of today’s official nonfarm payrolls release, and today’s average hourly earnings will be far less important than the release for January, as 22 US states will hike their minimum wage as of January 1. After two months at the cycle high at 3.1% year-on-year, today’s print is expected at +0.3% month-on-month and +3.0% year-on-year.
Chart: USDJPY
Charts have been ripped apart by the JPY flash crash, but conditions have quickly calmed here and the market may be more sensitive to positive news than negative news at this point. Even if USDJPY is headed lower, an upside US data surprise and solid sell-off in US treasuries after the recent brutal rally could drive plenty of upside before a new sell-off sets in. This isn’t to call the direction, but rather to point out the tactical two-sided risks. First pivot area is the overnight highs near 108.50 and then perhaps the weekly Ichimoku cloud areas around 109.50-110.00 and ultimately the 40-week moving average higher still. The next major chart area lower is the 105.00 area.