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Global Macro and Markets
Currencies don’t seem convinced by the latest decline in yields, and EURUSD is little changed at 1.0874, though this may also be being held in check ahead of today’s ECB meeting and the expectation of a 25bp rate cut from them. The AUD and Cable are also little changed over the last day, though the unwinding of the carry trade, which gave the JPY a large boost yesterday seems to have been short-lived, and USDJPY is back up at around 156 today. The CAD was briefly weaker following the dovish BoC rate cut, though this didn’t last for long. Within the Asian FX space, the picture is quite mixed. The KRW made the strongest gains on the day, though saw some weakness late in the session. The INR also made back some of the losses it suffered following the Indian election results and is back below 83.4 again. Elsewhere, there were losses for the IDR and THB. USDCNY rose slightly to 7.2477.
US stocks were lifted by the growing optimism that weaker data will lead to rate cuts (though the evidence for this is still extremely tentative). The S&P 500 rose 1.18% and the Nasdaq rose 1.96%. Chinese stocks didn’t benefit from this and the Hang Seng finished 0.1% lower while the CSI 300 was down 0.58%.
Taiwan: Taiwan publishes its May CPI inflation data this afternoon. We are expecting inflation to edge up to 2.1% YoY from 1.95% YoY in April. The April electricity price hikes already caused a direct uptick in the electricity component of CPI as well as PPI inflation in last month’s data, but it should take some time before these costs are fully passed on to consumers. Inflation will likely trend above the 2% target for several months before cooling but is not expected to be severe enough to cause another rate hike.
What to look out for: Australia’s trade numbers and Taiwan’s inflation
Australia trade balance (6 June)
Taiwan CPI inflation (6 June)
ECB policy meeting (6 June)
US initial jobless claims (6 June)
India RBI policy meeting (7 June)
Taiwan trade (7 June)
US non-farm payrolls (7 June)
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