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Global Macro and Markets
While this falls short of the scene setting for September that some were hoping for, markets have seized on this and Treasuries have rallied aggressively. The yield on the 2Y UST fell 10.1 basis points, and 10Y yields fell 11bp to just 4.03%. A September cut is now priced in with certainty, and almost three cuts are priced in by the year-end. With the labour market coming under closer scrutiny, tomorrow’s payrolls will get even greater attention.
EURUSD responded to the FOMC by rising, but with less certainty than the bond market, and has settled only slightly higher at 1.0824. The AUD has recovered from its inflation-driven drop yesterday and is back to 0.6544. The JPY is stronger, and sitting right on the 150 line. Cable was very choppy yesterday but has finished stronger at 1.2854. Asian FX had a good day yesterday. The THB followed the JPY stronger, rising by more than a per cent. The KRW, MYR and PHP all followed stronger. USDCNY is now down to 7.2267. US equities took comfort in Powell’s comments and rallied too. The S&P 500 gained 1.58% and the Nasdaq rose 2.64%. It was also a good day for Chinese stocks. The Hang Seng and CSI 300 both rose more than 2%.
Eurozone inflation yesterday missed the consensus for no change and ticked up 1bp to 2.6% YoY in July, further complicating the ECB’s September meeting decision.
Today, we also have the Bank of England, which is expected to cut Bank Rate to 5.0% from 5.25%
South Korea: Exports growth accelerated to 13.9% YoY in July (vs 5.1% in June) but came in below the market consensus of 18.4%. Favourable calendar effects are at work to stimulate the headline number. And adjusting for working days, average daily exports rose 7.1% YoY, which is a decent number, but a moderation from the double-digit growth of the past five months. Meanwhile, imports rose 10.5% YoY in July (vs -7.5% in June, 13.4% market consensus). Due to the import rebound, the trade surplus narrowed to USD 3.6bn in July from USD 7.9 bn in June.
What to look out for: S Korea July trade, PMIs from Japan, China, S. Korea
August 1stUS: FOMC rate decisionS Korea : July trade balance, Imports & exports, Manufacturing PMIJapan: Jibun Bank Manufacturing PMIAustralia: June trade balance, Imports & exportsChina: July Caixin China PMIPhilippines: July Manufacturing PMIIndia: July Manufacturing PMIIndonesia: July CPIAugust 2ndS Korea: July CPIJapan: July monetary baseAustralia: July PPISingapore: PMIUS: July non-farm payrollsMore By This Author:Federal Reserve: Setting The Scene For A September Cut
Disappointing Eurozone Inflation Makes September Rate Cut A Close Call
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