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Almighty dollar awaits PMIs for more signs of Fed cut delays.
The US dollar continued flexing its muscles for this week, with the so-called ‘Trump trades’ showing no signs of cooling as the president-elect Republican party will control both chambers of the US Congress, which will make it very easy for Donald Trump to turn his pre-election promises into legislation.
The newly elected US president has been advocating for massive corporate tax cuts and tariffs on imported goods from around the globe, especially China, measures that are seen by the financial community as fueling inflation and thereby prompting the Fed to delay future rate reductions.
With the US CPI data already pointing to some stickiness in price pressures during October and Fed Chair Powell noting just yesterday that they do not need to rush in lowering interest rates, more market participants are becoming convinced that the Fed may need to take the sidelines soon. They are assigning a decent 37% chance for this happening in December and a stronger 57% for a January pause.
With that in mind, this week, dollar traders may closely monitor the preliminary S&P Global PMI data for the month of November, due out on Friday, for clues as to whether the state of the US economy can indeed allow Fed officials to proceed at a slower pace.
The prices charged subindices may attract special interest as traders may be eager to find out whether the October stickiness rolled over into November. If this is the case, the probability for a January pause may increase further, driving Treasury yields and the US dollar even higher.
On the same day, ahead of the US data, S&P Global will release the Eurozone and UK flash PMIs for November. In the Euro-area, the better-than-expected GDP data for Q3 and the rebound in CPI inflation for October have lessened the likelihood of a 50bps rate cut by the ECB at the upcoming decision.
Nonetheless, concerns that higher tariffs by a Trump-led US government could weigh on the Euro-area economy revived speculation for bold action by the ECB in December, with the euro tumbling to a more-than-one-year low.
Even if the PMIs point to some further improvement in business activity for November, concerns about the impact of Trump’s policies could remain elevated. Therefore, a potential rebound in the euro on the PMIs is likely to stay limited and short-lived.
The uncertainty surrounding Germany’s political scene could also be a headache for euro traders as a lengthy process to form a new coalition government may result in delays in entering negotiations with the US for finding common ground on trade.
In the UK, there are more important releases for pound traders coming in ahead of Friday’s PMIs. On Wednesday, the CPI data for October are coming out, while on Friday, ahead of the PMIs, retail sales are due.
At its latest gathering, the BoE cut interest rates by 25bps but signaled it will proceed with caution on the pace of further easing, prompting market participants to push back their rate cut expectations. There is only an 18% chance for another reduction in December, with a quarter-point cut being fully penciled in for March 2025.
And this is despite the headline inflation rate dropping to 1.7% y/y in September. Perhaps investors have taken into account the still-elevated core rate and the upward revisions of the BoE itself. Just for the record, the Bank has raised its inflation forecast for 2025 to 2.7% y/y from 2.2%.
If Wednesday’s CPI data indeed show early signs of a rebound in price pressures, investors could push further back the timing of the next interest rate cut, something that could prove positive for the pound, especially if Friday’s retail sales come in on the bright side as well.
More CPI numbers are coming out this week. On Tuesday, the inflation chorus will start with the Canadian numbers, while on Friday, it will end with Japan’s Natonwide CPI data.
In Canada, there is a decent 35% chance for the BoC to deliver a back-to-back 50bps rate cut in December. The jobs data for October have been on the mixed side, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 6.5%, instead of rising to 6.6% as expected, but with the net change in employment slowing more than expected.
The report was not enough to stop the loonie from tumbling against the almighty US dollar, with dollar/loonie now trading at levels last seen in May 2020. Both the headline and core CPI rates stood at 1.6% y/y in October, while the closely watched trimmed CPI held steady at 2.4%. Further cooling may corroborate the notion that there are no upside inflation risks in Canada and may convince more traders to bet on a 50bps reduction in December, thereby pushing the loonie even lower.
In Japan, the BoJ kept interest rates untouched on October 31, but signaled that the conditions for raising rates again are falling into place. This and the latest slide in the yen convinced market participants that Japanese policymakers could hike again at the turn of the year, seeing rates 13bps higher in December and 20 in January.
Having said that though, even if Friday’s CPI data corroborates the view of higher rates soon, any yen recovery is likely to stay limited and short-lived due to further potential strength in the US dollar and due to the hikes being already priced in.
This week, more countries will release their estimates for October consumer inflation.
Canada will do so on Tuesday. The pace of price increases here is below the 2% target, allowing the Bank of Canada to cut interest rates by 50 basis points at the end of October. But how will the economy react to the 4% drop in the Canadian dollar against the US dollar since the beginning of October? With USDCAD reaching 1.40, its highest level since 2020, traders will also be keeping a close eye on inflation data.
The UK will release its inflation figures on Wednesday. Here, headline inflation is well below 2%, with core inflation, which excludes food and energy, hovering between 3.2-3.5% and 3.5% for the past five months. This is despite the negative annual rate of producer prices due to the impact of services prices.
The Japanese inflation estimate will be released on November 22nd, which may also play a key role in the future dynamics of the Yen and the Bank of Japan’s sentiment.
In the European session, all eyes will be on the preliminary business activity estimates for November. The release of the PMI indices often causes volatility in the Euro, and this time, it may determine the fate of the single currency for the next month.
In Australia, the latest Westpac-MI Consumer Sentiment Survey provided another encouraging update on the health of the consumer. An impressive 11.8% rebound over the past two months has left the headline index at 94.6, the strongest reading in over two-and-a-half years and well within striking distance of a ‘neutral’ reading. Most of the improvement in sentiment has been centred on forward-looking measures, namely year-ahead views on the economy (+23% vs. Sep) and family finances (+7.3% vs. Sep).
While the sub-indexes tracking ‘family finances versus a year ago’ and ‘time to buy a major household item’ have seen some improvement, they both remain at historically weak levels – consistent with evidence from card activity data that points to a limited pick-up in spending following the introduction of the Stage 3 tax cuts. An added complication was the reaction to the US Presidential Election, which saw sentiment deteriorate notably over the course of the survey week – the net effect being greater-than-usual uncertainty about how the rapid recovery in confidence may evolve as the year draws to a close.
Consumers remain confident in the jobs outlook – unsurprising given the strong growth in employment evinced by the labour force survey. Coming off a multi-month above-trend performance, employment growth slowed in October, printing a modest gain of 15.9k. However, that was still enough to keep the employment-to-population ratio unchanged at a record high of 64.4% – a signal employment is still keeping pace with historic population growth. A marginal easing in labour force participation also left the unemployment rate at 4.1% for a third consecutive month. These results, together with little-change in average hours worked and other broader measures of labour underutilisation, imply the labour market remains in robust health, with slack building only at the margin. If sustained, this trend will see nominal wages growth continue to moderate through 2025, but enough momentum persist to deliver further modest real income gains. The outlook for wages, inflation and RBA policy was discussed at length this week by Westpac Chief Economist Luci Ellis.
Before moving offshore, the latest NAB business survey provided further confirmation of a stabilisation in business conditions, the index marking time at +7 points in October. This is consistent with our view that economic growth is current at or near its nadir, having slowed to 1.0%yr mid-year. With consumers having begun to receive their tax cuts and monetary policy easing around the corner, businesses are becoming more optimistic on the outlook, confidence up seven points to +5 in the month. Westpac sees GDP growth accelerating to 1.5%yr by year-end, then 2.4%yr by December 2025.
Globally, financial markets this week continued to assess the implications of a second Trump presidency, attempting to ascertain the President-elect’s priorities through appointment announcements for the incoming administration. The US dollar rallied and longer-dated Treasury yields meanwhile rose as a Republican majority, albeit a slim one, was confirmed for the House of Representatives, giving President Trump more freedom to implement his agenda, centred around lowering taxes, deregulation and reducing immigration.
As we discussed this week, while an extension of the household income tax cuts due to expire next year should be easily achievable, agreement on other tax changes might prove more difficult and/or time-intensive to achieve, with views on next steps for tax policy varied even amongst Republicans. Import tariffs, another critical piece of Trump’s agenda, should support an expansion of domestic manufacturing activity, but only gradually and not without negative effects on consumers, with the price of imported and local production to lift. Note as well there is a timing difference too: tariffs will impact inflation and spending long before investment in new domestic supply can be planned, built and commissioned. We expect these policies to have a meaningful and sustained effect in consumer inflation which the FOMC will have to respond to in late-2026 when we have two 25bp rate hikes forecast – for full detail see Westpac Economics’ Market Outlook November 2024.
Between now and late-2025, the current disinflationary trend is expected to persist however, allowing the FOMC to reduce the fed funds rate to 3.375% by September 2025, a rate we regard to be broadly neutral for the economy. This week, October’s CPI report again confirmed that inflation pressures are benign, 0.2%mth and 0.3%mth increases in headline and core prices in line with the prior month as well as market expectations. Shelter is now the one significant laggard for inflation, with annualised and annual growth near 5%. The FOMC continue to show little-to-no concern over this item however, given rental growth for current agreements is close to zero. As the shelter component of the CPI factors these results in, annual headline inflation will tend from 2.6%yr currently towards the FOMC’s medium-term target of 2.0%yr.
Turning to Asia, just released October activity data for China showed authorities shift towards pro-active support is paying dividends, but more so that additional stimulus is necessary. Retail sales surprised to the upside, the annual rate accelerating from 3.2%yr in September to 4.8%yr in October, although year-to-date the pickup was considerably more timid, from 3.3%ytd to 3.5%ytd. House prices also responded to authorities’ directives, new and existing home price declines slowing abruptly, from -0.7%mth and -0.9%mth in September to -0.5% in October. Growth in fixed asset investment and industrial production was little changed though, at 3.4%ytd and 5.8%ytd.
Late last Friday, China’s run of policy announcements continued, a debt swap package already mooted detailed to the market. CNY10trn in new special bond issuance will be made available through two programs over 3 and 5 years to local governments to refinance ‘hidden debt’ onto public balance sheets. The primary benefit is an expected CNY600bn reduction in interest payments over 5 years. The measures will also aid the bring forward of infrastructure spending into late-2024 and early-2025 and ready local governments to buy up housing assets and land from 2025, another initiative previously announced, and intended to provide lasting support to home prices and construction. Authorities clearly remain focused on strengthening the financial position of both the public and private sector, removing impediments to growth and encouraging new activity. But by refraining from announcing outright stimulus, they continue to disappoint the market and, potentially, are putting confidence amongst consumers and business at risk.
Note though, last Friday, Finance Minister Lan Fo’an reportedly promised “more forceful” fiscal stimulus next year and, while discussing today’s data the NBS spokesperson pledged to achieve 2024’s annual growth target of 5.0%. As such, outright stimulus is arguably a matter of time, the length of the waiting period likely to depend on the evolution of US trade policy and global economic uncertainty.
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