Image Source: Unsplash
Asian stocks fell ahead of the U.S. employment data, which is anticipated to influence interest rate forecasts. The MSCI Asia index declined for the third consecutive day, with most market equities experiencing losses. S&P 500 futures showed slight fluctuations after U.S. stock markets paused on Thursday to observe a national day of mourning for former President Jimmy Carter. Treasuries remained steady during Asian trading, following a selloff earlier this week that pushed 30-year rates to their highest levels since 2023. Chinese yields rose after the PBOC announced a temporary halt to its government bond purchases, a surprising move given that the benchmark yield had just hit a new low. The offshore Yuan saw a slight appreciation against the Dollar. The Dollar index recorded a modest increase, continuing its three-day upward trend. The Yen depreciated by 0.1% against the Dollar. Traders are closely monitoring signs that Japan may intervene to support the Yen, with the upcoming U.S. employment report potentially acting as a catalyst for significant currency volatility.Yesterday was relatively calm for UK gilts, likely due to subdued US activity (President Carter’s funeral), despite a jittery start to the session. With the US employment report, a quiet day today seems less probable, and FX volatility is anticipated to persist. The key issue is whether the BoE will intervene to support the gilt market or at least halt QT. It is not the BoE’s responsibility to ensure gilt yields remain low enough for the government to borrow as much as it desires. Such action would contradict the BoE’s operational independence. The BoE’s monetary policy aims to achieve the 2% CPI target, not to absolve the government of the consequences of maintaining a narrow buffer against the fiscal rule. However, this does not imply that the BoE would never intervene, as past experiences suggest otherwise. Any motivation for intervention would relate to its financial stability policy objectives rather than monetary policy considerations. In essence, the potential for intervention would arise from signs of disorderly markets. Market participants believing that yields should rise to reflect weakened fiscal fundamentals does not constitute disorderly behaviour by itself. Therefore, the response to the intervention question hinges not on a specific yield threshold but rather on observing excessive volatility without any news, which has not occurred this week.The US employment report due today is anticipated to reflect another month of growth, with the Bloomberg survey median standing at 138,000. The unemployment rate is forecasted to hold steady at 4.2%, although there is a risk that it could improve in the household survey after two months of weaker performance, potentially lowering that figure. As indicated in the December minutes, the Fed is now less worried about negative risks to the labour market. Other employment data supports this perspective, showing a recent drop in jobless claims, a general increase in hiring intentions across various surveys, along with a rise in JOLTS job openings and sustained strength in broader demand indicators and surveys following the election. This situation raises the threshold for the Fed to revert to a more dovish stance. Currently, there is little urgency to prolong the rate cut cycle. Given the persistence of underlying inflation (core PCE) and the risks posed by tariffs to the overall disinflation narrative, this caution is likely to persist as we progress through the early part of the year.
eliteOvernight Newswire Updates of Note
(Sourced from reliable financial news outlets)
FX Options Expiries For 10am New York Cut (1BLN+ represents larger expiries, more magnetic when trading within daily ATR)
CFTC Data As Of 3/1/25
Technical & Trade ViewsSP500 Short Against 6045
EURUSD Short Against 1.0435
GBPUSD Short Against 1.2614
USDJPY Long Against 153.77
XAUUSD Short Against 2692
BTCUSD Short Against 101,960
More By This Author:FTSE UK Yields Surge AS MidCaps Slump To Eight Month Lows
Daily Market Outlook – Thursday, Jan. 9
FTSE Banks Bid As UK Yields Continue To Rise
Leave A Comment