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Today's economic developments and market movements.



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Key themes: The European Central Bank (ECB) delivered on its guidance for a rate cut, reducing it’s benchmark rates by 25-basis points. 

However, an upgrade to the bank’s inflation forecasts trimmed expectations for the timing of a follow-up move. Further easing is likely to be gradual and, of course, data-dependant.

Markets in the US were fairly quiet with the ECB meeting unfolding largerly as anticipated and underlying caution ahead of the US non-farm payrolls report tonight.

Equities and bonds were both little changed with treasury yields hovering around the lower end of recent ranges.

The US dollar was slightly softer, slipping modestly against all of the major currencies.

Share markets: US equities wavered ahead of the non-farm payrolls report tonight. The S&P 500 was little changed while the NASDAQ closed down 0.1%. This followed a solid rally in both indices over the past four sessions.

The ECB rate cut boosted risk apetite in Europe where equities were firmer. The Euro Stoxx 50 rose 0.7%, while the German Dax was 0.6% higher. The FTSE 100 was up 05% in London.

The ASX 200 jumped 0.7% yesterday. The local bourse followed US equities higher after a solid showing in the prior session. Futures were up a further 0.2% overnight.

Interest rates: The rally in bonds stalled ahead of the US non-farm payrolls report tonight. Treasury yields are at the bottom end of recent ranges and likely need some more fuel, in the form of softer data, before taking another leg lower.

The 2-year treasury yield was unchanged at 4.72%, while the 10-year yield was up 1 basis point to 4.29%. There are now almost two 25-basis point Fed rate cuts priced into the swaps curve for 2024, the odds of a second cut sitting around 90%.

Aussie bond futures were little changed overnight after physical yields edged lower in yesterday’s trade. Traders have upped the odds of an RBA rate cut by year-end to around a 40% chance.

Foreign exchange: The Aussie dollar remains stuck in limbo in the 66-67 cent range having bounced around the midde of the range over the past few sessions. Benign domestic data is doing little to help the Aussie, but the tone of US data will remain a more important catalyst with US non-farm payrolls tonight coming into the Fed’s June meeting next week.

The US dollar index continues to dance around above the 104 level, with a decisive shift in rate expectations needed for a break lower not yet materialising. A slightly softer US dollar overnight saw all of the major’s post modest gains against the greenback. 

Commodities: A slight reversal continued in oil and most metals after steep slides last week which extended into the first half of this week. Iron ore and copper were up 1.8% and 2.3%, respectively while oil gained 2.0%.

Australia: The value of new housing finance approvals, excluding refinancing, lifted for a third consecutive month in April, extending a well entrenched upswing in lending activity since early 2023. 

The punchy 4.8% monthly gain was the strongest since January 2022, registering well above consensus expectations. Over the year to April, new finance approvals were 24.6% higher - the biggest annual increase since December 2021.

Investor (+5.6%) and owner-occupier (+4.3%) lending were both higher in the month with the investor segment continuing to outperform. Since troughing in early 2023, new investor financing has rebounded over 40%, compared to a just over 20% gain in owner-occupier borrowing. The value of investor lending hit fresh record highs in Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia, the three states with the hottest housing markets. Strong capital gains are luring in investors, supported by strong rental growth which is keeping yields attractive.

Australia’s international trade in goods position improved in April. The goods surplus widened to $6.5bn from $4.8bn in March. Export earnings fell 2.5% in April to the lowest level since December 2021. Goods imports also unwound in April, posting a material and broad-based decline of 7.2% in the month.

Eurozone: The ECB cut their policy rates by 25bps at the June meeting as widely expected, having kept rates at peak levels for nine months. 

President Lagarde made clear that the Council have also become more confident in returning inflation to target in the medium term. However, this was contrasted by an upward revision to the ECB’s inflation forecasts, headline inflation now seen averaging 2.5% in 2024, 2.2% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026. 

A slow return to the inflation target underscores the need for patience and has supported broader expectations for a measured easing in policy restriction.

April retail sales suprised to the downside falling 0.5% in the month to be flat in annual terms. The result is evidence of consumer uncertainty as the outlook remains cloudy. 

United States: The trade deficit widened slightly in April, from $68.6bn to $74.6bn, inside the consensus expectation of $76.5bn. Behind the larger deficit was a 2.4% increase in imports, only partially offset by a 0.8% rise in exports. 

Initial jobless claims were broadly as expected and largely unchanged from last week at 229k. The claims trend highlights the labour market has been softening as a result of less job creation not job loss in recent months, though the business surveys continue to point to the latter being a risk.     

 

 

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