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Sentiment improved after a buyer for troubled SVB was announced and markets speculated on official support for the banking sector. US equities and bond yields rose. AUD remained around 0.6650. Today’s data includes Australia February retail sales and US March consumer confidence.

Yesterday

AUD/USD traded a very tight 0.6637 to 0.6662 range. Australia had no significant data. Regional equities were mixed, the ASX 200 somewhere in the middle of the pack, closing +0.1%. 

 

Currencies/Macro

The US dollar was mixed against the G10 on the day. EUR/USD rose from 1.0760 to 1.0800. GBP/USD rose 0.4% or 55 pips to 1.2290. USD/JPY followed the rise in US Treasury yields, rallying from 130.60 to 131.60. AUD/USD traded quietly, mostly 0.6640-60. Underperformer NZD fell below 0.6200, leaving AUD/NZD up 20 pips on the day at 1.0735.

 

The March Germany IFO business survey was stronger than expected, the overall climate index rising to 93.3 from 91.1 in February, with the current assessment improving to 95.4 from 93.9 and the expectations index up to 91.2 from 88.4. 

 

In the US, the Dallas Fed manufacturing survey fell to -15.7 in March (est. -10.0, prior -13.5).

 

First Citizens BancShares Inc. agreed to buy Silicon Valley Bank following the latter’s failure. The acquisition lifts First Citizens into the top 15 US banks. Meanwhile, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr testified that “SVB's failure is a textbook case of mismanagement.”

 

Interest rates

US treasury yields shifted higher after some concerns of the banking sector turmoil eased, and the curve flattened. 2yr government bond yields rose 23bps to 4.00%, and 10yr government bond yields rose 15bps to 3.53%. 

 

Australian bond yields took its trend from US price action, but outperformed their US counterparts. 3yr government bond yields (futures) rose 12bps to 2.88%, and 10yr government bond yields (futures) rose 11bps to 3.30%. The AU-US 10yr bond spread narrowed on the back of AU outperformance, currently at -24bps.

 

Credit saw a more stable session as indices firmed after the volatility to close last week (Main a bp tighter at 96, CDX in 1.5bp to 83), cash continued to search for clearing levels and primary activity returned on both sides of the pond. Europe saw 4 issuers price EUR3.7bn with 3 corporates in the mix together with a 4yr covered deal from CIBC (EUR1.5bn at MS+33, BBSW+84), with the US seeing 10 issuers price USD9.6bn. Mercedes was the largest issuer with its USD3bn, 4 part deal (2-5yr), Phillips 66 completed acquisition funding for DCP Midstream (USD1.25bn of 5/10yr) and PACCAR priced a USD500M 3yr deal at T+68 (BBSW+78).

 

Commodities

Crude markets jumped as supply disruptions in Turkey added to the general positive risk sentiment. The May WTI contract is up $3.64 to $72.90 while the May Brent contract is up $3.07 to $78.06. News that First Citizen was purchasing SVB lifted crude in early trade, and a dispute between Iraq, Kurdistan and Turkey halted circa 400kbpd of crude exports, adding to the price gains. Four of six French refineries are barely operating due to protests reducing French diesel output by 200kbpd according to Energy Aspects. Apparent oil demand in China is set to rise by 5.1% this year according to CNPC. Saudi Aramco announced its biggest ever foreign acquisition, buying a 10% stake in Rongsheng Petrochemical in China. The deal will boost Saudi exports to China by circa 700kbpd. Over the weekend, Saudi Aramco also announced a deal to invest in a new refining and petrochemical plant in China’s north-eastern Liaoning region bringing the total investment to over $7bn on the two deals.

 

Meanwhile recession fears and warmer weather forecasts sent natural gas prices in the US tumbling towards $2, with the April contract down 5.8% to $2.10. Strikes in France and colder weather in northern Europe lifted gas prices there though, with the UK April NBP contract up 4%.

 

Metals saw further gains with copper up 0.8% at $8,989, aluminium up 1.2% at $2,365 and nickel up 1.4% at $23,800. The focus on copper inventory from an FT article noted yesterday was a key driver for the gains with stocks dropping to the lowest level since late January. Global copper inventory has dropped by 25% so far this month with Shanghai inventory down 36%. 

 

Iron ore markets rose with rising steel production in China lifting sentiment. The May SGX contract is up 90c at $119.60 while the 62% Mysteel index is up 60c at $121.65. Steel production at major mills in China in the middle 10 days of March was 11% higher than the average over the previous 3 years.

 

Day ahead

At 11:30am Syd we see Australia’s February retail sales survey. Westpac looks for a 0.5%mth rise (median 0.2%), consistent with an underlying weakening trend, through the sharp monthly changes of recent months (+1.9%, -4.0%, +1.7%). 

 

The RBA’s Connolly will speak on payments policy at the AFR Banking Summit in Sydney, 4:15pm Syd.

 

NZ: Following the bounce-back in January, the monthly employment indicator is set to return to a modest growth pace in February (Westpac f/c: 0.2%).

 

US: The housing market will remain under pressure in January, with moderate declines anticipated in both the FHFA and S&P/CS home price indexes (market f/c: -0.3% and -0.5% respectively). The deterioration in wholesale inventories is expected to persist in February (market f/c: -0.1%) and the Richmond Fed index should also remain in subdued territory (market f/c: -9). Meanwhile, banking sector volatility will likely feature in the Conference Board’s March consumer confidence survey (market f/c: 101). 

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