Markets Daily
US equities rallied sharply on hopes for a debt ceiling deal in coming days. Hawkish comments from Fed officials helped bond yields and the US dollar rise, AUD slipping to 0.6620. Today’s light data calendar includes Japan April CPI and we will hear more from the Fed.


Yesterday
Australia April total employment slipped –4.3k from +61.1k (revised from +53.0k). The unemployment rate rose to 3.7% from 3.5%, with the participation rate falling to 66.7% from 66.8% (revised from 66.7%). Following two consecutive months of robust labour market outcomes, the labour force survey exhibited a sudden shift in tone in April. Seasonality (the timing of Easter) may have played a role. AUD/USD dropped from 0.6665 to what proved to be a session low of 0.6632, later steadying not much higher. Wall Street’s upbeat mood extended to Asia-Pacific, the ASX 200 closing up 0.5%.
Currencies/Macro
The US dollar rose against all G10 currencies on the day. EUR/USD fell from 1.0840 to 1.0770. GBP/USD fell from 1.2485 to 1.2405. AUD/USD fell 40 pips to 0.6620, with a low of 0.6605. NZD/USD fell 20 pips to 0.6230. AUD/NZD fell as far as 1.0608, then trimmed losses to 1.0630, net -0.3%.
US initial jobless claims slipped from 264k to 242k in the week to 13 May, versus consensus 251k. This includes the week of the May non-farm payrolls survey. Continuing claims for the week to 6 May fell to 1.799mn from 1.807mn. April existing home sales were very close to expectations, -3.4%mth to a 4.28mn annualised pace. This is well below pre-pandemic averages around 5.3mn, let alone late 2020 highs near 6.5mn.
Dallas Fed president Lorie Logan said "we aren't there yet" in terms of data showing the Fed can pause in June. St. Louis Fed president James Bullard said he has an “open mind” but is inclined to back another rate increase.
Interest rates
US 2yr treasury yields rose from 4.15% to 4.25%, while the 10yr yield rose from 3.56% to 3.65%. Fed funds futures price 9bp for the June meeting then down to 4.65% by December 2023, up from 4.54% at Wednesday’s close. Markets price about 16bp increase in the RBA cash rate by the August meeting (3.99%) then back down to 3.90% by year-end. The RBNZ cash rate is priced to peak at 5.82% in August from 5.25% now.
Credit indices were in positive territory as Europe played catch up to the US which saw Main 2.5bp tighter to 83.5 while CDX was another bp tighter (4bp in 2 days) at 79.5. US cash was also firmer with spreads 2-4bp tighter across the various sectors as the positive sentiment provided support and primary activity took a breather. There was no IG supply in either the Euro or US markets last night after we had seen ~EUR31.6bn (EUR56.2bn including SSA) and USD57bn of IG supply from these markets respectively in the opening 3 days this week.
Commodities
Crude fell as rates markets priced in the potential for higher US rates and the US$ rose. The June WTI contract is down 89c at $71.94 while the July Brent contract is down 99c at $75.97. US crude flows to Europe are set to reach a record this month as new players enter the market after a major overhaul of the Brent contract allows US crude to be included in the Brent price. And the IEF reported that world crude demand climbed by 3mbpd and hit a record in March. Chinese consumption rose by 1.6mbpd to 16.79mbpd, the highest submitted to the Joint Organisation’s Data Initiative. India was also reported to be considering refilling its depleted SPR with a plan to import as much as 9.2mb of crude.
Meanwhile US natural gas markets surged on softer than expected inventory build following a collapse in the rig count. Cheap gas is boosting demand from US power generators and warmer than usual temperatures are expected to keep demand elevated. The June Nat gas contract hit a 2-month high. Meanwhile European prices keep falling on hot weather and rising inventories. The June TTF contract has lost 15% in the last week and 38% so far this quarter. Thermal coal markets continue falling too with the July Newcastle coal contract dropping to a 14-month low.
Metals markets slid to fresh multi year lows with copper down 1.7% to $8,158, nickel down 2% to $20,900 and zinc down 2.8% to $2,453. That’s a fresh low back to September last year for nickel and to October 2020 for zinc. On warrant copper stockpiles have risen for 19 consecutive days hitting a 7-month high and Chinese production of copper rods fell 3.5% in April to 828kt on weak demand. Gold also fell to a 6-week low after all but hitting record highs just two weeks ago.
Finally note that iron ore markets weakened on rising production and concerns about the Chinese reopening recovery. The June SGX contract is down $3.60 from the same time yesterday to $104.15 while the 62% Mysteel index fell $1.55 to $109.25. The slump in the Chinese Yuan in offshore markets through 7 per US$ also weighed on sentiment as it weighs on the cost of commodity imports.
Day ahead
Although an increase in Japan’s annual inflation rates is anticipated in April, the Bank of Japan is confident that inflation will begin a steady return to target over the next year or so. Consensus is 3.5%yr for overall CPI versus 3.2% in March, 3.4%yr for CPI ex-fresh food and 4.2%yr for CPI ex-fresh food and energy.
UK: GfK consumer sentiment is continuing to improve despite persistent cost-of-living pressures (market f/c: -27).
Fed Chair Powell will participate in a panel discussion at a monetary policy research conference alongside former Chair Bernanke. New York Fed president Williams and Fed Governor Bowman are also due to speak at other events.
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