Latest News

Morning bid Europe-Markets to the Fed: Please take five more.

Wayne Cole gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

It was good to hear that. The CPI in the U.S. was a little firmer, but not enough to notice. The prices that feed core PCE were surprising benign. This led analysts to reduce their forecasts from +0.2%m/m to a steady 2,9% for the year.

The Federal Reserve is set to begin its easing cycle next week with 25 basis point, but the markets only see a 7% probability of a 50bps.

The magnitude of the decline in labour market data would lead you to assume that the more aggressive options will be discussed. If the vote is 25 to 50 but one or two voters dissent, this could be enough dovishness to keep the rally going.

It is important to provide a dovish outlook, given that futures markets have begun to price in 71bps cuts by Christmas and 125bps cuts by July. Five cuts over five meetings is fine. Oh, and I'd like to make a request to the Fed: please return to a single interest rate, not this range of 4.25-4.50. We are no longer at zero.

In the last two weeks, bonds have delivered a quarter point cut in mortgage rates. The yields on 10-year notes are down by 20bps. Investors need Fed Chair Jerome Powell's willingness to ease up on the market, depending of course on the data.

The prospect of lower U.S. interest rates has allowed liquidity to flow in Asia, and investors have been able to place bets on everything AI. All three indexes, in Japan and South Korea, have reached record highs. Kospi is alone up nearly 6% in the past week. The blue chips of China are now back at their peaks in early 2022. They have survived Beijing's warnings about capitalist excesses.

In the face of falling yields the dollar has held relatively well against the majors while losing ground on less popular crosses. The dollar index has only a slight decline on the week despite the constant talk about the end of exceptionalism.

The Australian dollar has finally broken out of its trading range and reached a 10-month high, while the Norwegian crown is now at its highest level since early in 2023.

In the last month, both have seen their yield spreads against the USD move in their favor by around 40 basis points. Both are also testing high chart levels.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Friday.

- Appearances of Bank of Spain Governor Jose Luis Escriva, and ECB Policy Maker Olli Reinn

- UK manufacturing output and GDP for July. Final CPI readings for the EU

- US consumer sentiment for September

(source: Reuters)