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Global Market Quick Take: Asia – December 18, 2023

Macro 5 minutes to read
Saxo Be Invested
APAC Research

Summary:  The rally in equities and bonds faded on Friday amid a pushback to Powell pivot from some Fed members including Williams. PMIs also continued to highlight a divergence in US and Eurozone economies, pushing EUR back to 1.09 as dollar recovered slightly. German Ifo will be in focus today. Hang Seng rose over 2% on China easing property curbs, although commodities came under some pressure but Gold still holding up above $2k.


The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events. 

MI 18 Dec 2023

US Equities: The Nasdaq gained 0.5% to close at 16,623, marking an all-time high, while the S&P500 was nearly flat. Costco surged 4.5% after reporting earnings beating estimates and announcing a special dividend. Intel added 2.2% after announcing new microchips for PCs and data centres.

Fixed income: The 2-year Treasury yield rose 6bps to 4.44% after Fed officials pushed back on discussion of imminent rate cuts. However, yields at the long end of the curve continued to decline, with the 10-year yield falling 1bp to 3.91% and the 30-year yield down 3bps to 4.01%.

China/HK Equities: The Hang Seng Index surged 2.4% to 16,792 last Friday after Shanghai and Beijing eased down payment requirements, mortgage rate floors and some other rules for home purchases. CR Land and Longfor gained around 6%. JD.COM surged 7%. China’s activity data was mixed in November with industrial production improving more than expected but retail sales and fixed asset investment disappointed. The rally waned somewhat in the afternoon amid chatters speculating that the recent Central Economic Work Conference had set the fiscal deficit target for 2024 at 3%, lower than market’s anticipation. The CSI 300 pared all the gains in the morning to close 0.3% lower.

FX: Another down-week for the US dollar as Fed Chair Powell adopted a dovish tone but other major central banks such as ECB and BOE stuck a relatively hawkish tone, although trends reversed slightly on Friday amid some pushback from Fed officials. A surprise rate hike from Norges Bank pushed NOK to be the outperformer on the G10 board. USDNOK moved below 10.50 for the first time in four months. BOJ comes next, and USDJPY traded flat around 142 with risk of a pushback on hawkish expectations likely to threaten a move back towards 145. EURUSD returned to sub-1.09 levels after failing at the 1.10 resistance and 200DMA at 1.0830 may be a key test, watch German Ifo due for a release today. GBPUSD was also back at sub-1.27 levels although AUDUSD held on the 0.67 handle.

Commodities: Dollar gains on Friday amid the Fed members’ pushback to the Powell pivot weighed on the commodity complex. Oil prices however closed higher for the week for the first time in 8 weeks amid risk on following the dovish FOMC and attacks on ships in the Red Sea. Gold also pared some gains on Friday but ended the week higher and continues to hold up above $2k begging the question whether a Santa rally could come. Copper remains in focus amid supply concerns and China easing property curbs, and China’s LPR announcement will be key this week.

Macro:

  • Fed’s Williams pushed back on the Powell pivot by saying that "we aren't really talking about rate cuts right now”, a clear divergence from Powell’s comment at the FOMC press conference last week when he said that the committee had discussed rate cuts. Later in the day, Fed's Bostic also came out considerably less dovish, suggesting just two rate-cuts in 2024, and likely after Q3. Fed's Goolsbee was dovish, but also less so than the market and the dots, saying that he expects rates to be lower next year than they are right now, but not significantly. Probability of a Q1 rate cut decline from 90% to less than 80%.
  • US flash PMIs for December showed that the economy picked up some momentum as looser financial conditions helped to boost demand, business activity and employment in the services sector. The improvement in services PMI to 51.3 from 50.8 previously offset the increasing weakness in manufacturing with its PMI coming in lower at 48.2 from 49.4. Composite PMI therefore increased slightly to 51.0 from 50.7.
  • Eurozone PMIs however escalated recession concerns. The composite flash PMI fell by 0.6pt to 47.0 in December with the manufacturing falling (by 0.5pt) to 44.1, and the services activity index falling (by 0.7pt) to 48.1. UK growth momentum however continued to pick up, particularly with services PMI expanding to 52.7 from 50.9 even as manufacturing cooled to 46.4 from 47.2.
  • In November, China’s industrial production grew 6.6% Y/Y, higher than October’s 4.6% and median projection of 5.7%. The improvement was broad-based as outputs in manufacturing, mining, and utility sectors accelerated to 6.7%, 3.9%, and 9.9% Y/Y from prior month’s 5.1%, 2.9% and 1.5% respectively. However, the strength can be attributed to a low base last year when many large cities were locked down. Retail sales growth accelerated to 10.1% Y/Y in November from 7.6% in October, again helped by a low base. The increase however was below the median forecast of 12.5%. The growth in fixed asset investment came in at 2.9% Y/Y in November, higher than the prior month’s 1.3% but below the median forecast of 4.1%. Property investment contracted 10.8% Y/Y in November while infrastructure investment grew 5.4% Y/Y and manufacturing investment grew 7.1% Y/Y.
  • Secondary home prices fell month-on-month in all the 70 largest Chinese cities while new home prices declined month-on-month in 59 of these cities.

Macro events: Fed’s Goolsbee, German Ifo, ECB’s Lane & Schnabel.

In the news:

  • Costco Earnings Beat Estimates, Company Announces Special Dividend (WSJ)
  • Tang Xiao’ou, the CUHK professor and founder of the artificial intelligence giant SenseTime, dies at age 55 (SCMP)
  • HKEX names Bonnie Chan as its first woman chief executive, succeeding Nicolas Aguzin as head of Asia’s third-largest stock market (SCMP)

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.

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