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Analysis

US Payrolls: Closely watched today to check whether they vindicate the Fed’s cautious stance

Markets

From economic data to the Fed over to trade and some back and fourth switching in between: this is a week that’s keeping markets on edge. The economic calendar yesterday offered no more than some second tier eco data, resulting in relatively small market moves. Core bond yields changed less than 2‐3 bps across the curve en both the dollar and euro kept each other balanced around but north of 1.14. JPY underperformed. It wasn’t until after the market close that we were treated with some actual news though. Going into the August 1 deadline, a White House document released a slew of unilateral tariffs announcements. President Trump kept a 10% minimum reciprocal tariff rate globally. Many countries faced higher rates though, including New Zealand (15%), Taiwan (20%), South Africa (30%) and Thailand and Cambodia (both 19%). Switzerland is looking at a whopping 39% and Trump raised the tariff for Canada to 35% from 25%. Goods traded under the rules of the US‐Mexico‐Canada trade agreement (covering the vast majority of US‐Canadian trade) are exempted tough. With the announcement, there’s at least some kind of clarity: worst case scenario’s were largely avoided and there’s a clear starting point. Countries that haven’t struck a deal yet can now try to bring their rates down through negotiations. Uncertainty is not at all gone though with sectoral tariffs still a pending matter. Talks with China are also ongoing and likely to be extended beyond the August 12 deadline. But all things considered, the Asian market response could have been worse. SK stands out (cfr. infra) but most other indices cap losses to less than 1% with some even trading in the green. European futures do suggest further losses after yesterday’s ‐1.3% drop, also catching up with a late‐session swoon on WS. The euro holds a tiny upper hand over the dollar while CHF along with NZD is lagging.

And from trade it’s back to the data again. US July payrolls are closely watched today to check whether they vindicate the Fed’s cautious stance. Yesterday’s June PCE price deflators already did so. The bar is set at a relatively low 104k for employment growth and at 4.2%, up from 4.1% in June, for the unemployment rate. A beat would further reduce Fed easing bets, in particular for September although we don’t expect markets to fully let go on the idea. Front‐end underperformance of the US yield curve may trigger further dollar strength even as we’re now seeing some signs of bottoming out in EUR/USD. Technically, next meaningful support in EUR/USD only pops up at 1.1214/1.1184 but going this far would require a massive upside payrolls surprise and could also be prevented by intermediate support at the 2023 high of 1.1276.

News and views

Germany’s finance minister Klingbeil warned that the country is facing a budget gap of as much as €170bn by 2029, posing what he calls a “massive challenge”. Germany lifted the constitutional debt brake (capping German deficits at 0.35% of GDP) but this only applied for defence spending. Other areas of the federal budget are still subjected to it, meaning Germany is now forced to either hike taxes (already ruled out by the government coalition) or cut spending across ministries and reform the welfare system. One potential windfall could come from growth though. Germany has pencilled in conservative growth forecasts of 0% this year and 1% annually between 2026‐2029. Stronger than expected growth could help close the shortfall.

South Korean stock markets hugely underperform regional peers this morning. It follows government plans to hike the capital gains tax by lowering the threshold to KRW 1bn from KRW 5bn as well as increase the transaction tax. Other measures include a reversal of the previous administration’s cut to 24% from 25% of the top corporate tax rate. South Korea’s major stock indices decline almost 4%.

There will be no KBC Sunrise from Monday, August 4 until Monday, August 11. We resume the publication on Tuesday,
August 12.

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