Market Movers

  • In the euro area the ZEW, IFO and PMI business surveys for March will attract attention after all three figures declined in January and February, with the financial uncertainty having a negative spill-over effect on economic sentiment. We expect the improved financial risk sentiment to result in a stabilisation but not a strong rebound in the three figures. The biggest increase should be seen in the financial ZEW expectations, whereas the economic survey indicators (PMI manufacturing and IFO expectations) are still faced with headwinds from weakness in global manufacturing, the stronger effective EUR and Brexit risks. On the other hand, the low oil price supports private consumption and hence the domestic-driven PMI services.

  • In the US will see the release of the Markit PMI. After better regional indicators the US PMI is expected to rebound from 51.3 in February to 51.9 in March. The Richmond Fed Manufacturing index is also expected to rebound. We keep an eye on Fed’s Evans when he speaks tonight after the somewhat hawkish comments from Lockhart and Williams yesterday. He is known to be dovish and he is a non-voting member of the FOMC.


Selected Market News

In the US Treasury market comments from Fed’s Williams and Lockhart pushed up yields. Both said that the FOMC may raise rates as soon as its 26-27 April meeting. That is way earlier than priced in the market and also much earlier than the Fed’s ‘dots’ predict and suddenly a June hike seems like a fair comprise for the FOMC.

The Fed funds futures market indicates a 10% chance that the Fed will raise rates by April and an around 40% probability of an increase by June. We look for a September hike. See in that respect our Yield Forecast Update that we published yesterday. We doubt that the comments from Williams and Lockhart are shared by the FOMC majority including Yellen.

The somewhat hawkish Fed comments come as inflation expectations over the past month have moved higher in the US. 10Y break-even rates have gone up by more than 45bp since mid February and at 1.66% are at the highest level since August 2016 – but still low in a historical context. Note also that Fed’s Lacker said that he is ‘reasonably confident that, barring subsequent shocks, inflation will move back to the FOMC’s 2 percent objective over the medium term’. He added ‘Inflation has been held down recently by two factors, the falling price of oil and the rising value of the dollar. But neither factor is likely to depress inflation indefinitely. After the price of oil bottoms out, I would expect to see headline inflation move significantly higher’.

There was little action in the US stock market yesterday and the hawkish Fed comments did not spoil the sentiment. M&A activity also supported sentiment. The positive sentiment has been carried over to Asia, where especially Nikkei is performing supported by a weaker JPY.

This publication has been prepared by Danske Bank for information purposes only. It is not an offer or solicitation of any offer to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Whilst reasonable care has been taken to ensure that its contents are not untrue or misleading, no representation is made as to its accuracy or completeness and no liability is accepted for any loss arising from reliance on it. Danske Bank, its affiliates or staff, may perform services for, solicit business from, hold long or short positions in, or otherwise be interested in the investments (including derivatives), of any issuer mentioned herein. Danske Bank's research analysts are not permitted to invest in securities under coverage in their research sector.
This publication is not intended for private customers in the UK or any person in the US. Danske Bank A/S is regulated by the FSA for the conduct of designated investment business in the UK and is a member of the London Stock Exchange.
Copyright () Danske Bank A/S. All rights reserved. This publication is protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD: Uptrend remains capped by 0.6650

AUD/USD: Uptrend remains capped by 0.6650

AUD/USD could not sustain the multi-session march north and faltered once again ahead of the 0.6650 region on the back of the strong rebound in the Greenback and the prevailing risk-off mood.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD meets a tough barrier around 1.0800

EUR/USD meets a tough barrier around 1.0800

The resurgence of the bid bias in the Greenback weighed on the risk-linked assets and motivated EUR/USD to retreat to the 1.0750 region after another failed attempt to retest the 1.0800 zone.

EUR/USD News

Gold eases toward $2,310 amid a better market mood

Gold eases toward $2,310 amid a better market mood

After falling to $2,310 in the early European session, Gold recovered to the $2,310 area in the second half of the day. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays in negative territory below 4.5% and helps XAU/USD find support.

Gold News

Bitcoin price coils up for 20% climb, Standard Chartered forecasts more gains for BTC

Bitcoin price coils up for 20% climb, Standard Chartered forecasts more gains for BTC

Bitcoin (BTC) price remains devoid of directional bias, trading sideways as part of a horizontal chop. However, this may be short-lived as BTC price action consolidates in a bullish reversal pattern on the one-day time frame.

Read more

What does stagflation mean for commodity prices?

What does stagflation mean for commodity prices?

What a difference a quarter makes. The Federal Reserve rang in 2024 with a bout of optimism that inflation was coming down to their 2% target. But that optimism has now evaporated as the reality of stickier-than-expected inflation becomes more evident. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures