|

New record highs for Gold – Oil prices retreated sub $90/barrel

Markets

Friday’s March payrolls were strong across the board. Employment topped all estimates by growing 303k, wage growth was solid and the unemployment rate eased back to 3.8% despite an uptick in the participation rate. The first Fed governors commenting after the release erred to the hawkish side. Dallas president Logan said there’s no urgency in cutting rates, adding that the risk of cutting too soon is higher than being late. She’s worried about disinflation stalling. Fed governor Bowman continues to see upside inflation risks and isn’t comfortable with cutting until disinflation returns. Both Logan and Bowman stated the possibility of a higher neutral rate, which would limit the Fed’s overall cutting capacity. US yields across the maturity spectrum revisited the YtD highs. We expected the break higher would need confirmation from Wednesday’s US CPI (March). Yet, it’s already happening as we speak. Granted, Asian dealings usually just pick up where US financial markets left off but the technical breaks are there. Apart moving beyond the YtD high, the US 2-y yield also surpasses resistance from the 200dMA to trade around 4.78%. The 10-y tenor jumped above the 4.40% resistance (50% recovery on the 2023Q4 decline) this morning and eked out further gains to a new 2024 high. US money markets increasingly push a first cut by the Fed further into time and will look for additional evidence supporting their case in a reaccelerating (headline) CPI. The dollar neither on Friday neither this morning really stands to benefit from the yield support, despite being driven by the real component and concentrating at the front-end of the curve (>10 bps). EUR/USD rebounded from an intradaylow just south of 1.08 to close unchanged at 1.0837. It’s hanging around these levels this morning. Rising German yields offer only part of the explanation since the move higher was only a fraction of what happened in the US (1.2- 3.9 bps). A surprisingly resilient risk environment (US stock markets rose up to 1.2%) is a second piece of the puzzle. Equally astounding is the ongoing rally in gold, with new record highs for the shiny metal (again) today. Oil prices retreated sub $90/barrel with a partial retreat by Israeli forces from southern Gaza easing some of the geopolitical/supply concerns. Other than inflation figures in the US, the eco calendar gives the stage to the ECB on Thursday. Frankfurt won’t have the desired wage negotiation data by then, giving Lagarde an easy way out of tricky questions. It does have input from the Bank Lending Survey (Tuesday). The central bank of Canada and New Zealand both meet on Wednesday and US banks kick off the Q1 earnings season on Friday. A slew of Fed speeches are scattered across the week.

News and views

Peter Pellegrini has won the presidential elections in Slovakia this weekend as he defeated the pro-Western candidate Ivan Korcok. Pellegrini is an ally of Prime Minister Robert Fico and is seen as Russia-friendly. Pellegrini secured 53.1% of the votes. Even as the president in Slovakia has only limited executive powers, the victory of Pellegrini is seen as supporting a policy of the country further withdrawing its support for Ukraine. Pellegrini who, as a president, can veto laws and can nominate judges, also might support reforms of the government with respect to criminal law and media that might be contested by the EU. Despite his Pro-Russian, Ukraine sceptic stance, Pellegrini reiterated that Slovakia will remain a strong member of EU and Nato.

In a news conference on Friday, Governor of the National Bank of Poland (NBP) Glapinski said that the NBP didn’t discuss rate cuts at last week’s policy meeting. He even indicated that no one is talking about 2024 rate cuts altogether. The room for rate cuts in 2025 will depend on the inflation figures at the end of this year. Glapinski reiterated that there is still a high the degree of uncertainty. Polish CPI in Q4 is seen in a wide range between 3.9% (if anti-inflation measures are maintained) and 7.5% (if fully removed). Glapinski sees current decline in inflation as temporary (1.9% Y/Y in March) as higher VAT on food prices will filter through in coming months. Glapinski is also worried about the inflationary impact of real wages rising fast together with a reacceleration of the economy. Polish 2-y swap yields jumped 9 bps Friday afternoon (5.43%), even as this was partially due to the overall rise in core yields post strong US payrolls. The zloty remains well bid. At EUR/PLN 4.28, the Polish currency is holding within reach of the strongest levels against the euro since February 2020. (YTD low 4.2749).

Download The Full Sunrise Market Commentary

Author

More from KBC Market Research Desk
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD trims losses and returns to the 1.1750 area

The US Dollar resumed its decline in the American afternoon, helping EUR/USD trim early losses. The pair trades around 1.1750 as market participants gear up for the European Central Bank monetary policy decision and the United States Consumer Price Index.

GBP/USD consolidates above mid-1.3300s as traders await BoE and US CPI report

The GBP/USD pair struggles to capitalize on the overnight bounce from the 1.3310 area, or a one-week low, and oscillates in a narrow band during the Asian session on Thursday. Spot prices currently trade around the 1.3370 region, down less than 0.10% for the day, as traders opt to wait on the sidelines ahead of the key central bank event risk and US consumer inflation data.

Gold declines on profit-taking, USD strength ahead of US CPI release

Gold price edges lower below $4,350 during the Asian trading hours on Thursday. The precious metal retreats from seven-week highs amid some profit-taking and a rebound in the US Dollar (USD). The potential downside for the yellow metal might be limited after the recent US jobs data reinforce market expectations of further interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve and drag the USD lower. 

Top Crypto Losers: Pump.fun, SPX6900, Bittensor slide further with double-digit losses

Pump.fun, SPX6900, and Bittensor are leading the losses in the cryptocurrency market over the last 24 hours amid total liquidations of over $500 million. The retail segment alleges institutional manipulation amid an early-morning Bitcoin sell-off routine in the US market.

Monetary policy: Three central banks, three decisions, the same caution

While the Fed eased its monetary policy on 10 December for the third consecutive FOMC meeting, without making any guarantees about future action, the BoE, the ECB and the BoJ are holding their respective meetings this week. 

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP slide further as risk-off sentiment deepens

Bitcoin faces extended pressure as institutional investors reduce their risk exposure. Ethereum’s upside capped at $3,000, weighed down by ETF outflows and bearish signals. XRP slides toward November’s support at $1.82 despite mild ETF inflows.