|

Today’s economic calendar centers around US CPI

Markets

The US and China agreed to restore the Geneva trade truce after a two‐day trade talk marathon in London. Both sides accused each other of violating the terms in recent days but have now found common ground. The news broke overnight and after US trading hours. Asian stock markets welcome the news but only cautiously. US equity futures appear to take it with a grain of salt although we should add that the likes of the S&P 500 have never really retraced on the trade matter when things escalated again. Either way it shows that markets are done with headline‐based trading and instead wait for actual results. And trade negotiations between the two largest economies of the world have merely just begun. The stoic dollar reaction is telling the same story. EUR/USD holds on to above 1.14, a level around it has been oscillating for all of June so far. DXY kept steady nearby 99. One of the largest FX moves were reserved for the pound. EUR/GBP shot up from as low as 0.8417 to 0.846. The trigger was a decent but slightly below‐consensus labour market report. Wages grew less than expected and a first, preliminary gauge for May showed employment shrunk the most since the pandemic erupted in 2020 (‐109k). Our feeling, however, is that this figure that’s subject to heavy revisions was more of a good excuse for GBP profit‐taking rather than anything else. US Treasuries traded mixed across the curve. The front underperformed (+1.6 bps). The 3‐yr $58bn auction tailed slightly but left no material traces. The onus remains on tonight’s 10‐yr and especially tomorrow’s 30‐yr sale. Longer maturities shed up to 1.3 bps. German bunds outperformed with net daily changes varying between ‐1.7 and ‐4.4 bps in a bull flattener.   

Today’s economic calendar centers around US CPI. Consensus expects the headline reading to rise by 0.2% m/m and accelerate to 2.4% y/y from 2.3%. The core gauge should add 0.3% m/m to 2.9% y/y. It will be interesting to see a potential first impact of the trade tariffs, in particular on goods inflation. But that won’t change the Fed’s policy decision of next week. If anything, after Friday’s payrolls it will only make the job (at least from a communication point of view) easier: a resilient labour market, an economy not derailing so far and inflation above target with risks tilted to the upside means sticking to the sidelines for the time being. Current US money market pricing implies a Fed rate cut by October at the earliest. We find that reasonable given the circumstances. Barring major CPI surprises, the front end of the curve probably won’t budge much. The long end is eying tonight’s bond auction while the US dollar is stuck in directionless, sideways trading.  

News and views

In an interview with Bloomberg yesterday, the Governor of the Czech national Bank (CNB), Alex Michl indicated that the CNB needs to keep its policy rate at the current level (3.5%) for some time. The CNB governor elaborated that the country still needs a high and positive real interest rate to keep inflation low in the longer term. The CNB in May after a pause further reduced its policy rate by 25 bps to 3.5%. Michl’s comments come after May inflation at 0.5% M/M and 2.4% Y/Y (up from 1.8% Y/Y in April) printed slightly higher than expected. In this respect, the CNB yesterday in a monthly comment on its website, analyzed that the rebound in May was expected and mainly due to higher volatile food prices. The outcome stays close to CNB spring forecasts. At the same time, the CNB indicates that inflation is not yet stabilized and requires a cautious monetary policy. Especially core inflation increased to 2.8% and will stay close to this level in the months ahead. This reflects the cost of owner‐occupied housing, which is accelerating due to strong house price growth. As a result, market services inflation remains elevated (4.6%), even though there are signs of a slight slowdown in the growth of other services prices (in restaurants, for example). The Czech koruna is well bid of late and trades near the strongest levels since June year (EUR/CZK 24.75 area).

Brazilian inflation in May eased slightly more than expected to 0.26% M/M and 5.32% Y/Y (from 0.43% M/M and 5.53% Y/Y in April). The slowdown was mainly driven by a slower rise in food prices (0.17%), lower transportations costs (‐0.37%) and a decline in prices of household goods (‐0.27%). On the other hand, higher electricity prices accelerated housing costs (1.19%). Even so, inflation still surpasses the central bank’s target (3.0% +/‐ 1.5%). The bank raised its policy rate by 50 bps to 14.75% at the May meeting and vowed a data‐dependent and flexible approach. The central bank meets next week. Even after the May inflation easing the debate remains open whether it will be enough for the bank to pause its tightening cycle or raise rates further.

Download The Full Sunrise Market Commentary

Author

More from KBC Market Research Desk
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD struggles near 1.1850, with all eyes on US CPI data

EUR/USD holds losses while keeping its range near 1.1850 in European trading on Friday. A broadly cautious market environment paired with a steady US Dollar undermines the pair ahead of the critical US CPI data. Meanwhile, the Eurozone Q4 GDP second estimate has little to no impact on the Euro. 

GBP/USD recovers above 1.3600, awaits US CPI for fresh impetus

GBP/USD recovers some ground above 1.3600 in the European session on Friday, though it lacks bullish conviction. The US Dollar remains supported amid a softer risk tone and ahead of the US consumer inflation figures due later in the NA session on Friday. 

Gold remains below $5,000 as US inflation report looms

Gold retreats from the vicinity of the $5,000 psychological mark, though sticks to its modest intraday gains in the European session. Traders now look forward to the release of the US consumer inflation figures for more cues about the Fed policy path. The outlook will play a key role in influencing the near-term US Dollar price dynamics and provide some meaningful impetus to the non-yielding bullion.

US CPI data set to show modest inflation cooling as markets price in a more hawkish Fed

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics will publish January’s Consumer Price Index data on Friday, delayed by the brief and partial United States government shutdown. The report is expected to show that inflationary pressures eased modestly but also remained above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

The weekender: When software turns the blade on itself

Autonomous AI does not just threaten trucking companies and call centers. It challenges the cognitive toll booths that legacy software has charged for decades. This is not a forecast. No one truly knows the end state of AI.

Solana Price Forecast: Mixed market sentiment caps recovery

Solana (SOL) is trading at $79 as of Friday, following a correction of over 9% so far this week. On-chain and derivatives data indicates mixed sentiment among traders, further limiting the chances of a price recovery.