ECB’s Lagarde
(neutral – voter) reaffirmed her patience stance with the usual focus on wage
growth:
- We are not there yet
on inflation. - We have to get to 2%
inflation sustainably. - ECB must play its
role in climate transition. - There are increasing
signs of a bottoming-out in growth and some forward-looking indicators
point to a pick-up later this year. - Wage pressures,
meanwhile, remain strong. - The current
disinflationary process is expected to continue, but the governing council
needs to be confident that it will lead us sustainably to our 2% target. - Labour cost
increases are partly buffered by profits and are not being fully passed on
to consumers. - We expect inflation
to continue slowing down, as the impact of past upward shocks fades and
tight financing conditions help to push down inflation. - Our restrictive
monetary policy stance, the ensuing strong decline in headline inflation,
and firmly anchored longer-term inflation expectations act as a safeguard
against sustained wage price spiral.
The Japan January
CPI beat expectations although the inflation rates eased from the prior
figures:
- CPI Y/Y 2.2% vs. 2.6%
prior. - Core CPI Y/Y 2.0% vs.
1.8% expected and 2.3% prior. - Core-Core CPI Y/Y 3.5% vs. 3.7% prior.
Fed’s Schmid (hawk
– non voter) can be put on the top of the FOMC hawks after his comments
although he’s not a voting member this year:
- No need to pre-emptively
adjust the stance of policy. - Fed should be
patient, wait for convincing evidence that inflation fight has been won. - In ‘no hurry’ to
halt the ongoing reduction in size of Fed’s balance sheet. - We are not out of
the woods yet on ‘too high’ inflation. - How much further Fed
can shrink its balance sheet ‘an open question’. - Don’t favour ‘overly
cautious’ approach to balance sheet runoff; some interest-rate volatility
should be tolerated. - Fed should minimize
its footprint in the financial system, particularly as relates to Fed’s
balance sheet. - Returning inflation
to 2% will likely require restoring balance in labour markets, moderating
wage growth. - Reducing Fed’s
balance sheet should be a priority once crisis has passed. - Large Fed balance
sheet can create unintended consequences, including on bank lending,
liquidity. - January CPI
inflation data argues for caution. - Large Fed balance
sheet can create asset-price distortions. - Bank regulators
should take tailored approach. - Silicon Valley Bank
was a bit of a canary in a coal mine. - Fed’s Discount
Window should be part of a bank’s ‘strategic stack’ funding. - it would be a
mistake to consider cryptocurrency as a currency.
The US January Durable
Goods Orders missed expectations:
- Durable Goods Orders
M/M -6.1% vs. -4.5% expected and -0.3% prior (revised from 0.0%). - Non-defense capital
goods orders ex-air M/M 0.1% vs. 0.1% expected and -0.6% prior (revised
from 0.3%). - Ex transport M/M
-0.3% vs. 0.2% expected. - Ex defense M/M -7.3% vs. 0.5% prior.
- Shipments M/M -0.9%.
BoE’s Ramsden (neutral –
voter) supports the current patient approach as he would like to see more
evidence that inflation is going back to their 2% target sustainably.
- Key indicators of
inflation persistence remain elevated. - I support the
more-balanced outlook on risks to inflation set out in the MPC’s latest
forecast. - I am looking for
more evidence about how entrenched this persistence will be and therefore
about how long the current level of bank rate will need to be maintained.
The US February Consumer Confidence missed expectations
by a big margin with negative revisions to the prior readings:
- Consumer Confidence
106.7 vs. 115.0 expected and 110.9 prior (revised from 114.8). - Present situation
index 147.2 vs.154.9 prior (revised from 161.3). - Expectations 79.8 vs.
81.5 prior (revised from 83.8). - 1 year Inflation 5.2% vs. 5.2% prior.
- Jobs hard-to-get 13.5%
vs. 11.0% prior (revised from 9.8%).
“The decline in consumer
confidence in February interrupted a three-month rise, reflecting persistent
uncertainty about the US economy,” said Dana Peterson, Chief Economist at The
Conference Board. “The drop in confidence was broad-based, affecting all income
groups except households earning less than $15,000 and those earning more than
$125,000. Confidence deteriorated for consumers under the age of 35 and those
55 and over, whereas it improved slightly for those aged 35 to 54.”
Fed’s Bowman (hawk – voter) maintains her patient
stance with no fear of raising rates further if inflation progress were to
stall:
- Will remain cautious
on monetary policy. - If inflation moves
sustainably to 2% goal, it will eventually be appropriate to cut interest
rates; not yet there. - Reducing policy rate
too soon could result in need for future rate hikes. - She remains willing
to raise policy rate if inflation progress stalls or reverses. - Latest inflation
data suggests slower progress on inflation. - Economic activity
and consumer spending are strong, labour market ‘tight’.
Reuters reported that OPEC+ may consider extending
their voluntary output cuts into Q2 or even into year-end.
The Australian January Monthly CPI missed
expectations:
- CPI Y/Y 3.4% vs.
3.6% expected and 3.4% prior. - Trimmed Mean CPI Y/Y
3.8% vs. 4.0%.
The RBNZ left the OCR unchanged at 5.5% and dropped
the tightening bias:
RBNZ forecasts:
- Sees official cash
rate at 5.59% in June 2024 (prior 5.67%). - Sees official cash
rate at 5.47% in March 2025 (prior 5.56%). - Sees twi nzd at
around 71.5% in March 2025 (prior 70.7%). - Sees annual CPI 2.6%
by March 2025 (prior 2.4%). - Sees official cash
rate at 5.33% in June 2025 (prior 5.42%). - Sees official cash
rate at 3.16% in March 2027.
Statement:
- The OCR needs to
remain at a restrictive level for a sustained period. - The New Zealand
economy has evolved broadly as anticipated by the committee. - The committee
remains confident that the current level of the OCR is restricting demand.
- Core inflation and
most measures of inflation expectations have declined, and the risks to
the inflation outlook have become more balanced. - However, headline
inflation remains above the 1 to 3 percent target band, limiting the
committee’s ability to tolerate upside inflation surprises. - A sustained decline
in capacity pressures in the New Zealand economy is required to ensure
that headline inflation returns to the 1 to 3 percent target. - With high
immigration and weaker demand growth, capacity constraints in the New
Zealand labour market have eased.
From
the minutes to the meeting:
- Ongoing restrictive
monetary policy settings are necessary to guard against the risk of a rise
in inflation expectations. - Capacity pressures
have eased significantly over the past year. - The committee agreed
that interest rates need to remain at a restrictive level for a sustained
period of time. - The committee noted
that aggregate demand is now better matched with the supply capacity of
the economy. - The starting point
for capacity pressures in the New Zealand economy is only slightly lower
than previously assumed. - The committee is
conscious that the economy has limited capacity to absorb further upside
inflation surprises. - Recent drops in core
inflation and business inflation expectations are encouraging, but they
remain above the 2 percent mid-point of the committee’s target band.
Moving on to the Governor Orr’s Press Conference:
- Central banks may
have to hold rates higher than markets expect. - New Zealand economy
has evolved ‘broadly’ as expected. - Discussed rate hike,
but strong consensus that rates were sufficient. - Domestic price
pressures are easing as expected. - Comforting to see
inflation expectations decline. - Data has given us
more confidence in the outlook than in November. - We are in a
disinflation period. - Economy faces a
soft-landing scenario.
ECB’s Kazimir (hawk – non voter in March) is clearly
signalling a rate cut in June, all else being equal:
- Market’s rate cut
pricing now “more realistic”. - Pleased with recent
shift in expectations. - Headline
disinflation is going quicker than expected but core prices still remain
uncertain. - Prefers June rate
cut, then “smooth and steady cycle of policy easing”.
The 2nd reading for the US Q4 2023 GDP
missed slightly expectations with higher figures for consumer spending and
inflation:
- US Q4 2023 GDP 3.2%
vs. 3.3% expected.
Details:
- Consumer spending 3.0% vs. 2.8% advance.
- Consumer spending on
durables 3.2% vs. 4.6% advance. - GDP final sales 3.5%
vs. 3.2% advance. - GDP deflator 1.7% vs. 1.5% advance.
- Core PCE 2.1% vs.
2.0% advance. - Business investment 0.9% vs. 2.1% advance.
Fed’s Collins (neutral – non voter) echoed her
colleagues in supporting a patient stance as they gather more information:
- Repeats it will
likely become appropriate to begin easing policy later this year. - Recent economic data
highlight that progress toward the Fed’s goals could continue to be bumpy. - More time is needed
to discern if the economy is sustainably on the path to price stability
and a healthy labour market. - States the need to
see more evidence that the disinflationary process will continue before
starting to carefully normalize policy. - Expecting all of the
data to speak uniformly is too high a bar; shouldn’t overreact to
individual data readings. - The return to 2%
will likely require demand growing at a more moderate pace this year. - Wants to see
continued evidence that wage growth is not contributing to inflationary
pressures. - In assessing
inflation progress, will look for inflation expectations remaining well
anchored and an orderly moderation in labour demand. - Wants to see
continued declines in housing inflation and non-shelter services
inflation. - The threat of
inflation remaining above 2% has receded. - I see risks is more
balanced between cutting too early and too late. - We should be taking
time on policy. - We expect we will
see more of a decline in reserves, and will be paying attention to what
point it might be appropriate to revisit QT. - Too early to tell if
we are extracting the right signal from housing inflation data.
Fed’s Williams (neutral – voter) reiterated the
patient approach as the Fed will be guided by the incoming economic data:
- Still some ways to
go before hitting the 2% inflation target. - Fully committed to achieving
the Fed’s 2% inflation target. - Will let incoming
economic data determine the monetary policy path. - Sees likely uneven
path back to 2% inflation. - Inflation pressures
have fallen a lot amid broad-based improvement. - Risks to outlook
exist on up and down sides. - Inflation to hit
2%-2.25% this year, 2% in 2025. - Growth at 1.5% this
year, unemployment up to around 4%. - Economy, job market
strong, imbalances waning. - Current 3.7%
unemployment rate around long-term level. - Risks to Fed job,
inflation mandates moving into better balance. - Fed likely to cut
rates later this year. - Will watch data to
drive decision over cutting rates. - Fed has time to take
in data before cutting rates. - Pandemic aftermath
still affecting economy, but optimistic about outlook. - 3 interest-rate cuts
in 2024 reasonable for US central bank officials to debate. - Data will drive one
federal cut rates. - Current US economy
is similar to where it was during December policy meeting. - It is unclear what
impact potential US government shutdown would have on economy.
Fed’s Bostic (hawk – voter) repeated the comments from
other members as they all support a patient approach:
- There is still work
to do on inflation. - Has not declared
victory just yet. - Is comfortable being
patient on policy. - Will not be a fast march
to 2% inflation.
ECB’s Nagel (hawk – voter) wants to see wage growth to
moderate before supporting rate cuts:
- It would be fatal if
ECB cut rates too early only for inflation to rebound. - ECB needs
confirmation that wage growth is moderating to a level that will let
inflation fall back to target in 2025.
BoE’s Mann (hawk – voter) blamed consumers for the
slow progress on inflation:
- Lack of consumer
discipline complicates policy. - BoE is struggling to
bring inflation back to target because price rises are increasingly driven
by people who are immune to the pressures of higher interest rates. - There is lack of
consumer discipline to rein in business’s pricing power in areas of the
services sector where prices were often sticky.
The Japanese January Industrial Production missed
expectations:
- Industrial
Production Y/Y -1.5% vs. -0.7% prior. - Industrial
Production M/M -7.5% vs. -7.3% expected and 1.4% prior.
The Japanese January Retail Sales came in line with
expectations:
- Retail Sales Y/Y
2.3% vs. 2.3% expected and 2.4% prior (revised from 2.1%). - Retail Sales M/M
0.8% vs. -2.9% prior.
BoJ’s Takata delivered
some hawkish comments that sent the Yen higher across the board:
- Momentum is rising
in spring wage talks. - Many companies are
offering higher-than-2023 wage hikes. - Achievement of 2%
inflation target is becoming in sight despite uncertainty of economic
outlook. - Japan’s economy is
in inflection point of changing ‘norm’ that people think wages, prices are
not rising. - Exit measures should
include abandoning yield curve control framework, ending negative rates,
overshoot commitment. - I would call for a
gear shift in policy, but not one that is going backwards. - Moderate recovery
trend intact despite slowdown in capex, consumption. - Monetary policy
needs to remain consistent with the real economy, financial environment. - Have not made up
mind yet on monetary policy decision. - Wage hikes are
broadening stronger than last year. - Need to watch outcome
of spring wage talks after mid-March. - Not thinking of
raising rates one after another. - Don’t want to single
out any policy step in mentioning “nimble responses”. - Gradual steps will
be needed amid mixed circumstances surrounding smaller firms. - We need to keep some
easing measures to some extent. - But important for
exit strategy to not be too complicating.
The Switzerland Q4 2023
GDP beat expectations:
- Q4 2023 GDP Q/Q 0.3% vs.
0.1% expected and 0.3% prior.
The US Jobless Claims
missed expectations:
- Initial Claims 215K
vs. 210K expected and 202K prior (revised from 201K). - Continuing Claims
1905K vs. 1874K expected and 1860K prior (revised from 1862K).
The US January PCE came
in line with expectations:
- PCE Y/Y 2.4% vs.
2.4% expected and 2.6% prior. - PCE M/M 0.3% vs.
0.3% expected and 0.1% prior. - Core PCE Y/Y 2.8%
vs. 2.8% expected and 2.9% prior. - Core PCE M/M 0.4%
vs. 0.4% expected and 0.1% prior (revised from 0.2%).
Consumer
spending and consumer income for January:
- Personal income 1.0%
versus 0.4%. Prior month 0.3%. - Personal spending
0.2% versus 0.2% expected. Prior month 0.7% - Real personal
spending -0.1% vs 0.6% last month revised from 0.5%).
The Canadian Q4 2023 GDP
beat expectations:
- Q4 GDP Q/Q 0.3% vs. -0.1%
prior (revised from -0.3%). - Annualised GDP Q/Q
1.0% vs. 0.8% expected and -0.5% prior (revised from -1.1%). - December GDP M/M
0.0% vs. 0.2% expected and 0.2% prior.
Fed’s Goolsbee (dove –
non voter) continues to see progress in disinflation:
- We’ve had very
substantial progress over a long-term basis on inflation. - Even with January
PCE data showing a month of rebound, should be careful to extrapolate. - There is element of
truth that disinflation of 2023 was supply chain repair. - Should be careful
with the argument that supply change is now fixed. - Should not expect
more benefit in 2024. - Impact on supply
shock on inflation takes time. - Suggests benefits of
supply chain disinflation are still to come. - Lags on supply shock
from labour on inflation are probably long. - As of labour supply
shocks probably have a longer lasting effect on inflation then supply
chain shocks. - If substantial
productivity growth continues, that would have an impact on monetary
policy. - What I’m watching
the most is why hasn’t housing inflation improved more than it has. - There is a risk of
betting against the Fed being committed on doing what it says. - Rates are pretty restrictive.
- I still think the
question is how long we want to remain in this restrictive. - External shocks are
the things I worry about most. - 2023 was a golden year.
- If golden path is to
continue in 2024, would rely on lagged effect of the past positive supply
shocks. - If you stay quite
restrictive, you will eventually have to think about impact to employment.
Fed’s Bostic (hawk –
voter)
- Inflation came down
much faster than expected. - The last inflation
number shows that inflation’s decline will be a bumpy one. - Fed must stay
vigilant and intensive. - Over the long arc inflation
is still coming down. - It is probably
appropriate to reduce the fed funds policy rate in the summertime. - Economic data will
be the guide for the Fed on when rate cards are made. - Degree of risk
exposure in the nonbanking sector worries me. - Calls the US banking
sector sound and strong. - Range of risks that
has to think about has become more complex. - Geopolitical risks
are currently high. - I expect things are
going to be bumpy on inflation. - It is useful to use
a range of different approaches to assess inflation.
Fed’s Daly (neutral –
voter) repeated that the current policy stance is appropriate:
- Fed policy is in a
good place. - Fed can cut rates if
needed. - The Fed wants to
avoid holding rates all the way to 2% inflation. - There is no imminent
risk of the economy faltering. - If Fed were to cut
too quickly, inflation can get stuck. - Risks of persistent
inflation and economic downturn are even.
Fed’s Mester (hawk –
voter) continues to support the patient stance guided by incoming economic
data:
- January PCE data was
not too surprising. - January PCE reading
does not change view that inflation is going downward. - There is a little
more work for the Fed to do on inflation. - It’s all about risk
management until we get to 2% inflation goal. - Monetary policy is
restrictive, demand should cool. - We can’t rely on
pace of disinflation last year to continue this year. - Demand will
moderate, growth this year will not be as strong as last year. - Does not want to
focus on timing of the rate cut but the data. - Expects some
slowdown in employment growth. - That slowing in
employment growth is what we need to see to ease policy. - We do need to be
more confident that inflation is on that downward path. - Baseline is we will
see moderation in the labour market, but it will still healthy. - Need to see
continued disinflation. - Baseline forecast of
three rate cuts still seems about right. - Economy and monetary
policy is in a good spot.
BoJ’s Ueda basically
retracted what Takata said yesterday as he cast doubt on the achievement of the
2% target and wasn’t upbeat on wage negotiations:
- The recent recession
in Japan follows previous strong quarters. - Japan’s economy will
continue recovering gradually. - Japan firms’ capex
plan is strong, which likely to be implemented eventually. - Japan’s economy not
yet in situation where sustained achievement of 2% inflation can be
foreseen. - In judging whether
sustained achievement of 2% inflation target can be foreseen, this
year’s annual wage negotiation outcome is key. - Compared with when
we announced our January report, labour unions have demanded wage growth
higher than last year, big firms seem keen to hike wages. - Want to look at
collective outcome of wage talks, as well as hearings we conduct on firms.
RBNZ Hawkesby reaffirmed
the central bank patient stance:
- Restrictive policy
needed to ensure inflation expectations anchor at 2%. - Policy is going to
stay restrictive for some time yet. - Policy will need to
stay restrictive even when the output gap is negative. - We think the output
gap now is around zero, if not a bit negative. - We don’t have a lot
of room to manoeuvre when it comes to future inflation shocks. - We are on the right
path with inflation, have to hold our course. - Not in a mindset to
cut rates now, will be cutting sometime down the track.
The Japanese Unemployment
Rate came in line with expectations:
- Unemployment rate
2.4% vs. 2.4% expected and 2.4% prior.
RBNZ Governor Orr
reaffirmed the central bank’s patient stance:
- Economy is evolving
as anticipated. - Inflation expectations have fallen.
- Inflation is still
too high but is falling. - Monetary policy
needs to stay restrictive for some time. - Expect to begin
normalising policy in 2025. - Expect economic
growth to begin picking up in 2024.
Fed’s Williams (neutral –
voter) reiterated that he sees progress on inflation and rate cuts this year:
- Says 2023 was an
amazing year for the economy. - Current business
cycle is not a normal one. - Much of what
happened in the economy is a reversal of the pandemic hit. - The resilience of
the US economy is remarkable. - The Federal Reserve
is dealing a strong economy, adding lots of jobs. - Wants inflation back
to 2% and sees progress on that. - I do expect us to
cut interest rates later this year. - Doesn’t see sense of
urgency to cut rates. - Rate hike is not
part of base case. - Current outlook
doesn’t suggest another hike is needed.
The Chinese February PMIs
showed Manufacturing remaining in contraction and Services improving further:
- Manufacturing PMI
49.1 vs. 49.1 expected and 49.2 prior. - Services PMI 51.4
vs. 50.9 expected and 50.7 prior.
The Chinese February Caixin
Manufacturing PMI beat expectations:
- Caixin Manufacturing
PMI 50.9 vs. 50.6 expected and 50.8 prior.
Caixin PMI summary:
- Production and new
orders grew faster in February. - New export business
expanded for the second consecutive month due to an improvement in
underlying global demand conditions. - Inventories of
purchased items increased at the fastest pace since late-2020. - Stocks of finished
items fell for the first time since June last year. - Employment fell for
the sixth successive month. - Factory gate prices
down for the second month, with the rate of discounting being the quickest
since July 2023.
The Switzerland February
Manufacturing PMI missed expectations:
- Manufacturing PMI 44.0
vs. 44.4 expected and 43.1 prior.
The Eurozone February CPI
beat expectations:
- CPI Y/Y 2.6% vs.
2.5% expected and 2.8% prior. - Core CPI Y/Y 3.1% vs.
2.9% expected and 3.3% prior.
The Eurozone Unemployment
Rate remained unchanged at 6.4%.
Fed’s Barkin (hawk –
voter) seems to be getting a bit uncomfortable as he even questioned rate cuts
this year:
- Yesterday was a high
inflation report. - We’re still a world
of prices increasing at higher levels. - Says he tried to not
take too much out of January economic figures in general. - PCE data yesterday
is consistent with the story he is hearing with regards to services
inflation. - Inflation is coming
down, but we have to see how much more has to happen to get it to 2%. - I am not in a hurry
to cut rates. - I still see wage and
inflation pressures. - We’ll see if there
are rate cuts this year. - It all depends on
progress on inflation. - Economy will tell us
what to do on policy.
BoE’s Pill (neutral –
voter) stressed that even if they cut monetary policy will remain restrictive:
- My baseline is that
the time for cutting rates is some ways off. - I need to see more
compelling evidence that the underlying persistent component of UK CPI
inflation is being squeezed down. - Maintaining
restrictiveness does not necessarily mean leaving bank rate unchanged. - Real interest rates
will rise as inflation and short-term inflation expectations ease. - Monetary policy
stance remains restrictive even after a cut.
The Canadian
Manufacturing PMI improved further in February:
- Manufacturing PMI 49.7
vs. 48.3 prior.
The US February ISM
Manufacturing PMI surprisingly missed expectations:
- ISM Manufacturing
PMI 47.8 vs. 49.5 expected and 49.1 prior.
Details:
- Prices paid 52.5 vs. 52.9 prior.
- Employment 45.9 vs. 47.1 prior.
- New orders 49.2 vs. 52.5 prior.
- Inventories 45.3 vs. 46.2 prior.
- Production 48.4 vs. 50.4 prior.
The
highlights for next week will be:
- Monday: Switzerland CPI.
- Tuesday: Tokyo CPI, China Caixin
Services PMI, Eurozone PPI, US ISM Services PMI. - Wednesday: Australia GDP, Eurozone
Retail Sales, US ADP, BoC Policy Decision, US Job Openings, Fed Chair Powell
Testimony. - Thursday: Japan Wage data,
Switzerland Unemployment Rate, ECB Policy Decision, US Jobless Claims, Fed
Chair Powell Testimony. - Friday: US NFP, Canada Labour
Market report.
That’s all folks. Have a
nice weekend.