Another mild inflation number from the US - this time the PPI! 😅🐮
Inflation is heading lower, but watch out!
A thread 1/n
PPI now clearly hints of lower CPI readings around 6-7% within a couple of months from now.. Good news and it adds to a series of downwards pointing indicators for inflation
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Freight rates for example hint of SHARP goods disinflation in coming months.. Supply chains are softening up, which ought to bring prices of goods down ultimately..
3/n
Also food prices are bound for a correction lower in the CPI index due to 1) lower energy prices and 2) lower transportation costs
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But.. we need to look at what it means for the Fed and for markets as well ..
Using historical parallels, the market will likely try and chase equities higher on lower CPI prints in search of a Fed pivot on rates AND QT
This happened in 1974 as well
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The problem is just that an early pivot risks refueling inflation pressures (as it did in the 1970s) when the Fed pivoted alongside weakening CPI momentum
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Powell has been pretty firm that he does not want to repeat the mistakes of the 1970s, why a pivot on BOTH rates AND the balance sheet seems a bit farfetched to hope for already. At best we get a slowdown in the pace of hikes
7/n
Remember that we need a pivot in both rates and QT to truly turn positive on equities, not least as a recession / slowing economy is the main reason why the CPI is disinflating
8/n
A falling PPI (year over year) usually corresponds to an EARNINGS RECESSION as it is a symptom of weak demand.. So even if it is good medium-term news, it is not necessarily something to celebrate short-term
A China reopening is maybe THE hottest macro story outside of the US disinflation euphoria (suddenly I don't get a ton of trolls in my feed, when I tell that inflation has peaked for now)
Lower global inflation INCREASES the chance of a reopening in China
2/n
HARD lock-downs have brought Chinese inflation under control relative to EU and US inflation and the Chinese politburo knows
Inflation dissipating in Europe and US will increase the chance of a reopening in China, but we are still far from comfortable global inflation
3/n
The CPI report came in Thursday with headline at 7.7% and core at 6.3%, both lower than expected. And boy oh boy did risk assets like that. Everything was partying like there was no tomorrow.
Let’s have a quick look at what F happened here?
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Firstly, yields in the US and Europe collapsed, which saw the dollar weakening given Europe a bit more breathing room. China was the only country to see yields rise on a weekly basis properly reflecting the reopening story.
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Everyone and their mother suddenly celebrated inflation at 7.7% and that saw the largest daily move up in the SPY since the spring of 2020. You know .. back when rates and inflation were near zero. I don’t quite get the rush to suddenly turn uber bullish risk assets.
Serious technical damage has been done to the long USD bet 🐻
A thread 1/n
A move from 0.95 to 1.035 is quite a reversal and the trend-channel is clearly broken in the short EURUSD bet now
Let's look at the reasons why
2/n
1) The energy bet has been reversed. Nat Gas priced are down materially, which helps the German (and European) current account balance regain its footing and consequently helped the EUR
So, I doubt you have missed the MAYHEM unfolding in Crypto these past days
Are we witnessing a Bear Stearns / Lehman 2.0 in Crypto space in real-time here on Twitter?
Here is a boomers ‘executive summary’ if you will…
1/n
The saga took its beginning on Nov. 2nd after a leaked balance sheet from Alameda Research, the Sam Bankman-Fried founded trading firm, showed significant holdings of the FTX-native token FTT. This rightly concerned the crypto community.
2/n
Alameda's CEO tried to pour oil on troubled waters with the statement on Nov 6
“The BS breaks out a few of our biggest long positions; we obviously have hedges that aren’t listed … given the tightening in the crypto credit space this year we’ve returned most of our loans”
3/n
Natural gas prices have bottomed and will likely SPIKE again now 🐻
Let's have a look at commodity market dynamics, shall we? A thread 1/n
While grains have softened, pretty much any other commodity has risen last week.
Besides energy lead by heating oil (de facto diesel) and natural gas, metals have surged – industrials as well as precious. The move likely has to do with speculations of a China reopening
2/n
With European storages near max capacity, LNG-mail-orders still in que to unload and a historically mild autumn, natural gas was briefly down 50% from June 1st
As temperatures decline and Europe enters heating season, prices has regained momentum – exactly as I predicted