As a complicated financial trading product, contracts for difference (CFDs) have the high risk of rapid loss arising from its leverage feature. Most retail investor accounts recorded fund loss in contracts for differences. You should consider whether you have developed a full understanding about the operation rules of contracts for differences and whether you can bear the high risk of fund loss.
The Fed's 50 bp rate hike is behind us. Another 50 bp hike is expected next month. The April employment report will do little to calm the anxiety about the "too tight" labor market. The decline in the participation rate was disappointing and this coupled with decline in Q1 productivity raies questions about the economy's non-inflationary speed limit. One of the fascinating things about the markets is that sometimes the cause take place after the effect. This is an interesting way to express the observation that investors anticipate, discount, futures scenarios. The dollar has been bought and fixed income sold on ideas that the Fed had taken a hawkish turn. The market now accepts that the Federal Reserve will bring it Fed funds target rate within the range regarded as neutral before the end of the year. The hikes will be front-loaded with the next 50 bp hikes discounted for the next two meetings (June and July) and a strong leaning for the same in September (~66%). The balance sheet will begin shrinking next month at roughly the same pace that it peaked in the 2017-2019 experience before ramping up to twice the pace ($95 bln). The week ahead is important because it may be the first signs that may be peak inflation is at hand. For the first time since April 2020, the headline reading of consumer prices and producer prices are expected to have fallen on a year-over-year basis. To be sure, it may not be a large move. By any measure price pressures remain elevated, but the direction is important. It would be the first decline in headline CPI since last August. Core CPI will also likely ease as well. Recall that after the March report, many economists suggested that could be the high-water mark. - Producer prices, both the headline and core, are also expected to have softened a little. In April 2021, they had increased by 1.0%. The composition of inflation may also be changing. Used car prices spurred a great deal of discussion last year. Prices are falling, like Powell suggested would happen when a year ago he drew attention to used car prices and lumber. The unusual rise in durable goods prices may be stalling. Shelter costs may pick up the slack. One of the most important developments last week was the surge in the swaps market to price in a terminal Fed funds rate near 3.75%. Some, like the noted economist and former chief economist for the IMF, Kenneth Rogoff, believes that a considerably higher rate (5%) may be necessary to break the price spiral. However, most observers think that the economic conditions will warrant the end of the tightening cycle before then. Before the Fed gets the funds rate into the 3.75% area, the pockets of economic weakness, that already appear below the surface, will likely have broadened and deepened. It is not just the domestic economy either. Headwinds will emerge globally. Although Europe's April PMI readings continue to show resilience, the deterioration of consumer and business confidence is alarming. Germany and French industrial output fell and by more than expected in March. National governments are cutting growth forecasts. The ECB has not moved. It continues to expand its balance sheet. The hawks are pushing for a July hike and the swaps market is taking the bait. We are less convinced that a consensus for this crystalized among ECB members. The Bank of England warned that the UK's output could contract by 1% in Q4 as the cost-of-living bites as energy price cap is lifted by another 40% in October. The BOE sees the economy contracting by 0.25% in 2023. Japan does not report Q1 22 GDP until May 18, but that it contracted will not be a surprise given the extended Covid restrictions and the earthquake. It is old news in many respects. Arguably more important is that the recovery is already underway, and it will be aided by new stimulus measures. The preliminary April composite PMI rose for a second month, and if confirmed (May 9), it will stand at a four-month high. Arguably, Japan's March current account figures due on May 12 will be noteworthy. First, the first trade surplus in five months is expected. To be sure though, the trade balance, as we have noted, does not drive the current account surplus. The capital flows associated with past investments, such as interest, dividends, profits, royalties, ad licensing fees, drive Japan's current account surplus. Second, with the current account report, Japan also reports portfolio capital flows. The MOF publishes weekly figures, but the monthly figures include a country breakdown. Recall that the February report showed Japanese investors sold about JPY3.1 trillion (~$25 bln) of US sovereign bonds. Some observers have been emphasizing the Japanese selling of US Treasuries. Often the cost of hedging is cited. The general flattening...
The Fed's 50 bp rate hike is behind us. Another 50 bp hike is expected next month. The April employment report will do little to calm the anxiety about the "too tight" labor market. The decline in the participation rate was disappointing and this coupled with decline in Q1 productivity raies questions about the economy's non-inflationary speed limit. One of the fascinating things about the markets is that sometimes the cause take place after the effect. This is an interesting way to express the observation that investors anticipate, discount, futures scenarios. The dollar has been bought and fixed income sold on ideas that the Fed had taken a hawkish turn. The market now accepts that the Federal Reserve will bring it Fed funds target rate within the range regarded as neutral before the end of the year. The hikes will be front-loaded with the next 50 bp hikes discounted for the next two meetings (June and July) and a strong leaning for the same in September (~66%). The balance sheet will begin shrinking next month at roughly the same pace that it peaked in the 2017-2019 experience before ramping up to twice the pace ($95 bln). The week ahead is important because it may be the first signs that may be peak inflation is at hand. For the first time since April 2020, the headline reading of consumer prices and producer prices are expected to have fallen on a year-over-year basis. To be sure, it may not be a large move. By any measure price pressures remain elevated, but the direction is important. It would be the first decline in headline CPI since last August. Core CPI will also likely ease as well. Recall that after the March report, many economists suggested that could be the high-water mark. - Producer prices, both the headline and core, are also expected to have softened a little. In April 2021, they had increased by 1.0%. The composition of inflation may also be changing. Used car prices spurred a great deal of discussion last year. Prices are falling, like Powell suggested would happen when a year ago he drew attention to used car prices and lumber. The unusual rise in durable goods prices may be stalling. Shelter costs may pick up the slack. One of the most important developments last week was the surge in the swaps market to price in a terminal Fed funds rate near 3.75%. Some, like the noted economist and former chief economist for the IMF, Kenneth Rogoff, believes that a considerably higher rate (5%) may be necessary to break the price spiral. However, most observers think that the economic conditions will warrant the end of the tightening cycle before then. Before the Fed gets the funds rate into the 3.75% area, the pockets of economic weakness, that already appear below the surface, will likely have broadened and deepened. It is not just the domestic economy either. Headwinds will emerge globally. Although Europe's April PMI readings continue to show resilience, the deterioration of consumer and business confidence is alarming. Germany and French industrial output fell and by more than expected in March. National governments are cutting growth forecasts. The ECB has not moved. It continues to expand its balance sheet. The hawks are pushing for a July hike and the swaps market is taking the bait. We are less convinced that a consensus for this crystalized among ECB members. The Bank of England warned that the UK's output could contract by 1% in Q4 as the cost-of-living bites as energy price cap is lifted by another 40% in October. The BOE sees the economy contracting by 0.25% in 2023. Japan does not report Q1 22 GDP until May 18, but that it contracted will not be a surprise given the extended Covid restrictions and the earthquake. It is old news in many respects. Arguably more important is that the recovery is already underway, and it will be aided by new stimulus measures. The preliminary April composite PMI rose for a second month, and if confirmed (May 9), it will stand at a four-month high. Arguably, Japan's March current account figures due on May 12 will be noteworthy. First, the first trade surplus in five months is expected. To be sure though, the trade balance, as we have noted, does not drive the current account surplus. The capital flows associated with past investments, such as interest, dividends, profits, royalties, ad licensing fees, drive Japan's current account surplus. Second, with the current account report, Japan also reports portfolio capital flows. The MOF publishes weekly figures, but the monthly figures include a country breakdown. Recall that the February report showed Japanese investors sold about JPY3.1 trillion (~$25 bln) of US sovereign bonds. Some observers have been emphasizing the Japanese selling of US Treasuries. Often the cost of hedging is cited. The general flattening...
S&P 500 finishes the week moderately lower despite wild swings. SPY -0.34% for the week. Nasdaq finishes lower as high growth tech still not favored. QQQ -1.44%. S&P closes off intra-day lows as some position squaring evident. A lot to get through this week. The equity market had looked to put the worst behind it by midweek when a dovish Powell looked after his equity friends by taking a 75bps hike off the table. This set equities on a charge. It was actually up to the plain-speaking Bank of England to set things straight when they talked in strongly bearish terms about the possibility of a recession. Yields had already begun spiking in the US and the resultant collapse in the pound sterling sent the dollar charging and yields again spiked up. Equities went into full panic mode and have not yet fully recovered. This is despite Friday's employment report coming more or less as good as can be for equities. Earnings (wages) were below forecast while the jobs number showed the still healthy employment market in the US. But at the time of writing the major US indices are down again. Sentiment is terrible, it will take a bit more than an average to good employment report to wash this out. But after it all the S&P 500 and Dow were actually little changed on the week. The Dow only lost 0.19% for the week so things may not be as bad as they seem. Energy remains the sector in demand as it was up a whopping 10% for the week, utilities were also positive for the week that was. Real estate and consumer discretionary were some of the worst-performing sectors with both down over 3%. Real estate was hit as pandemic darling Zillow (Z) was bearish in its outlook for the housing market. Higher rates are seeing a noted slowdown here. Things get more interesting next week with US CPI up on Wednesday. Unlikely to show much decline there but by then the market may have priced in as much bad news as it can take. Investors remain highly nervous and pessimistic with sentiment readings from CNN Fear and Greed and AAII both showing extreme bearish readings. Source: CNN.com Equity Fund flow The latest Refinitive Lipper Alpha data shows inflows for equity ETF's up to Wednesday. Interesting to see how Thursday may have impacted that. But $2.3 billion was drawn into equity ETF's, the first net inflow in four weeks. Equity income, growth, and utility funds performed well. Banking and technology sectors continued to see outflows. S&P 500 (SPY) forecast We remain with our sub $400 forecast. As mentioned CNN fear and greed index, AAII sentiment and Goldman Sachs sentiment are at peak fear or oversold levels. However to prevent everyone front running these metrics we called for a waiting game until the SPY really flushed everyone out. That is below $400 in our view and we are more or less there now. Then time for a hard and fast bear market rally. We do have a potential double bottom to watch at $405 but for now we stick with a bit more selling to really flush things out. SPY stock chart, daily Nasdaq (QQQ) forecast $297.45 is the low from March 2021 so nearly a year of hyper gains later and we are back where we started. Let's see if that can stop the rot. The Nasdaq is naturally more bearish than the S&P 500 but the S&P 500 will be the leader here when it finally rallies (sub $400 anyone!) then it will drag the Nasdaq kicking and screaming higher. Earnings week ahead The main grouping of S&P 500 companies has reported, but next week still sees a lot of names with strong interest. So far 413 companies from the S&P 500 have reported and 79.9% of them have beaten estimates according to Refinitive Lipper Alpha. Retail favorites such as AMC, Rivian (RIVN), Lordstown Motors (LORD)and Buffet favorite Occidental (OXY) are up next week. Source: Benzinga Pro Economic releases After the relative relief of Friday's employment report next week turns back to inflation concerns with Wednesday's CPI number the highlight. All eyes will be on bond yields to guide equity investment.
The EURUSD pair moved lower from its daily highs but remained somewhat higher on the day, trading at 1.0560 shortly after the US labor market figures. US jobs market remains strong Earlier today, data showed the US economy posted 428,000 new jobs for April, precisely at the March level and higher than the 391,000 expected. As a result, the unemployment rate stayed at 3.6%. However, wage growth slowed monthly, down to 0.3% from 0.5% previously, while the yearly change slipped a notch from 5.6% to 5.5%. Since the numbers came somewhat in line with expectations, there was no initial volatility. However, the market's medium-term trends are expected to continue since today's numbers have reinforced the Fed's hawkish stance on monetary policy. However, recent improvements in payrolls and earnings and a lower unemployment rate have not translated into a similar gain in many Americans' financial situations. Consumer price rises have outpaced earnings growth as inflation has reached 40-year highs. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in the United States climbed at an annual pace of 8.5 percent in March, the quickest since 1981. Still above 1.05 The key support for the following days seems to be at the 1.05 level. Once it is broken, the euro could quickly decline to 1.035 - the 2016/2017 lows. On the other hand, the resistance could be found at Wednesday's lows near 1.063. But as long as the euro trades below 1.08, the medium and long-term bearish outlooks remain intact.
Outlook: The big story today is supposed to be nonfarm payrolls, with critics already saying a low number will encourage the Fed to back down. Morgan Stanley has a forecast of 475,000, higher participation, the unemployment rate at 3.5% and average hourly earnings up to 5.7% y/y. Bloomberg has a forecast of 380,000, almost 100,000 lower, and the same unemployment rate. The WSJ has 400,000 and the same unemployment rate. It was 431,000 in March, by the way. It looks like the unemployment rate is the thing to watch, along with average hourly earnings. We will soon be getting guesses about how high unemployment can go before the Fed feels the heat. Since we have surplus of jobs and a shortage of labor, that seems unlikely. If average hourly wages are up 5.7% but inflation is closer to 8%, what can draw the worker? It’s important to keep remembering that the Fed can do nothing about supply chain disruptions or the price of oil, both heavy influencers of input prices and hiring decisions, so we are not so sure even bad numbers will stay its hand—0and we don’t expect bad jobs numbers. About those those disruptions: The NY Fed updated the Global Supply Chain Pressure Index for March. See the chart, which is not prices but the standard deviation from the prices over time. Contraction means a dip. To get prices themselves, one of the NY Feds’ components is our old friend the Baltic Dry Index, which is a little less encouraging. Former Fed Clarida gets the WSJ front page with the remark that even if the inflation overshoot fades away, Fed funds still has to be raised into restrictive territory, by which he means 3.5%--at least. He is speaking this afternoon at the Hoover Institute. Several other actually serving Feds also speak today. As usual on payrolls Friday, we advise against trying to trade the news. It’s not a system-based trading regime—it’s betting at the dog track. The probability is high that a surprise will take the price right through your stop or target without stopping. This may be nice when it’s your target but can be catastrophic if it’s your stop. And how to set a stop? Presumably someone has looked at the history of “maximum excursions” on payrolls day and you could use that, but what is the spread of outcomes--and have you got that data? Do those advisors luring you into gambling have it? The commentary today is messier than usual. Everyone is trying to figure out how such a terrible day for equities yesterday could follow such a good one, and why the dollar is up, commodities are mostly flattish, and the 10-year yield rose by far more than the 2-year, which is not supposed to happen if we are headed into recession. After all that chatter about inverted yield curves, you’d think de-inverting would get a headline or two, but that doesn’t match the current narrative, so let’s ignore it. On the commodities front, US nat gas prices rose but European ones fell. Gold is wobbly at $1880 from $2043 on March 8 when gold is supposed to go up as inflation news scares everyone. Nobody seems surprised by this except us. The one thing that does make sense today is the drop in the pound after the BoE came across as cack-handed and indecisive. Loss of confidence in the top financial institution is critical, and we doubt sterling is responding to the Tory party’s woes instead. Bottom line, instances of contradictory developments and frightening developments (China) lead to the same deduction—the dollar is the safe haven. This is an excerpt from “The Rockefeller Morning Briefing,” which is far larger (about 10 pages). The Briefing has been published every day for over 25 years and represents experienced analysis and insight. The report offers deep background and is not intended to guide FX trading. Rockefeller produces other reports (in spot and futures) for trading purposes. To get a two-week trial of the full reports plus traders advice for only $3.95. Click here!
USD/JPY The USDJPY returned to bullish mode, after shallow pullback from new 20-year high found firm ground at 129 zone, contained by rising 10DMA and Fibo 23.6% of 121.27/131.24 upleg. Bulls are establishing above 130 level, but need weekly close above here to confirm bullish signal, after last week’s spike to 131.24 was short-lived and failed to register close above 130. Thursday’s rebound left a double-bottom and formed bullish engulfing pattern that underpins near-term action and adds to positive signals. However, traders remain cautious despite the dollar regained traction, awaiting fresh signals from the US labor report, while daily studies show weakening bullish momentum, which warns bulls may lose steam on renewed probe through 120 pivot. Near-term action is expected to keep bullish bias above rising 10DMA (129.42) with sustained break above 130.00 and 130.65 (Fibo 76.4% of 147.68/75.55) to open way for retest of new peak at 131.24 and unmask 2002 peak at 135.16. Res: 130.47; 130.65; 130.80; 131.24. Sup: 130.00; 129.42; 128.89; 128.62. Interested in USD/JPY technicals? Check out the key levels
Politics French President Emmanuel Macron defended his mandate in the second round of the presidential election with 58.55% of the vote. His opponent Marine Le Pen obtained 41.45%. Turnout was just under 72%. The liberal green Freedom Movement won the parliamentary elections in Slovenia with 34.3% of the vote. The Slovenian Democratic Party of incumbent Prime Minister Janez Jansa came in second with 23.8%. The ruling group has already acknowledged the defeat, and Jansa, who heads the government of the country with 2.1 million inhabitants, will soon finish his term. The Russian gas company Gazprom has completely stopped gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria. It justified its decision by saying that local gas companies PGNiG and Bulgargaz refused to pay for gas in rubles, as Moscow demands. Projections for Europe without Russian gas point to a problem by the end of January 2023 (according to Bruegel). In the event of a complete supply shutdown, EU countries would have to reduce annual consumption by 10 to 15%. At that time, even record high supplies from other countries would not be enough and gas storage facilities in Europe would be emptied at the turn of January and February 2023. The European Central Bank has left its position (in April) on monetary policy essentially unchanged. The current data reinforces expectations that net asset purchases under the APP programme should end in the third quarter and that further monetary policy developments will depend on current data and assessments of the outlook. Economy In the first quarter of 2022, seasonally adjusted GDP increased by 0.4% in the EU, compared with the previous quarter. In the fourth quarter of 2021, GDP had grown by 0.5%. Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, seasonally adjusted GDP increased by 5.2% in the EU in the first quarter of 2022. Portugal (+2.6%) recorded the highest increase compared to the previous quarter, followed by Austria (+2.5%). Declines were recorded in Sweden (-0.4%) and in Italy (-0.2%). The year-on-year growth rates were positive for all countries. The year-on-year inflation rate in the EU rose to a record 7.8% in March from 6.2% in February. The highest inflation in the EU was recorded in Lithuania, where consumer prices increased by 15.6% year-on-year. Estonia came in second place with inflation at 14.8%. Malta, on the other hand, had the lowest inflation at 4.5%. It was followed by France and Portugal. In the fourth quarter of 2021, the seasonally adjusted general government deficit to GDP ratio stood at 3.5% in the EU. The deficit to GDP ratio decreased due to stronger increases in total revenue compared to total expenditure as well as due to a higher GDP in comparison with the third quarter of 2021. In the EU, the deficit to GDP ratio remained stable compared with the third quarter of 2021. In the fourth quarter of 2021, most Member States continued to record a government deficit. In the second half of 2021, average household electricity prices in the EU increased sharply compared with the same period of 2020 (€21.3 per 100 kWh), standing at €23.7 per 100 kWh. Average gas prices in the EU also increased compared with the same period of 2020 (€7.0 per 100 kWh) to €7.8 per 100 kWh in the second half of 2021. Household electricity prices rose in 25 EU Member States in the second half of 2021, compared with the second half of 2020. The largest increase (in national currencies) was registered in Estonia (+50%) and in Sweden (+49%). Between the second half of 2020 and 2nd half of 2021, gas prices increased in 20 of the 24 EU Member States. The largest increases in household gas prices (in national currencies), were observed in Bulgaria (+103%) and in Greece (+96%). In the EU, household real consumption per capita decreased by 0.5% in the fourth quarter of 2021, after an increase of 4.2% in the previous quarter. At the same time, household real income per capita decreased by 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2021, after an increase of 0.4% in the third quarter of 2021. Download The Full EU News Monthly
The euro rose against key currencies as investors focused on the widening gap between German and Italian bonds. The spread between the 10-year bonds of the two countries rose to 2.007%, which was its highest level since May 2020. This means that investors have a preference for safer German government bonds. It also signals that there are expectations that the European Central Bank will start hiking interest rates in its July meeting. The hawkish state of the ECB comes at a time when there are worries about stagflation in the region as inflation rises to over 7%. Global stocks continued crashing on Friday as the mood in the market deteriorated following the hawkish Federal Reserve decision. In the United States, futures tied to the Dow Jones declined by 170 points while those linked to the Nasdaq 100 fell by 150 points. The two indices declined by 1,100 and 600 points on Thursday. The same trend happened in Europe where the DAX, CAC, and Stoxx dropped by more than 1.50%. The worry is that major central banks like the Fed, BOE and the ECB will accelerate their tightening process soon. Also, while most companies have reported strong revenue growth, their margins have dropped. The US dollar continued its strong rally as investors reacted to the latest non-farm payroll data. Data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) showed that the economy added more than 428k jobs in April. This increase was better than the median estimate of 391k. Further numbers revealed that the unemployment remained at 3.6% while wages continued growing. Elsewhere, in Canada, the economy added just 15k jobs in April while its unemployment rate declined to 5.2%. XBR/USD The XBRUSD pair continued rising after the OPEC+ meeting. It managed to move above 112 for the first time in weeks. It has moved above the 25-day moving averages while the DeMarker indicator has moved above the overbought level. The pair has moved above the descending trendline that is shown in orange. Therefore, the pair will likely keep rising as bulls target the key resistance level at 114.17. EUR/USD The EURUSD pair tilted upwards as EU bond spreads widened. The pair rose to a high of 1.0582, which was higher than this week’s low of 1.0480. It has moved between the middle and upper side of the Bollinger Bands. Also, it has risen above the 25-day moving average while the Relative Strength Index has been rising and has managed to move above 50. The pair will likely retest the resistance at 1.0650. ETH/USD The ETHUSD pair made a strong bearish breakout in the past few days. It managed to move below the important support level at 2,700. It also declined below the envelopes and moving average indicators. Further, the pair’s MACD has moved below the neutral level while the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has moved slightly below the overbought level. Therefore, the pair will likely keep falling as bears target the next key support at 2,500.
GBP/CAD traded lower yesterday after the BoE hiked interest rates but warned over recession risks to the UK economy. The dip brought the rate below the 1.5925 barrier, marked by the low of April 28th, a move that confirmed a forthcoming lower low on both the 4-hour and daily charts. This, combined with the fact that we can draw a downside resistance line from the high of February 22nd, paints a positive near-term picture. Today, the rate rebounded somewhat after nearly hitting again support at 1.5775, and thus, we cannot rule out some further recovery, even back above 1.5925. However, as long as the pair stays below the aforementioned downside line, we will see decent chances for the bears to jump back into the action, perhaps from near the high of May 4th, at 1.6105. A possible slide from there could result in another test near the 1.5775 zone, the break of which would confirm another forthcoming lower low and perhaps set the stage for declines towards the low of August 1st, 2013, at 1.5583. Shifting attention to our short-term oscillators, we see that the RSI rebounded and exited its below-30 zone, while the MACD, although below both its zero and trigger lines, shows signs of bottoming. Both indicators detect slowing negative speed, which adds more credence to the view that some further recovery may be on the cards before the next leg south. On the upside, we would like to see a clear recovery back above 1.6203 before we start examining a bullish-reversal case. This would not only confirm a forthcoming higher high on the daily chart, but also the break above the downside resistance line drawn from the high of February 22nd. The bulls could then get encouraged to test the 1.6290 hurdle, the break of which could carry extensions towards the 1.6435 or 1.6504 areas, marked as resistances by the highs of April 22nd and 14th, respectively.
EUR/NZD is trading in an ascending channel on the four-hour chart after the 50-exponential moving average crossed over the 200 EMA. Moreover, the positive slope of divergent moving averages indicates a strengthening bullish Momentum in the short term. In addition, the candlestick bars suggest that Euro buyers have taken control of the European morning trading session by accelerating upward bias. Currently, they are attempting to push the price towards the channel ceiling around 1.65 after defeating the 1.63980 resistance level. If this barrier can halt the rally, we may see a price consolidation for some time. With a sustained move above this level, the 1.65873 mark could come under the spotlight. Otherwise, if sellers take cues from the price at the ascending channel resistance, the pair could return to the support area between 1.63539 and 1.63980. If this area is broken, the probability of falling to the 50-EMA will increase. However, as long as the price floor of 1.60736 remains intact, the uptrend will continue. Short-term momentum oscillators indicate that buyers are dominating the market. The RSI is approaching 70 in the buying area. Despite falling from a three-day peak, the Momentum is still above the -100 line. Positive MACD bars are also rising above the signal line. However, a divergence between price and oscillator occurred on May 2 compared to April 25, suggesting a probable waiting period for buyers.
1) US CPI (Apr) – 11/05 – having seen the US Federal Reserve raise rates by 50bps this week, attention now turns to next month's expected 50bps rate rise, especially if US inflation shows little sign of slowing down when this week’s April numbers are released. This seems likely given Powell’s recent comments about inflation being too high. In March US CPI rose by 8.5%, slightly above expectations, while core prices rose by 6.5%, slightly below expectations, in a sign that inflation pressures could well be close to easing. These expectations proved to be short-lived after PPI in March rose to 11.2% and another record high while core prices rose to 9.2%. With ISM prices paid data still looking frothy, any signs of a peak in headline inflation still seems some way off, with US 10-year yields rising to 3%. This week’s CPI numbers could go some way to determining whether we’ve started to see a pause in inflationary pressures, or whether we get a further lift in inflation expectations. The Federal Reserve has already said it will go for successive 50bps rate hikes at the next two meetings, as well as announcing the process of balance sheet reduction, starting next month at $47.5bn a month, increasing to $95bn a month by September. Expectations are for headline CPI to slip back to 8.1%, core prices to 6.1% and headline PPI to fall to 10.7%. 2) UK Q1 GDP – 12/05 – after a solid January, the UK economy appears to have hit a bit of a speed bump in February and March if recent retail sales and consumer confidence numbers are any guide. Year on year to March retail sales growth slumped from 7.2% to 0.9%, as consumer confidence slid to its lowest levels since October 2020. Manufacturing and construction appear to have held up much better in Q1, although like everyone they are facing huge increases in costs. Having finished last year with an expansion of 1.3%, it's quite likely we’ll see a slowdown for Q1, although we probably won’t see a contraction. On the monthly numbers we’ve seen a 0.8% expansion in January and a 0.1% expansion in February. March is likely to see a contraction which could well drag the quarterly number down sharply, although market expectations are for a 1% expansion. This seems somewhat optimistic. 3) ITV Q1 22 – 11/05 – the last few months haven’t been kind ones for the ITV share price. In March, the shares plunged over 30% and have struggled to recover since then. The announcement of a $180m investment into yet another streaming service ITVX for Q4, on top of its investment in BritBox and ITV Hub has understandably got investors asking questions as to what their long-term strategy is. Reports that they might be interested in bidding for Channel 4 has been equally lukewarm. It has been suggested that the acquisition of Channel 4 could be a net positive for ITV, however it doesn’t change the story when it comes to its disjointed approach on its streaming services. For a start they need to decide on a specific model, this ad-hoc chopping and changing speaks to a management who can’t make up their mind about what type of streaming model they want to pursue. If they can arrive at a settled approach, it might give investors more confidence that they can achieve their target of digital revenues of at least £750m by 2026. Last year ITV saw revenues of £3.45bn, a decent improvement on the previous year, although 2020 was impacted by a sharp fall in advertising revenue. Expectations for this year are for revenues to improve to £3.56bn, with Q1 advertising demand expected to rise 16%, and April expected to rise 10%, although the rest of Q2 will be impacted by tough comparatives due to Euro 2020 last year. 4) BT Group FY 22 – 12/05 – initial reaction to BT’s Q3 results was disappointing with the shares initially falling to 3-month lows. This was despite the numbers being better than expected. Q3 adjusted EBITDA came in at £1.96bn, pushing 9m EBITDA up to £5.71bn. Total revenues for the year rose to £15.67bn, 2% lower than a year ago. BT said its 5G build is on track and that FTTP rollout is now at 6.5m properties, with 662k over the recent quarter at a rate of over 50k per week. The main reason for the initial decline may well have been down to disappointment that they wouldn’t be selling BT Sport to DAZN for £580m, and that they were in discussions with Discovery to create a sports joint venture. The venture would be a 50/50 split between BT Sport and Eurosport UK. The full year outlook for full...
The Fed signaled that it will avoid shock-and-awe rate increases, putting more emphasis on avoiding a recession rather than vanquishing inflation. Another round of US inflation data is on tap next week and the Fed might finally get some good news, as the yearly CPI rate may have peaked. Is this the beginning of the end for the dollar’s supremacy? Maybe not.