3 Numbers: Will The Slide In The 10-Year Treasury Yield Roll On?

 | Apr 12, 2017 06:04AM ET

  • Today’s claimant count report is expected to reflect low macro risk for the UK
  • The outlook for Britain is encouraging, despite some pessimism about Brexit
  • Retail sales in Brazil on track to rise in March for the first time in three months
  • Janet Yellen has hinted that the Fed is keen to keep hiking interest rates
  • The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield touched a new year-to-date low yesterday
  • The UK economy is in focus today with the March update on the labour market scheduled for release. We’ll also see March numbers on Brazil’s retail sales. Meantime, traders will be closely monitoring the US 10-year Treasury yield, which dipped to a new year-to-date low in mid-day trading on Tuesday.

    UK: Labour Market Report (0830 GMT): Brexit opponents keep looking for a smoking gun in the economic data that will confirm their forecasts that leaving the European Union will come at a heavy price for the UK economy. But so far, there are few signs in the hard data that trouble is near.

    True, retail sales look wobbly, but some analysts say this is less about trouble in the consumer sector versus seasonal issues related to a late Easter. “The distortion which results from the timing of Easter always makes Spring a tricky period to assess and the later timing of the holiday this year certainly detracted from last month's performance,” noted the chief executive at the British Retail Consortium.

    Bears note too that Inflation has increased, rising modestly above the Bank of England’s 2% target. But it appears that pricing pressure isn’t set to climb sharply higher from current levels.

    Meanwhile, the near-term growth outlook for Britain remains encouraging, based on this week’s update of the OECD’s composite leading indicator (CLI). “The CLI continues to point to tentative signs of growth gaining momentum, although uncertainty related to Brexit remains,” the organization advised.

    The EY Item Club’s new forecast also sees moderate growth continuing this year. “Our forecast projects that UK GDP will grow by 1.8% this year, in line with last year’s outcome,” the consultancy predicted.

    Brexit risks lurk, of course, but for the moment the UK appears to be adjusting to the shifting landscape unleashed by last year’s decision to exit the EU.

    Today’s March report on the labour market isn’t expected to change the cautiously upbeat outlook. For example, economists expect that the number of newly unemployed workers is expected to drop for a third month in a row, according to Econoday.com’s consensus forecast. Note, however, that the Office for National Statistics has removed this data from the statistical release (although it will still be published on the ONS web site). The reasoning, according to the government: the numbers may be dispensing a misleading profile of the labour market.

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    Perhaps, but a broad review of economic data continues to signal a healthy rate of growth for the months ahead. The bullish outlook for the claimant count comes with new caveats, but for the moment these numbers are reflecting a familiar narrative: the UK’s expansion rolls on.