All Priced In, But By How Much?

 | Nov 30, 2015 03:43AM ET

A big final week of 2015 for central bank policy and macro data this week – the only remaining event after this week is the December FOMC.

What’s factored in?

A no-move is fully priced in with the market being told to “chill out” ahead of tomorrow’s Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) meeting. The interbank market is sitting at a 5% chance of a move (which is just hedging teams providing the smallest amount of cover required) and the AUD has now found a concrete floor at 71 cents.

What’s also likely is the limited outlook from the statement, considering the ‘chill out’ answer was tied to the rest of this week’s events and the fact that the RBA wants to have the ‘full’ economic picture to assess policy for 2016; tomorrow will be the most lacklustre event of the week – no surprises will be sprung.

China’s Caixin manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI data due tomorrow, however that is not what we are watching. What is starting to build is CNY devaluation (again). Friday’s intraday collapse on the Chinese markets has been put down to the investigations into ‘margin financing and short selling’ at the three largest brokerage firms in China. However the fact that price action went global (Chinese ADR’s were punished on the weekend) suggests something bigger – this could be the next leg of the July - August move.

ECB is meeting on Thursday is the most ‘overpriced’ event globally. There is growing belief that the board will be harder and stronger than the predicted cuts from economists on Thursday morning AEDT (late Wednesday night in Hong Kong and Singapore).

Economists are pricing in a ten basis point (bps) cut to the deposit rate taking it to -30bps, that the board will increase the bond buying program by €15 billion to €75 billion and will push the timeline well out (currently September 2016).

However, 2-Year German Bunds are currently sitting at -41bps and the movement in EUR/USD since the October meeting has seen eight cents coming out of the pair – suggesting it’s also pricing in a ”shock and awe” move this week from Frankfurt.