Closing Out The Month Of April On A Soggy Note

 | Apr 30, 2019 07:11AM ET

We close out the month of April, and it’s a pretty soggy picture, although, given the data flow risk aversion could be higher. Certainly, from an economics perspective, the data flow through Asia has reinforced the issue that if you want growth, you head Stateside, and even then, Q2 GDP is likely to slow to 2% to 2.5%. What we have seen today won’t inspire though, with China’s manufacturing PMI falling to 50.1, relative to consensus of 50.6, with a big miss on services PMI (54.3 vs 54.9 eyed). Shortly after the NBS print, we saw the Caixin manufacturing print, which looks at manufacturing activity from small- and medium-end of town, printing 50.2 and a decent miss to the consnesus of 50.9.

Elsewhere in Asia, Korea’s March industrial production fell 2.8% YoY, while we wait for Taiwan’s Q1 GDP print (due at 18:00 aest), and this is expected to be seen at 1.4% - the lowest since mid-2016. Of course, this carries on from the poor export numbers seen recently in Korea, Taiwan and Singapore…. The bulls were hoping that China could again be the shining light of the region, but that hasn’t come to fruition.

Australia private sector credit expanded 0.3% in March, as was expected, and that won’t give the RBA any new insights, and we can look across the Aussie interest rates curve and see little change on the day, with the 3-year Aussie govt bond unchanged at 1.29%. We saw a dip in AUDUSD into 0.7034 on the China data, following the buying seen in USDCNH, although we are seeing a few buyers take AUDUSD a touch higher – let's see how European and US traders act, but this is one where you take the timeframe down into hourly charts or below.

The ASX 200 is closing out April with a monthly gain of 2.3% at this stage, although the set-up on the daily has a distinctively heavy feel and is gravitating towards trend support at 6300.

Sellers have made light work of pushing the Aussie index lower, with volumes 10% below the 30-day average – thus, it feels like the bid is not there and the index is simply falling under its own weight. Breadth has been quite poor, with 70% of stocks lower on the day, with the materials sector leading the decline and is 1.3% move lower on the day, subtracting 15.3-points from the index. Consider the materials space was falling into the China PMI data, and actually, iron ore futures are now 1.8% higher on the day, while Chinese equity indices are now positive - so it’s hard to say moves in mining names are a reflection of economic sentiment.

Energy is also finding sellers easy to come by, with the sector -1.3%, with REITs and utilities, also lower by over 1% and while month-end flows could be behind this, I would be eyeing the US 2s10s yield curve (see below) and questioning if this break higher could be seeing some capital flow out of the equity bond proxies.

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