Fed Minutes Don't Make For Happy Asia Session

 | Aug 20, 2015 02:40AM ET

Fed minutes don’t make for a happy Asia session

While perceptions of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes appear to be mixed, the market clearly believes that a September rate hike is unlikely to happen. The implied probability of a September rate hike in the Fed funds futures dropped to 38% overnight, from 48% a day ago. Some Fed members stated that the incoming information did not yet provide grounds for inflation to reach 2% in the medium term. This was made clear by the US inflation data. While core inflation was in-line with expectations for 1.8% year-on-year growth, if you strip out housing (ie inflation ex food, energy and housing), inflation is only running at 0.9% year-on-year. Nonetheless, John Williams’ speech tonight will be keenly dissected for any further information, but if there is going to be a Fed rate hike this year, December is now the most likely scenario.

Greater China disconnect

It’s been another interesting day in Hong Kong-Shanghai Stock Connect. The China Securities Finance Corporation (CSFC) appears to be back with a vengeance in the mainland stock markets, after the Shanghai Composite rallied over 6% from its low yesterday. A similar pattern is being eschewed by the CSI 300 today, initially falling 2% only to be driven up by strong buying in the IT and materials sectors.

However, this buying does not seem to have spread over to the Hang Seng today. The index is currently down 1.1%, but the H-shares of mainland companies are noticeably faring even worse, down 1.7%. This disconnect between the A-share and H-share market does give a lot of credence to the argument that the “National Team” is out in force buying in the Mainland markets.

There has been a lot of confusion over why the Chinese government has intervened so heavily to prop up the stock market, when its comparatively low market capitalisation would seemingly not have a huge effect on the real economy. What is becoming clearer now is the stepped-up capital outflow associated with the falls in the stock market. With equities taken out of the extremely limited array of mainland China investment opportunities, desire for capital growth naturally turns to overseas assets.

These increased capital outflows put further stress on interbank liquidity, as the recent People’s Bank of China (PBoC) injections through reverse repos and the MLF can attest to. The CNY 1-year interest swap has climbed 10 basis points today to 3.39, a strong indicator of lack of liquidity. Analysts are calling for further reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cuts before the end of the year, and as the Chinese stock markets continue to threaten further declines, this becomes increasingly likely.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App