Bank Of Canada Stays On Hold, RBNZ Cuts Rates

 | Sep 10, 2015 05:43AM ET

• Turns and roundabouts Yesterday saw amazing mean reversion. On Tuesday, it was risk on all the way: stocks soared, with the Nikkei showing the largest gain in several years; copper and oil rose sharply; and most EM currencies gained. Yesterday, it all reversed during US time, as there was a massive bout of derisking for reasons that remain obscure. Reuters said it was because “hopes of further stimulus measures in China faded,” but I wonder. I think the rally on Tuesday and during the European day Wednesday is what was questionable. The rally was probably caused by “hopes” of further China stimulus, plus the rally in Japan caused by talk of a cut in corporate tax rates, not to mention the market-specific factors that caused copper prices to rebound, which I mentioned yesterday. But perhaps these factors only caused momentary covering of short positions, after which people realized that the fundamental picture hadn’t or wouldn’t change. There was no big change in Fed fund rates expectations. Personally, I doubt that we are going to see any moves in China large enough to turn things there around – at best they may try to slow the slowdown, not reverse it. Large-scale investment funded by a huge increase in debt is just no longer possible there. The slide in stocks (and risk in general) accelerated as the Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) event went on, although correlation is not the same as causation.

• In any event, the US stock market closed down 1.4%, commodity prices down (oil in particular off over 5%) and EM currencies largely fell. EUR rose, as is usual nowadays on risk-off days, but it was notable how little it rose relative to the big moves in stocks and commodities. That may be because the dollar gained sharply vs the commodity currencies.

Bank of Canada stays on hold The Bank of Canada (BoC) remained on hold at its meeting Wednesday, as we expected. The statement focused on headline inflation, which at 1.3% yoy is close to the bottom of its 1%-3% target range. Core inflation, however, has been at or slightly above the 2% midpoint of its target range for the past 12 months. They expressed concern about the Chinese economy and the effects of increased market volatility and lower commodity prices. On the other hand, they also noted that “the stimulative effects of previous monetary policy actions are working their way through the Canadian economy” and that exchange-rate sensitive sectors are regaining momentum, while they refrained from mentioning “elevated” vulnerabilities associated with household imbalances. On the whole, they seem to be satisfied with the impact of their recent reduction in rates and happy to remain on hold for some time. As for the currency, they mentioned approvingly that the fall in CAD is “helping to absorb some of the impact of lower commodity prices” and “facilitating the adjustments taking place in Canada’s economy.” That shows they are happy with the fall in the currency and so are not at all going to fight any further weakness. With monetary policy on hold for a while, I would expect oil prices to determine the direction of CAD for now, and therefore expect it to drift lower for the time being.

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