Fed’s Blink Effects Linger

 | Jan 07, 2019 09:36PM ET

The risk rally ignited by the blinking of Fed’s Powell and further supported by the easing in China after the PBOC announced a 1% RRR cut to its banks, continues to underpin risk assets. The underperformance of the Japanese yen, now well below its pre-flash crash levels, portrays the improved picture, even if the cynic within me, still tells me we are far from being out of the woods.

The reason I am adamant to place too much weight on a protracted relief rally is that I still have very present in my mind where we come from in late 2018. One of the ugliest December equity sell-off ever, U.S. companies’ earnings estimates to follow Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL)'s downgraded guidance, a oil exchange rate that still screams a low growth/deflationary environment, a record-high move into U.S. money markets, just to name a few. As an analogy, the current recovery in risk assets still feels like too minuscule and with a few major hurdles to overcome before a more convincing phase can take shape.

Fed’s Powell has caused technical damage to overblown risk-off extensions, but as I argued in yesterday’s report, the Fed will still need to transition from a mere dovish stance about its readiness to act and adjust its balance sheet to more dovish action. Even if the market buys into the idea that the Fed tightening campaign is clearly over (no more hikes priced in this year), the Central Bank needs to follow up with the type of signals that will keep the market’s hopes of a slowdown in QT alive. If you check today’s 25-delta risk reversals updates (provided below), it should be concerning that the premium to buy Puts on the E-mini S&P 500 keep rising as the correction higher continues. Similarly, the Calls in U.S. fixed income seem to be reverting back up, now more expensive than the Puts again, after a brief spell in which Fed’s Powell interview caused the pricing to even out.

The weak U.S. PMI, which follows a broader negative theme worldwide, Apple’s miss unlikely to be an isolated incident, recently extreme equity valuations, a housing market in trouble must still contend with residual strong U.S. economic data emanating from the jobs market or consumers’ consumption. So, while we’ve been offered the first catalyst courtesy of Powell to see risk premiums come down, the process of reckoning the true risks of a deterioration in the U.S. economy may end up being a slow process, with the pendulum swinging from optimism to pessimism.

All the walk-back the Fed has done ever since Chairman Powell told us that U.S. rates were at a significant distance from neutral to now even consider adjusting the Fed’s balance sheet, draws a clear trend. One that is starting to show some clear cracks via the USD index, as it threatens a major technical breakout after closing at the bottom of its multi-month range circa 95.70, just as the EUR/USD keeps re-aligning itself with its higher macro valuation based on the German vs U.S. yield spread. It’s still too early to claim victory by the bulls, but the highest close in the EUR/USD in the entire duration of its torturous range is a pretty negative presage for the USD worth monitoring.

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