The Long And The Short Of It: US, AUD And Gold Enjoying The Ride

 | Jul 17, 2017 03:12AM ET

The US equity juggernaut rolls on, with the S&P 500 hitting a new all-time high of 2463 on reasonable participation, with 78% of stocks higher and all sectors, bar financials (-0.5%), gaining.

We had expected financial markets to be sensitive to US data on Friday and while industrial production was somewhat better than expected at +0.4%, we saw a poor monthly read on the core CPI print, at 0.12% (vs +0.2% expected). This was a slight pickup from the cumulative 0.00% pace we saw in the prior three months, but it was still a very soggy number and a 1.7% annualised pace was enough to keep the inflation concerns out there. One can also throw in a poor US retail report, where we can immediately focus on the core retail control group (the element of goods that feed directly into the GDP calculation) and see this declining 0.2%, far worse than the +0.4% the market had expected. It suggests the 2.6% consensus call for Q2 GDP is up for debate, and I would not be surprised if a few economists ratcheted down their Q2 consumption estimates by a few basis points (bp).

The reaction has been interesting, as most of the moves have been confined to FX and equity markets.

There was only modest buying in US fixed income and ‘real’ (or inflation adjusted) rates only fell modestly.

However, it’s the USD the talking point and is firmly in the dog house and with equities higher, commodities firmer, credit spreads tight and implied volatility so low we have seen US financial conditions become even more accommodative. This, in itself, gives the Federal Reserve license to hike again this year, but the market pricing suggests this is unlikely to happen with the fed funds future pricing in 11.5bp of tightening this year and only 39bp through to the end of 2018. So a 46% chance of one hike this year (presumably December) and less than two hikes priced through to 2018.

This backdrop is great for Emerging markets (see lower chart) and they are in fine form, with the EEM ETF (MSCI Emerging Markets) gaining for a sixth day and eyeing a move to the 2015 highs.

The USD index, itself, is at the lowest levels since September 2016 and is technically in a bad spot and short positions (from a purely technical perspective) is really the only way to go. That being said, positioning and sentiment have deteriorated to an extreme level, notably with speculative positioning on the EUR (futures) increasing to 83,788 contracts and the most bullish (on the EUR) since May 2011. Keep in mind that there are no Fed speakers due out this week and economic data is limited to lower importance releases, so it’s hard to see any real chances to fed hike probability, and the USD.