Global Equity Market At A Crossroads

Via Dana Lyons’ Tumblr,

Global equity markets are testing levels potentially critical to the survival of the bull market.

As this stock market correction progresses, it is natural to consider what levels may be effective in halting the decline. We have recently taken a stab at a couple potential “support” levels in the U.S. market with excellent success, so far. Those posts include Monday’s The Mother Of All Support Levels on the broad Value Line Geometric Composite which held precisely, as well as a few Premium Posts at The Lyons Share covering key sectors, which also held on cue: Market Leaders At Must-Hold Levels and Finally Some Support To Bank On (if you’d like to see these posts, shoot us an email at info@jlfmi.com and we’d be happy to share).

Today, we look at an international stock barometer with an equally as compelling level.  The MSCI EAFE Index is a broad index of developed markets outside of the U.S. It was the subject of the Chart Of The Day and headliner in this week’s #TrendlineWednesday feature on Twitter. In the feature, we highlight some of the most important chart trendlines currently relevant in the financial markets. In the case of the EAFE, it is interesting because it is testing the potential support of 2 key trendlines, one up and one down. Specifically, they are the Up trendline (on a log chart) stemming from the 2009 low and the broken Down trendline stemming from the 2007 top. The 2 lines are currently intersecting near the 1780 level.

Each of these trendlines are important in their own right. The Up trendline contains the entire action of the post-2009 bull market while the break of the Down trendline led to the 2017-2018 rally and an eventual higher high. The fact that they are presently crossing paths makes this a particularly important juncture for the index and international stocks (the recent correction low was 1778, FYI).

A rally from here (which may be underway as the EAFE bounced all the way up to 1815 yesterday) would maintain the integrity of the post-2009 bull market and preserve the technical progress made when the Down trendline was broken. However, a loss of this level would undermine the stability of the bull market and forfeit the key technical ground gained in overtaking the Down trendline. Will the trendline cross hold? It remains to be seen. However, it does appear to represent a significant crossroad at which the international equity market finds itself.

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If you’re interested in the “all-access” version of our charts and research, we invite you to check out our site, The Lyons Share. FYI, given the current treachorous market landscape, TLS has extended our CRASH SALE through this weekend. So considering the discounted cost and the current treacherous market climate, there has never been a better time to reap the benefits of our risk-managed approach. Thanks for reading!

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The Next Big Fight Over Organized Labor May Already Be Here: New at Reason

June’s Supreme Court ruling in Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) freed public sector workers from being required to pay dues to unions to which they do not belong. It was kind of a big deal, and a single sentence in Justice Samuel Alito’s majority opinion hints at what might be the next major legal fight over American unionism, writes Eric Boehm in the latest issue of Reason.

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Global Stocks Soar As Trump Doubles-Down On China Trade Deal Hopes

World stock markets are closing out the week on a euphoric note, with Asian and European stocks and S&P futures roaring higher on Friday amid a sea of green on Friday on renewed hopes that the US and China were starting to repair their badly damaged trade relations.

As shown in the table above, stocks extended gains around the world, as Treasuries dropped and the dollar tumbled on Friday on the back of fresh hopes for trade between the world’s two biggest economies. The buying frenzy was unleashed after Bloomberg News reported that Trump was interested in reaching an agreement on trade with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Group of 20 nations summit in Argentina this month, and has asked key officials to begin drafting potential terms.

The latest attempt at easing trade tensions (and boosting stocks, incidentally just 5 days before the midterm elections) came less than 24 hours after Trump tweeted that he held a “long and very good conversation” with China’s President Xi, in which trade was the key topic and “discussions are moving along nicely.”

Whether or not the news was signal or more noise – and we’ve had a lot of it in the past 6 months – it achieved its goal, resulting in a surge in Asian stocks that included 2.5-4% leaps for most of region’s big bourses, taking gains on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to 5% for the week and put the world’s main emerging market index up 3%, on course for its best day and week since early 2016. Even China was quick to forget about its trade troubles, as the Shanghai Composite jumped 2.7%…

… while the yuan soared 500 pips as the USDCNH tumbled from 6.93 to 6.88

Europe was overjoyed too. Germany’s export-heavy DAX jumped 1.5% in its best start since July with Volkswagen +4.5%, pushing the DAX up to best levels this week, while European shares were headed for their best week since late 2016. The Stoxx Europe 600 was over 1% higher taking this week’s gain to 4.1 percent. Even the long-suffering auto and mining sectors edged higher. Luxury and chemicals got a boost, as did technology shares that might otherwise be fretting more over Apple’s disappointing sales forecast.

European earnings have improved lately, though this quarter is still the weakest season in four years as margin pressures build, according to Morgan Stanley. Earnings revisions are at the lowest in 2 1/2 years, while share prices have reacted more strongly to result misses than they have to beats, the U.S. bank said. On the other hand, final Mfg PMIs from around Europe came in slightly on the softer side of prelims while Italian manufacturing shrank the most in nearly four years, but trade news trumped data this morning, however fleeting that may be. BTPs print fresh highs having been knocked on the data, Bund/BTP spread tightens to 289bp.

Meanwhile, even the long-running Brexit drama saw a positive twist this week, with Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab saying he expects a deal by Nov. 21. That’s caused the FTSE 100 to underperform Europe for a third-straight day, as the pound continues to gain.

Dow Jones and S&P futures were also up almost one percent ahead of the monthly non-farm payrolls jobs data, and even the Nasdaq was higher despite the drop in Apple shares pre-market trading after underwhelming sales forecasts.

There was no hiding from today’s euphoria: an index of emerging-market equities jumped the most since March 2016, while currencies from South Korea to Australia joined the rally.

As risk aversion faded, the Bloomberg dollar index tumbled back below 1200 and commodity currencies rallied. Risk-sensitive currencies and stocks extended their recent rebound as the onshore yuan headed for biggest two-day gain since January.

Sterling made ground again to $1.30 on hopes London is closing in on transitional deal for when it leaves the EU next year. If it doesn’t slip it will be the second best week of the year for the pound. Thursday was its best day of the year. “Were it not for Brexit uncertainty, the Bank of England would probably have laid the groundwork (at its meeting on Thursday) for its next rate hike,” BNP Paribas analysts said in a note.

Overall, prospects for easing protectionist tensions are helping round out a week that’s seen appetite for risk assets return following the October rout in equities; the question of course is how much of what Trump has said is just an attempt to goose stocks into the midterms.

“Either President Trump is paving the way for a trade deal being agreed at the Buenos Aires G-20 summit later this month, or he’s cynically driving up equity indices ahead of U.S. mid-terms,” said SocGen FX strategist Kit Juckes. “What’s for sure, is that talk of a trade deal has added further juice to the last few day’s risk appetite.”

“When Trump wants to bump the market ahead of the mid-terms the market likes it,” Saxo Bank’s head of FX strategy John Hardy referring to next week’s mid-term U.S. elections. Hardy said while it might just be “political theater” from Trump for now, the real test would come when he and China’s President Xi Jinping meet at a summit of world leaders later this month in Argentina.

Meanwhile, doubts remain on the capacity of earnings to deliver. Apple’s disappointing forecast for the key holiday period suggested weaker-than-expected demand for the company’s pricier new iPhones. Next up is the U.S. jobs report for October later Friday, while U.S. mid-term elections next week are also weighing on investors’ minds.

As for the renewed euphoria of world trade peace, Bloomberg notes that talks between the U.S. and China may not be straightforward, with intellectual property theft still a stumbling block. A Chinese state-owned company was charged Thursday with conspiring to steal trade secrets from American chipmaker Micron Technology Inc. as the Justice Department steps up actions against the Asian nation in cases of suspected economic espionage.

In rates, Europe’s bond yields rose already on the rise as economists expect a 200,000 rise in U.S. jobs and see hourly earnings increasing 3.1% Y/Y. US 10Y Treasury yields with 3bps higher, at 3.1627%.

In commodity markets, metals led the charge on the hopes a trade deal will prevent China’s resource-hungry economy faltering. Three-month copper on the LME climbed as much as 2.5% to $6,240.50 a ton, its highest in a week. Other base metals were up across the board too, with zinc rising 1.8 percent, nickel climbing 1.7 percent, lead up 1.3 percent and aluminum gaining 0.9 percent.

Meanwhile, WTI was steady as fears over a supply disruption eased after the U.S. was said to agree on giving waivers to eight nations to continue importing Iranian crude. Bloomberg’s gauge of industrial metals extended a rebound from a 15-month low as copper, zinc and nickel led gains in other raw materials.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.9% to 2,762.00
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 1.1% to 367.19
  • MXAP up 2.5% to 154.05
  • MXAPJ up 3.1% to 493.46
  • Nikkei up 2.6% to 22,243.66
  • Topix up 1.6% to 1,658.76
  • Hang Seng Index up 4.2% to 26,486.35
  • Shanghai Composite up 2.7% to 2,676.48
  • Sensex up 2.1% to 35,165.01
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.1% to 5,849.21
  • Kospi up 3.5% to 2,096.00
  • Brent Futures down 0.4% to $72.59/bbl
  • Gold spot up 0.1% to $1,234.99
  • U.S. Dollar Index down 0.2% to 96.10
  • German 10Y yield rose 3.5 bps to 0.434%
  • Euro up 0.3% to $1.1438
  • Brent Futures down 0.4% to $72.58/bbl
  • Italian 10Y yield fell 4.6 bps to 3.01%
  • Spanish 10Y yield rose 1.0 bps to 1.578%

Top Overnight News from Bloomberg

  • President Donald Trump has asked key U.S. officials to begin drafting possible trade deal with China as the two leaders look to meet at G-20 summit this month in Argentina; said will make the right deal with China, President Xi “wants to do it”
  • Xi says China will cut taxes, give market access to help private firms
  • PBOC: China will speed up opening; sees continued “gray rhino” financial risks; economic and financial risks are controllable overall
  • The U.S. has agreed to let eight countries keep buying Iranian oil after it reimposes sanctions on the OPEC producer on Nov. 5, according to a senior administration official
  • The Financial Times reported that EU Brexit negotiators are exploring a plan for Northern Ireland that would give U.K. stronger guarantees that a customs border won’t be needed
  • Eurozone final Oct. Markit Mfg PMI: 52.0 vs 52.1 flash; fall in order books as exports decline for first time nearly 5.5Y
  • Riksbank’s Ingves: matters little whether hike in Dec. or Feb.
  • U.S. is said to give 8 countries oil waivers under Iran sanctions

Asian equity markets tracked their Wall St counterparts higher after US stocks posted a 3rd consecutive gain with sentiment underpinned by optimism regarding US-China trade after what US President Trump described as a ‘very good’ conversation between him and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Furthermore, reports that Trump asked the cabinet to draft a potential China trade deal added fuel to the rally and helped US equity futures recover from the after-market pressure triggered by declines in Apple shares after the tech giant missed on iPhone and iPad sales, provided soft Q1 revenue guidance and announced to halt product unit sales data. ASX 200 (+0.1%) and Nikkei 225 (+2.6%) were mixed throughout most the session with Australia dampened by energy names after WTI crude futures slipped 2.7% to below USD 64.00/bbl on higher OPEC production in October, while the Japanese benchmark surged on a weaker currency and the encouraging trade related news. Elsewhere, Hang Seng (+4.2%) and Shanghai Comp. (+2.7%) also rose aggressively on the positive developments between US and China, with gains led by strength in tech names as well as casino stocks post-Macau gaming revenue numbers. Finally, 10yr JGBs were eventually flat as the initial upside was wiped out as US-China trade hopes were kindled by overnight reports, while the BoJ were also in the market today and increased its purchase amounts in the 1-5yr JGBs which was unsurprising given the reduction in the number of occasions it had planned for those purchases this month.

Top Asian News

  • Chinese Property Dollar Bond Demand Wanes Amid Heavy Supply
  • Fraud-Hit PNB’s Losses Mount as Provisions Surge to $1.3 Billion
  • $2.8 Million to Switch Sides? Bribe Allegation Rattles Sri Lanka
  • ’Wrath of Markets?’ New Delhi Pokes at India’s Central Bank
  • Donmez: Turkey May Be Among Nations Exempted From Iran Sanctions

Main European indices are in the green, continuing the trend from Asia. The FSTE MIB (+1.5%) is leading after reports in Il Sole that Banca Carige are the only Italian bank seen as fragile; while the SMI is lagging (+0.1%) after the US FDA announced that Roche’s (-1.5%) recall is Class 1. Indices are mixed with materials (+2.3%) outperforming due to trade progression between the  US and China, notably President Trump said to have asked his cabinet to draft a potential trade deal. In terms of individual equities Kering (+5%) are higher after being upgraded at RBC, which has had a knock-on impact on other luxury names such as Burberry (4.5%), Moncler (+5.5%) and LVMH (+3.8%) who are up in sympathy. Separately, BMW (+2.5%) are up as they state they are expanding their car share service into 5 more London boroughs.

Top European News

  • Russian Missile Tests Ground Helicopters to Norway Oil Platforms
  • It’s Crunch Time for Trump Versus the World on Iran Sanctions
  • Macquarie Lures Prop Traders to London After Rivals Retreated
  • British Airways Owner Lifts Long Term Profit Goals: IAG Update
  • Italy Considers Amending Rules on Strategic Industry M&A: Sole

In currencies, there was no respite for the Dollar, as its retracement from midweek peaks continues, albeit at a more measured pace. The latest downturn comes amidst reports that US President Trump has commissioned a draft trade accord with China following his encouraging chat with Xi and plans for a dinner+ date between the 2 at the upcoming G20 summit in Argentina. The Greenback is weaker vs all G10 counterparts, bar the JPY, which is still bucking the trend as an even safer currency haven, although the headline pair has topped out just above 113.00+ again and is back below its 30 DMA at 112.85, which could be pivotal on a closing basis. On that note, the DXY looks precarious just a fraction ahead of 96.000 in advance of NFP that could determine whether the index stabilises, recoils further or rebounds. AUD – The major outperformer and main beneficiary of constructive dialogue between China and the US, with Aud/Usd extending its marked recovery to 0.7250 before fading and essentially tracking Yuan moves after a considerably lower Usd/Cny fix overnight. EUR/CHF/NZD/GBP/CAD – All firmer vs the Buck, with the single currency not deterred by some downbeat Eurozone manufacturing PMIs and breaching a key Fib at 1.1426 to expose 1.1450 before 1.1460. However, a cluster of hefty option expiries, and 3.1 bn at the 1.1400 strike may stall Eur/Usd, ahead of 1.6 bn between 1.1450-60. The Franc is back above parity, and perhaps belatedly taking some note of SNB commentary yesterday about the inevitability of tighter policy, while the Kiwi continues to piggy-back its Antipodean peer with gains up towards 0.6700 before waning. Elsewhere, Cable has sustained 1.3000+ status after a knee-jerk visit post-BoE super Thursday, and cleared its 10 DMA circa 1.3005-10 with the aid of more positive-sounding Brexit reports (on paper), but respecting the 100 DMA from 1.3045-50. The Loonie is holding near the upper end of 1.3050-1.3100 parameters and also has jobs data looming to provide some independent direction. EM – Broad gains vs the Usd, with the Try through 5.5000 and Cnh breaking 6.9000, but Rub lagging against the backdrop of still soggy oil prices.

In commodities, WTI (-0.1%) and Brent (+0.3%) began the session lower following increased oil supply from Russia, OPEC and the US for October, notably the highest OPEC level since December 2016; an increase which has thrust the oil market into an oversupply dragging down prices. However, this has since reverted as Iran’s Deputy Oil Minister commented that he is unsure if waivers are permanent; comments which follow reports that 8 countries have received waivers allowing them to continue to purchase Iranian oil. Gold (+0.1%) is continuing the steady trade seen in Asia overnight, although off of yesterday’s highs of USD 1237.39/oz as market sentiment improves following Presidents Trump and Xi expressing optimism over the trade dispute. Separately, Trump has initiated an executive order preventing anyone within the US from dealing with anyone associated with gold sales from Venezuela. US is to give 8 countries waivers on new Iran oil sanctions, according to sources; updates to follow on the breakdown but India and South Korea have been touted as two of the nations.

Looking ahead to today, the highlight is almost certain to be the October employment report in the US this afternoon however prior to that this morning we’ll get the final manufacturing PMI revisions in Europe including those for the Euro Area, France and Germany, as well as a first look at the data for the periphery. Also out this morning is the September import price index reading in Germany, while in the US we’ll also get the September trade balance, September factory orders and final September durable and capital goods orders data. Away from that, the BoE’s Tenreyro is due to take part on the panel of an IMF conference while the big earnings releases include Berkshire Hathaway, Alibaba, Exxon Mobil, Chevron and AbbVie.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Trade Balance, est. $53.6b deficit, prior $53.2b deficit
  • 8:30am: Change in Nonfarm Payrolls, est. 200,000, prior 134,000
    • Unemployment Rate, est. 3.7%, prior 3.7%
    • Average Hourly Earnings MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.3%
    • Average Hourly Earnings YoY, est. 3.1%, prior 2.8%
    • Average Weekly Hours All Employees, est. 34.5, prior 34.5
  • 10am: Factory Orders, est. 0.5%, prior 2.3%; Factory Orders Ex Trans, prior 0.1%
  • 10am: Durable Goods Orders, prior 0.8%; Durables Ex Transportation, prior 0.1%
  • 10am: Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air, prior -0.1%; Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air, prior 0.0%

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Early in the session yesterday it had looked like US equity markets might have had their legs taken away from them after this week’s rally. This followed a softer than expected ISM reading (more below) but a more upbeat comment from President Trump on Twitter about potential upcoming trade talks with China seemed to kick start a steadily climbing market for most of the rest of day. The S&P 500 rallied +1.06% which means it is now up +3.75% in the last three sessions. So it’s recouped about a third of the loss the index took into October 29th from the end of September. That three-day gain is the biggest since immediately following the US elections in November 2016 now for the S&P. The DOW (+1.06% yesterday) has also had its strongest three-day run since November 2016 while the NASDAQ (+1.75% yesterday) and NYSE FANG index (+2.56% yesterday) have had the strongest runs since June and February 2016 respectively.

Apple earnings poured a bit of cold water on things after the bell though. Earnings per share and revenue both beat the consensus forecasts at $2.91 versus $2.78 and $62.9bn versus $61.4bn, but the company’s guidance was disappointing. In addition, Apple sold fewer iPads, Macs, and iPhones than expected, and the stock traded around -6% lower in after hours trading.

In Asia S&P futures were initially down around 0.5% on the back of Apple but more positive China/US trade headlines have reversed this as we type. They are now up 0.6%. Looking at the trade headlines chronologically, the tweet from President Trump which helped markets to bounce in the morning US session was a vote of confidence from the President that conversations with Chinese President Xi Jingping on trade and also North Korea ahead of the G20 meeting later this month are “moving along nicely.” Reuters followed with a headline quoting Xi as saying that the President hopes China and the US can promote a steady and healthy relationship. The reporting by Chinese state-run television was similarly rosy, saying that Trump “cherishes the good relationship with the Chinse president” and that Xi “wishes to keep the Sino-US relationship healthy and stable.”

Overnight, following yesterday’s call between the US President Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping, Trump has asked his key cabinet secretaries to have their staff draw up a potential deal to signal a ceasefire in an escalating trade conflict. This was reported by Bloomberg citing unidentified sources. In the meantime, China’s daily South China Morning Post reported, quoting unidentified sources, that Mr Trump has offered to host a dinner for Chinese President Xi Jinping on December 1 in Buenos Aires after the G20 leaders summit, an invitation China has tentatively accepted.

The possible thaw in the trade war has helped risk gain momentum in Asia this morning. The Nikkei (+2.36%), Hang Seng (+3.58%), Shanghai Comp (+2.14%) and Kospi (+3.46%) are all up along with most Asian markets. Asia FX is largely up on the pause in trade war escalations with export oriented countries leading the gains – the Taiwan dollar (+0.85%), South Korean Won (+1.43%), China’s onshore yuan (+0.23%) and Australian dollar (+0.51%) are all up.

In spite of the rebound this week, October won’t be forgotten in a hurry, given the extent of the sell-off across markets. This is a good time to remind readers that we published our usual monthly performance review yesterday for October as a supplement to the usual EMR. You can find the link here .In it, we show an interesting chart that highlights how 2018 is shaping up to be the worst year on record in terms of breadth of negative assets returns in dollar terms, with data going back to 1901. In our sample, 89% of assets have now seen negative total returns in dollar terms this year. That is after 2017 saw the ‘best’ performance on this measure with just 1% (or 1 asset) with a negative dollar return. Hardly a coincidence in our view that this occurred as we moved from peak global QE to global QT over the past 2 years.

With markets faring well into the end of the week, there’s still one more test with today’s payrolls report in the US due up. The market consensus is for a 200k reading following that softer-than-expected 134k last month. Our US economists expect a 185k print, but believe that risks are to the downside due to the hurricane disruptions. Our colleagues expect the unemployment rate to remain steady at 3.7% (with risks it rounds down to 3.6%) while they expect average hourly earnings to rise +0.2% mom and to a new post-crisis high of 3.1% yoy – the highest since early 2009. This represents a jump of almost 40bps from the September reading which is largely due to base effects from October 2017, when earnings plunged after Hurricane Harvey, Irma and Maria boosted September 2017’s print.

Staying with economics, our German economics yesterday downgraded their near-term growth forecasts in light of recent data and also published the first big DB 2019 Outlook piece. In it they revised down their third quarter GDP forecast from 0.4% for 0.0.%, and their 2019 projection to 1.3% from 1.7%. This partially reflects the disruptions from new emissions standards, but it is also attributable to softer external demand as net exports drag on growth. On the political front, snap elections look more likely after Chancellor Merkel’s decision to not seek another term as party leader. The continuity replacement candidate would be Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, while a slightly more conservative and market-friendly option would be Friedrich Merz. Regardless, the SPD will reconsider its membership in the grand coalition and snap elections could come sooner than many currently expect.

Back to yesterday and European markets lagged behind the US with the STOXX 600 closing +0.41% and the DAX +0.18% – the former hindered by a struggling energy sector after oil tumbled around -2.5% following the latest supply numbers from OPEC which showed crude production had climbed to the highest level since 2016. European Banks did, however, finish up +1.47% – the third >1% rise for the index in the last six sessions – while bonds were slightly weaker at the margin (Bunds +1.4bps) with the exception of BTPs which ended -4.8bps lower in yield. Treasury yields turned lower after the ISM manufacturing print which declined 2.1pts from September to a below market 57.7 (vs. 59.0 expected). New orders tumbled 4.4pts to 57.4 and employment 2pts to 56.8. While these headline moves looked a lot softer than expected its worth putting the overall level in the context of what is still a number firmly in growth territory. Plus, the prices paid subindex rose to 71.6 versus the expected 69.0. It’s therefore unlikely to deter the Fed from the current path with respect to the growth outlook.

Here in the UK, we had the double act of a BoE meeting and more Brexit headlines. Gilt yields faded from early highs to close just +1.8bps higher, however Sterling rallied +1.93% for its biggest gain since April 2017 and in the process edged above $1.300 again after trading as low as 1.2696 just three days ago. The BoE meeting wasn’t much of game changer with policy left unchanged as expected, but with minor tweaks to the Inflation Report (mostly in line with our expectations) tilting the outlook slightly towards the hawkish side.

As for Brexit, well the Times “financial services deal” article that was out early yesterday morning was quickly downplayed from all sides, however a more material story was the MNI article which said that the EU is moving toward a semi-temporary customs union arrangement for the whole of the UK. Such a setup would apparently include strong regulatory alignment and would have no  fixed end-date. This would likely be sufficient to prevent the imposition of border checks in Northern Ireland (between NI and either Ireland or the rest of the UK), which should keep the DUP onside. We have long viewed this outcome as the most likely, though it is likely to enrage the hard Brexit wing of the Conservative government, potentially raising the odds of a political crisis if the story is confirmed. Later in the session, the FT reported a similar story about the proposed deal, and the pound held its gains. The chatter of late points to a deal being in sight but then the domestic political fun and games will start.

Apart from the ISM print, covered above, US data showed that productivity rose +2.2% qoq in the third quarter while unit labour costs increased +1.2%. This indicates that the supply side of economy may be improving, while inflationary pressures simultaneously continue to build. September construction spending printed at 0.0% as expected, but August was revised up to +0.8% from +0.1%. This presents upside risks to the second print of third quarter GDP. The only notable data releases in Europe were the UK’s nationwide house price index (which rose +1.6% versus expectations for +1.9%) and the October manufacturing PMI, which fell to 51.1 compared to consensus forecasts for 53.0. That’s its lowest level since July 2016 immediately following the Brexit referendum

Looking ahead to today, the highlight is almost certain to be the October employment report in the US this afternoon however prior to that this morning we’ll get the final manufacturing PMI revisions in Europe including those for the Euro Area, France and Germany, as well as a first look at the data for the periphery. Also out this morning is the September import price index reading in Germany, while in the US we’ll also get the September trade balance, September factory orders and final September durable and capital goods orders data. Away from that, the BoE’s Tenreyro is due to take part on the panel of an IMF conference while the big earnings releases include Berkshire Hathaway, Alibaba, Exxon Mobil, Chevron and AbbVie.

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Kurt Loder Reviews Bohemian Rhapsody: New at Reason

Bohemian Rhapsody—a movie that recounts the life of the late Queen singer Freddie Mercury, who’s played by Rami Malek—is pretty wonderful in several ways, but it’s also a museum of ancient biopic clichés. For example, in an early scene we see the young Freddie-to-be, an immigrant kid from Zanzibar named Farrokh Bulsara, at his parents’ London home, where he lives. You’ve met these parents before. Dad (Ace Bhatti) is an old-world kind of guy who disapproves of this rock & roll music his son is so into, and the late-night life it engenders. However, Freddie’s mom (Meneka Das) is an optimist. When her young nightcrawler says he’s going “out with friends” again, she asks, hopefully, “A girl?” “Maaahhm,” he whines, writes Kurt Loder.

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US Approves Waivers On Iranian Oil Imports As Supply Panic Fades

With oil prices already extending the drop from their highs as the trader “panic attack” identified by celebrated energy analyst Art Berman abates, and approaching a bear market from recent highs, a Friday morning report from Bloomberg will likely ensure that prices continue to move lower.

According to an anonymous “senior administration official”, the US will soon approve waivers for eight countries, including Japan, India and South Korea, that will allow them to continue buying Iranian crude oil even after sanctions are reimposed on Monday. China is also believed to be in talks to secure a waiver, while the other four countries weren’t identified. The waivers are part of a bargain for continued import cuts, which the administration hopes will lead to lower oil prices.  Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is expected to announce the exemptions on Friday.

Speculation that waivers could be forthcoming had been brewing for some time, and has been one of the factors driving oil prices lower in recent weeks. Pompeo has acknowledged that waivers were being considered for countries who insist that they depend on Iranian supplies, while adding that “it is our expectation that the purchases of Iranian crude oil will go to zero from every country or sanctions will be imposed.” Assuming the US does follow through with the waivers, it’s expected that they would be temporary, and the US would expect that the recipients would continue to wean themselves off Iranian crude. The administration will also reportedly ask that these countries reduce their trade in non-energy goods.

It’s believed that Turkey, another major importer of Iranian crude, may be one of the four working on an exemption, according to Turkish Energy Minister Fatih Donmez told reporters in Ankara on Friday. Iran was Ankara’s biggest source of oil last year, accounting for more than 25% of Turkey’s daily average imports of around 830,000 barrels. The identities of the recipients are expected to be released on Monday as sanctions take effect.

Oil

Despite the international outcry over Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Iran deal, the administration believes the sanctions are working. According to internal estimates, exports of Iranian crude have fallen to 1.6 million barrels a month, from 2.7 million barrels. That compares favorably to the 1.2 million barrels a month removed from the market under President Obama and the EU during the negotiations for the deal. Obama also extended waivers to 20 countries. 

The administration’s decision to issue waivers to eight countries also marked a significant reduction from the Obama administration, which issued such exemptions to 20 countries over three years. During the previous round of sanctions, nations were expected to cut imports by about 20 percent during each 180-day review period to get another exemption.

And in order to ensure that oil money isn’t used by Iran to finance terrorism, the US is reportedly developing an escrow system that will ensure that Iran can only spend its oil money on food, medicine and other crucial supplies.

Countries that get waivers under the revived sanctions must pay for the oil into escrow accounts in their local currency. That means the money won’t directly go to Iran, which can only use it to buy food, medicine or other non-sanctioned goods from its crude customers. The administration sees those accounts as an important way of limiting Iranian revenue and further constraining its economy.

“It’s a virtual certainty that Western banks are not going to violate the escrow restrictions,” said Mark Dubowitz, the chief executive of the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies who has advised Pompeo. “The message they’re sending is don’t screw around with these escrow accounts and try to get cute.”

Oil prices were little-changed following reports of the waivers, though it’s possible the reaction could be delayed until Pompeo releases more details about the countries that will be granted the waivers, and the details of what the waivers will look like.

It’s also possible that, since the killing of Jamal Khashoggi has thrown a wrench in the US’s plans to enlist Saudi help to further pressure the Iranian energy industry, that the likelihood of waivers had already been priced in.

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Trump Reportedly Asks Cabinet To Draw Up Trade Deal After Conversation With China’s Xi: BBG

Is a harmonious conclusion to the six-month-long US-China trade battle finally within reach? Or this just a ploy to push US stocks higher ahead of an election that will decide which party controls Congress for the balance of Trump’s term?

That’s the question traders will be asking themselves as they try to suss out the implications of a Bloomberg report claiming that President Trump has asked his cabinet to begin drawing up the terms of a deal following a “long and very good” conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday – the first phone call between the leaders of the world’s two largest economies in months. According to Bloomberg, Trump has asked key cabinet secretaries to have their staff draw up a draft deal that he hopes will signal an end to the trade conflict, BBG’s anonymous sources said. What remains unclear is whether Trump will drop the list of demands that have reportedly been a sticking point in negotiations since the spring. Among those demands are that China scale back state support for its ‘Made in China 2025’ initiative, drop policies that support the siphoning of intellectual property from foreign companies and reduce the country’s trade surplus with the US.

Xi

Predictably, the news ignited a torrid rally in Asian shares, with the Hang Seng Index rising 4.2%, the biggest gain since 2011, while the Shanghai Composite Index climbed 2.7% to cement its first four-day winning streak since February. The Chinese yuan, meanwhile, traded back below 6.9 to the dollar, while US stock futures moved higher, signaling that shares could be on their way to a fourth straight day of gains.

Analysts were split on their interpretation of the news. Some believed that the rash of downbeat forward guidance that helped trigger the ‘Shocktober’ market rout had finally inspired the president to try and quash the trade beef.

Tuuli McCully, head of Asia-Pacific economics at Scotiabank in Singapore, called the news “encouraging.” It “likely reflects the fact that businesses in the U.S. are starting to feel the impact of the trade conflict through higher prices and squeezed margins,” she said.

Others insisted that the news was a ploy and that, if anything, deal talks remain in preliminary stages.

The telephone conversation on Thursday was Trump and Xi’s first publicly disclosed call in six months. Both sides reported that they had constructive discussions on North Korea and trade, with Chinese state media saying that Trump supported “frequent, direct communication” between the presidents and “joint efforts to prepare for” the planned meeting on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit, which is scheduled to take place from from Nov. 30 to Dec. 1.

We now wait for Trump economic advisor Larry Kudlow to pour cold water on the report during a Friday morning interview.

 

 

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The ECB’s Epic Failure In One Shocking Chart

Authored by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

Europe – From ‘Boom’ To The Precipice Of Recession

Data dependent, they claim. They aren’t. Mario Draghi at his last press conference admitted, “incoming information, [is] somewhat weaker than expected.” There is so much riding on the word “somewhat.” Because of the weasel, the head of the ECB told the assembled media policy normalization was unimpeded. He did so with a straight face.

Good. Europe’s QE experiment needs to end. Not because it succeeded, rather since there was no hope for it from the beginning. It was a giant waste, at best an enormous distortion. At most, it was a huge distraction from the real problem.

You have to hand it to the Germans. They seem quite capable of the more serious business of economics (small “e”). Where Economists (capital “E”) like Draghi play the game of somewhat data dependent, businesses in Germany refuse license to the same luxury. They are business dependent, meaning that if things really were booming they would act that way. And if something like recession looms, the Germans would know it.

And that’s exactly what they’ve said for much of this year particularly the past four or five months. The global economy, which heavily influences Germany’s, is heading for another downturn. For Europe as a whole, it’s a whole lot of trouble.

The European Union’s statistical body confirms today what German sentiment has been warning about. The European economy is already on the precipice of recession. The ZEW survey in September was as low as it was when Europe was last contracting. In Q3 2018, Eurostat reports that GDP expanded by just 0.16% over Q2. That was about one-third the rate in Q2, which was itself about three-quarters the gain in 2017.

Data dependent. Like the ZEW index, GDP growth was the lowest since Europe’s last recession.

This is quite a change from just three quarters ago. The latter half of last year was a veritable golden age for central bankers. They couldn’t contain themselves from seeing actual success within their grasp. At least that’s what they thought. If they had actually been data dependent they might’ve been far more cautious if still somewhat optimistic.

In truth, they seized on some positive numbers and hyped them as far as they possibly could. The economy of 2017 in Europe or anywhere else really wasn’t anything to get excited about. It was, consistent with the last decade, nothing more than the same low ceiling upturn we’ve experienced since August 2007. The question now is whether it was intentional misdirection, an economic fraud of sorts.

You give people the idea of QE, money printing supposedly, and then some positive numbers and then let them imagine a boom. Monetary policy that since Paul Volcker’s reign has been ruled by expectations management rather than money supply actually believes if enough people believe, it becomes self-fulfilling.

It’s not data dependent, it’s sheer lunacy. This is Economics.

Therefore, the results have been rising insanity. Picture yourself as an Italian. Europe’s political class tells you, based on Economists’ math, that you better just accept the way things are, that you don’t know how good you have it. Europe’s economy is booming and therefore you must be some form of detestable “ism” to resist their carefully laid plans.

Now, all of a sudden, the European economy as a whole is slowing and even contracting in some parts. You never felt this boom they talked about endlessly and now you can sense even that might be gone.

And that’s why it is really dangerous. Because Italy’s economy, Europe’s third largest, has shrunk. In Q2 2018, the latest Eurostat figures for Italy alone, Italian GDP was still 5% below the peak in Q1 2008. Five percent is a huge contraction for any single recession. Stretched out over ten and a half years it is nothing at all like recession, it is absolute criminal corruption. Not the kind where officials are looting the Treasury, but intellectual corruption that is far more dastardly and ultimately destructive.

And if Europe’s economy as a whole is now at best slowing, you know as an Italian the chances Italy’s economic condition will somehow change for the better is practically nothing. For if Europe isn’t growing, Italy hasn’t a prayer.

The Italians, they are data dependent.

This would be alarming enough on its own, but Europe’s sudden economic struggles in 2018 quite against all mainstream expectations and perceptions presage rough times for more than just unfortunate Europeans stuck with Draghi and the ECB. Economists and policymakers (redundant) in the United States currently gloating about some US boom should take note of the tone and audaciousness of their European counterparts late last year.

The President’s recent rhetoric with regard to Powell suggests that he has.

Europe is merely further along the same path than the US economy. Quite simply, it hit its low ceiling before the American economy did. The idea of decoupling is as ridiculous as “somewhat weaker than expected.”

From the get-go, in January, 2018 has been a huge disappointment. That already told us Economists hadn’t actually been paying close attention to data and making honest assessments. As it goes further along, though, we may end the year in far more dangerous than merely frustrating circumstances.

By all means, end QE. To do it close to or perhaps in full-blown recession would be perfectly fitting for the whole regime. The reasons and justifications won’t matter. That’s because it didn’t, and doesn’t, matter. QE or no QE, the global economy isn’t moved by central banks. They are, and have been, irrelevant. That much should be painfully obvious by now.

They really don’t know what they are doing. It’s starting to show, again, for a fourth time. The world simply will not stand for much more of this. 

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UK Think-Tank Blames Hatred Of Islam On Russian Twitter Trolls

UK Twitter users divided over Islam may have fallen victim to Russian trolls, according to a research group which analyzed over 9 million tweets. 

report released Thursday by the UK’s cross-party Demos think tank shows that a St. Petersburg “troll farm” tweeted far more about Islam than Brexit, reports Bloomberg

Using a Twitter-provided data set of 3,841 blocked accounts said to be linked to the Internet Research Agency, the study shows how accounts “camouflaged” themselves after their creation in 2011 by tweeting innocuous things about exercise and fitness in order to appear genuine, before becoming politically active to divide people. Demos adds as a caveat that they are “dependent on Twitter’s determination that these are indeed Russian state-operated accounts.” 

According to Demos:

  • There were three phases in Russian influence operations: under-the-radar account building, minor Brexit vote visibility, and larger-scale visibility during the London terror attacks.
  • Russian influence operations linked to the UK were most visible when discussing Islam. Tweets discussing Islam over the period of terror attacks between March and June 2017 were retweeted 25 times more often than their other messages.
  • The most widely-followed and visible troll account, @TEN_GOP, shared 109 Tweets related to the UK. Of these, 60 percent were related to Islam.
  • The topology of tweet activity underlines the vulnerability of social media users to disinformation in the wake of a tragedy or outrage.
  • Focus on the UK was a minor part of wider influence operations in this data. Of the nine million Tweets released by Twitter, 3.1 million were in English (34 percent). Of these 3.1 million, we estimate 83 thousand were in some way linked to the UK (2.7%). Those Tweets were shared 222 thousand times. It is plausible we are therefore seeing how the UK was caught up in Russian operations against the US.
  • Influence operations captured in this data show attempts to falsely amplify other news sources and to take part in conversations around Islam, and rarely show attempts to spread ‘fake news’ or influence at an electoral level.

In other words, the suspected Russian bots weren’t spreading fake news – they were amplifying legitimate news sources. 

Of the nine million tweets analyzed, a staggering one thousand four hundred and sixteen (1,416, or 0.0015%) were “messages sent by Russian state-operated accounts” after three London Islamic terror attacks, and were “widely shared on the platform.” The 1,416 tweets were retweeted 98,499 times – however Demos notes that they “cannot tell how many of these retweets were from other state-controlled or otherwise malicious accounts.” 

Demos offers the following caveats to their analysis:

  • we cannot say with confidence what proportion of Russian state-operated accounts that were active over the period the data represents.
  • we expect there to be significantly more accounts that have either not been detected or were not contained in the data released
  • Although this is a useful window into Russian influence operations, we cannot be sure it is a representative one. We are equally dependent on Twitter’s determination that these are indeed Russian state-operated accounts.
  • One of the major questions that this analysis cannot answer is whether this data set reveals Russian operations against the UK directly, or a small part of a Russian operation against the USA which happened to include UK-related messaging.

Read the working paper below: 

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277 Billion Reasons Why France Is So Worried About Italy’s Showdown With Brussels

Authored by Don Quijones via WolfStreet.com,

…the French megabanks are on the hook!

France was just served with a stark reminder of an inconvenient truth: €277 billion of Italian government debt — the equivalent of 14% of French GDP — is owed to French banks. Given that Italy’s government is currently locked in an existential blinking match with both the European Commission and the ECB over its budget plan for 2019, this could be a big problem for France.

On Friday, France’s finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, urged the commission to “reach out to Italy” after rejecting the country’s draft 2019 budget for breaking EU rules on public spending. Le Maire also conceded that while contagion in the Eurozone was definitely contained, the Eurozone “is not sufficiently armed to face a new economic or financial crisis.” As Maire well knows, a full-blown financial crisis in Italy would eventually spread to France’s economy, with French banks serving as the main transmission mechanism.

France isn’t the only Eurozone nation with unhealthy levels of exposure to Italian debt, although it is far and away the most exposed. According to the Bank of International Settlements, German lenders have €79 billion worth of exposure to Italian debt and Spanish lenders, €69 billion. In other words, taken together, the financial sectors of the largest, second largest and fourth largest economies in the Eurozone — Germany, France and Spain — hold over €415 billion of Italian debt on their balance sheets.

While the exposure of German lenders to Italian debt has waned over the last few years, that of French lenders has actually grown, belying the ECB’s long-held claim that its QE program would help reduce the level of interdependence between European sovereigns and banks.

If anything, the opposite has happened: thanks to the ECB’s tireless efforts to underpin the Eurozone’s bond markets (by doing “whatever it takes” to make sovereign bonds virtually risk-free), banks have been able to make a tidy margin by simply bulk-buying government bonds at officially zero risk.

A few years ago fiscally hawkish Eurozone countries such as Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland lobbied to put an end to this practice by removing the risk-free status of certain risk-prone sovereign bonds. But their efforts were staunchly opposed by French, Italian and Spanish politicians and bankers, who feared that any such move would result in market mayhem.

Today, market mayhem is not off the cards. The dispute over Italy’s draft budget is unsettling investors. This is reflected not only in the spread between Italian and German ten-year bond yields, which hit four-year highs a couple of weeks ago, but also the sentix Euro Break-up Index, which in October rose to its highest level since April 2017, mainly due to the strong rise in the Italian sub-index.

On a more positive note, investors do not yet appear to fear negative contagion effects, as reflected in the low rise of the Greek sub-index and the index for the contagion risk, which even dropped slightly from 36% to 33%. In other words, investors don’t yet fear for the stability of the Eurozone. But as Bloomberg points out, the exposures of French and German banks to Italian debt mean that those countries’ leaders are strongly incentivized to seek a compromise in the current standoff over Italy’s government budget.

Italy’s coalition partners are perfectly aware of this fact. They know that during the Greek crisis of 2010-11, French and German banks held around $115 billion of Greek debt. That was enough to convince the French and German governments of the day to offer Greece a partial bondholder bailout, though eventually, some private-sector bondholders were given a large haircut as part of the deal.

This is all perfectly understood by Italy’s government, as is the fact that French, German and Spanish banks are now far too exposed to Italian debt for their respective governments to even entertain the idea of pushing Italy to the edge. That knowledge is fueling the coalition government’s bravado, with some lawmakers now even talking about extending Italian government funds to struggling Italian banks if economic conditions continue to worsen.

“Brussels would love to see our defeat,” said Claudio Borghi, the Lega economics chief and budget chairman in the Italian parliament.

“They think that we’ll surrender if they cause a crisis for our banks. But we still have €15 billion left in the bank rescue fund from the Renzi era. It is not a great situation but we’re still relatively comfortable. In the end, it will be they who have to back down.”

Lorenzo Bini-Smaghi, a former member of the ECB board, disagrees. He believes that events are following a similar script to the onset of the Eurozone debt crisis in 2011, when surging bond yields caused a massive contraction in credit.

“Italy is going straight into a wall,” he says.

“The economy risks tipping into recession in the fourth quarter. The banks have already cut loans over the summer, as soon as the spreads began to rise. The Italian government has not understood this. You can’t see the wall yet, but the crash is going to be violent.”

It may sound like rank fear mongering from a dyed-in-the-wool eurocrat, but besides being a former central banker, Bini-Smaghi is also the current Chairman of Société Générale, France’s second largest bank, which is presumably filled to the gills with Italian debt. As such, he probably has even more to fear from a full-scale Italian debt crisis than most.

But outside Italy, credit markets are sanguine, and no one says, “whatever it takes.” Read…  Italy’s Debt Crisis Thickens  

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