Will The Euro Collapse In 2017?

Will The Euro Collapse In 2017?

 2017 could be the year that the euro collapses according to Joseph Stiglitz writing in Fortune magazine and these concerns were echoed over the weekend by former Bundesbank vice-president and senior European Central Bank official, Jürgen Stark, when he said that the ‘destruction’ of the Eurozone may be necessary if countries are to thrive again.

Stark and Stiglitz are too of many respected commentators, from both the so called right and the so called left, who are warning that the common currency and the Eurozone itself will not survive the financial and political turmoil already besetting the European monetary union and set to deepen in the coming months and years.

euro_gold_2017
Gold in Euros – 5 Years

According to Stiglitz:

Greece remains in a severe depression. Growth for the Eurozone over the past year has been an anemic 1.6%, and that number is twice the average growth rate from 2005 to 2015. Historians are already speaking of the Eurozone’s lost decade, and it’s possible they’ll soon be writing about its last decade, too.

The euro was introduced in 2002, but the cracks in the single currency arrangement, which began in 1999, became evident with the 2008 global financial crisis.

Indeed, Greece and many periphery nations remain borderline or actually insolvent and this inconvenient truth has been largely ignored in recent months as it would clash with the cosy, and complacent, Eurozone “recovery” narrative.

The recovery is unsustainable as the root cause of the crisis – humongous levels of debt in Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal and Ireland – was not dealt with rather the debt can was simply kicked down the road.

France, a nation with its own debt and economic issues, warned last week that the “window of opportunity” for a debt deal is closing after Athens and its creditors failed to find a solution to the country’s deadlocked bailout last week. French Finance Minister Michel Sapin warned that the coming volatile elections in Europe in 2017 would soon dominate the agenda and may make it much harder for Greece to reach a new ‘bailout’ deal.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem who heads the Eurozone’s Finance ministers also said: “there is a clear understanding that a quick finalization of the second [bailout] review is in everyone’s interest” as reported by the Wall Street Journal.

However, others such as Stark believe that eurozone “must break up if its members are to thrive again.”

Stark, who served on the ECB’s executive board during the financial crisis, said it was time to “think the unthinkable” and work towards a “reset” of Europe that pulled power away from Brussels as reported by the Telegraph.

He said the creation of a two-speed eurozone, with France and Germany at its core, would help to ensure the smaller bloc’s survival and he said that the current eurozone may need to be destructed in order to create a new “two-speed eurozone, with France and Germany at its core”.

This “would help to ensure the smaller bloc’s survival.”

Stiglitz conclusion, in a little noticed or commented upon article in Fortune magazine is also not optimistic and underlines the importance of being properly diversified and not having all your eggs in the euro basket – be that euro bank deposits in Eurozone banks or indeed euro denominated assets.

Stiglitz concludes by warning that:

…  It is at least as likely that the political forces are going in the other direction, and if that is the case, it may be only a matter of time before Europe looks back on the euro as an interesting, well-intentioned experiment that failed—at great cost to the citizens of Europe and their democracies.

The full article can be read on Fortune here

Whether we like it or not, there is an increasing possibility that there may be a return to national currencies in Europe. Periphery nations savers and investors are particularly exposed in this regard.

Gold is an important hedging instrument and financial insurance that will protect people from the potential return to liras, drachmas, escudos, pesetas and punts. Hoping for the best but diversifying and being prepared for less benign financial outcomes remains prudent.

Gold and Silver Bullion – News and Commentary

Gold up on weaker dollar, sluggish U.S. economic data (Reuters.com)

Dollar Slips After Trump Move, Asia Stocks Decline (Bloomberg.com)

Gold Goes Cold Turkey as Chinese Stop Buying for Year of Rooster (Bloomberg.com)

U.S. Economic Growth Cools on Biggest Trade Drag Since 2010 (Bloomberg.com)

New “Housing Bubble” Developing In Dublin (NewsTalk.com)

Trump Sitting On Ticking Fiscal Time Bomb – Stockman (DailyReckoning.com)

 

 

Would the real Donald Trump please stand up? – McWilliams (DavidMCWilliams.com)

Gold is world’s ultimate currency – Former Indian central banker says (IndiaTimes.com)

Real story behind ‘Gold’ movie is crazier than fiction (CalgaryHerald.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

30 Jan: USD 1,189.85, GBP 949.38 & EUR 1,112.63 per ounce
27 Jan: USD 1,184.20, GBP 943.81 & EUR 1,108.77 per ounce
26 Jan: USD 1,191.55, GBP 945.14 & EUR 1,111.95 per ounce
25 Jan: USD 1,203.50, GBP 956.90 & EUR 1,119.62 per ounce
24 Jan: USD 1,213.30, GBP 972.22 & EUR 1,130.07 per ounce
23 Jan: USD 1,213.75, GBP 974.03 & EUR 1,130.12 per ounce
20 Jan: USD 1,199.10, GBP 974.87 & EUR 1,127.03 per ounce
19 Jan: USD 1,203.35, GBP 976.76 & EUR 1,129.34 per ounce
18 Jan: USD 1,212.50, GBP 984.91 & EUR 1,134.78 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

30 Jan: USD 17.10, GBP 13.65 & EUR 16.03 per ounce
27 Jan: USD 16.70, GBP 13.32 & EUR 15.61 per ounce
26 Jan: USD 16.86, GBP 13.39 & EUR 15.71 per ounce
25 Jan: USD 16.93, GBP 13.46 & EUR 15.74 per ounce
24 Jan: USD 17.10, GBP 13.73 & EUR 15.92 per ounce
23 Jan: USD 17.14, GBP 13.78 & EUR 15.97 per ounce
20 Jan: USD 16.89, GBP 13.73 & EUR 15.87 per ounce
19 Jan: USD 16.95, GBP 13.75 & EUR 15.89 per ounce
18 Jan: USD 17.12, GBP 13.93 & EUR 16.01 per ounce
17 Jan: USD 17.00, GBP 13.91 & EUR 15.87 per ounce


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Reversal on Green-Card Holders Highlights Casual Cruelty of Trump’s Immigration Order

The most revealing thing about the executive order that President Trump signed on Friday, which suspended admission of all refugees for 120 days, blocked Syrian refugees indefinitely, and banned travelers with passports from any of seven Muslim-majority countries, is how casually he hurt innocent people to score political points. Over the weekend, hundreds of people who had permission to enter the United States as students, researchers, tourists, refugees, immigrants, and legal permanent residents were stopped from boarding their flights or detained after arriving at U.S. airports because of the new restrictions. Thousands more were left in limbo, their plans to move, visit children or ailing parents, take a job, or attend school suddenly canceled or on hold, all based on one man’s whim. The Trump administration’s shifting position on the order’s implications for legal permanent residents from the seven designated countries shows how little thought went into a policy that has upended and endangered so many lives.

Trump’s executive order bars entry, except with special permission, of all “aliens” from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. The New York Times, citing “two American officials,” reports that Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly “had suggested green card holders be exempted from the order,” but presidential advisers Stephen Bannon and Stephen Miller “overruled him.” Hence legal permanent residents, including at least a few who were on the verge of becoming American citizens, were among the travelers who were stopped from flying to the U.S. or detained after arriving. By Sunday criticism of that policy had prompted an embarrassing reversal. “The order is not affecting green card holders moving forward,” Trump’s chief of staff, Reince Priebus, announced on Meet the Press yesterday. Also on Sunday, Secretary Kelly issued this statement:

In applying the provisions of the president’s executive order, I hereby deem the entry of lawful permanent residents to be in the national interest.

Accordingly, absent the receipt of significant derogatory information indicating a serious threat to public safety and welfare, lawful permanent resident status will be a dispositive factor in our case-by-case determinations.

Whether legal permanent residents were covered by Trump’s ban was no small detail, since they include half a million people who would either be stranded abroad or forced to remain in the United States for the next three months. Furthermore, excluding green-card holders is more legally problematic than excluding refugees or visitors, and it was especially controversial among critics of the order, including members of Trump’s party. “It’s unacceptable when even legal permanent residents are being detained or turned away at airports and ports of entry,” Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said on Saturday. Yesterday Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) agreed. “This vetting proposal itself needed more vetting,” he said in a press release. “More scrutiny of those traveling from war-torn countries to the United States is wise. But this broad and confusing order seems to ban legal, permanent residents with ‘green cards,’ and might turn away Iraqis, for example, who were translators and helped save lives of Americans troops and who could be killed if they stay in Iraq.”

Since Trump’s avowed aim is preventing terrorist attacks in the United States by improving the vetting of foreign visitors, including legal permanent residents in the order never made much sense, given the formidable process required to obtain a green card. It is also hard to justify the ban on refugees, who undergo a rigorous screening process that takes up to two years. That process seems to work pretty well. Cato Institute immigration policy analyst Alex Nowrasteh calculates that “the chance of an American being murdered in a terrorist attack caused by a refugee is 1 in 3.64 billion per year.”

The security rationale for picking the seven countries covered by Trump’s order is rather hazy as well. “Since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001,” the Times notes, citing University of North Carolina sociologist Charles Kurzman, “no one has been killed in the United States in a terrorist attack by anyone who emigrated from or whose parents emigrated from Syria, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.” Most of the 9/11 perpetrators (15 of 19) came from Saudi Arabia, while the rest were from Egypt, Lebanon, and the United Arab Emirates. None of those countries is covered by Trump’s order.

“The reason we chose those seven countries was those were the seven countries that both the Congress and the Obama administration identified as being the seven countries that were most identifiable with dangerous terrorism taking place in their country,” Priebus said on Face the Nation yesterday. “Now, you can point to other countries that have similar problems, like Pakistan and others. Perhaps we need to take it further.”

As to why Trump’s half-baked plan had to take effect immediately, interrupting hundreds of journeys that had already begun, Priebus said terrorists might have taken advantage of any delay. “Some people have suggested [that] maybe we should have given everyone a three-day warning,” he said. “But that would just mean that a terrorist would just move up their travel plans by three days.” Taking Priebus at his word, that theoretical risk of a very low-probability event outweighed the certain chaos that would be caused by imposing the restrictions without warning.

The chaos was compounded by a lack of consultation and training. Trump signed the order in the middle of a briefing explaining it to Kelly, head of the department charged with carrying it out. “Customs and border control [CBP] officials got instructions at 3 a.m. Saturday,” the Times reports, “and some arrived at their posts later that morning still not knowing how to carry out the president’s orders.” The ACLU complaint that led to a federal judge’s order blocking the removal of detained travelers, which was filed on behalf of two Iraqi men who were granted visas based on work for the U.S. military, suggests the extent of the confusion. The complaint says that when lawyers for the men asked CBP agents who could explain the new policy, the response was, “Call Mr. Trump.”

Priebus argues that Trump erred on the side of caution by taking swift action to prevent terrorism. “President Trump is not willing to take chances on this subject,” he said on Face the Nation. But that stance means Trump is willing to cause wide, predictable, and potentially lethal damage in exchange for security benefits that are speculative and possibly nonexistent. The questionable logic and haphazard implementation of his order reflect a disregard for the people he might trample in his rush to fulfill an impulsive campaign promise.

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Trump Blames Travel Chaos On Protesters, “Schumer’s Tears”; Tweets “Nothing Nice About Searching For Terrorists”

In his first volley of tweets for the week, President Trump blamed protesters, Charles Schumer’s “tears” and Delta’s computer glitch for chaos at airports across the country in the aftermath of his executive order on immigration.He added that according to Secretary Kelly “all is going well with very few problems” and all-capped “MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN””

“Only 109 people out of 325,000 were detained and held for questioning,” the president tweeted early Monday.  “Big problems at airports were caused by Delta computer outage,…..protesters and the tears of Senator Schumer. Secretary Kelly said that all is going well with very few problems. MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN!”

He then followed up his latest defense of his immigration order, when in a later tweet Trump said there is “nothing nice about searching for terrorists before they can enter our country. This was a bit part of my campaign. Study the world!

Protests broke out on Saturday and Sunday at airports across the country with demonstrators urging the government to welcome refugees and immigrants. Several Democratic lawmakers joined the protests at locations in various cities and some Republican lawmakers also expressed concern about the order and its implementation. During a press conference on Sunday, Schumer, holding back tears, called the order “mean-spirited and un-American.” He said Democrats are considering legislation to overturn the order.

After the White House initially announced it blocked green card holders from entering the US, the DHS later backtracked and said permanent residents would not be prevented from entering the US.

Overnight, 6 people were killed in a Quebec City mosque in what Canada’s prime minister Trudeau dubbed a terrorist attack, one day after the PM tweeted his welcome to anyone around the globe who is “persecuted.”

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Key Events In The Coming “Big Week” For The US

Markets will again zero in on the U.S. this week, and not just because of Donald Trump in Bloomberg’s opinion. The Federal Reserve meeting and nonfarm payrolls may set a clear direction for dollar and yields for the next few months.  U.S. GDP data on Friday showed the largest negative contribution from net exports since 2010. This will give the president ammunition for his Twitter feed because it confirms his view on the evils of globalization. So prepare. Beyond Trump’s rhetoric, it’s going to be a big week for orthodox economic developments in the United States.

No one expects a policy shift at the Fed meeting Wednesday. The FOMC has remained silent on whether they are considering hiking rates in March; the market prices around a one-third chance. This low probability reflects last year’s experience of perpetual rate hike delays. But if the Fed hints that a rate hike is a serious possibility for March, pricing should rise to between 50% and 75%. The dollar would obviously benefit. On the other hand, silence would likely lead yields and the dollar to fall. The dot plot in December showed a median expectation of three rate hikes this year. Nothing has happened since then to suggest this is too optimistic. Therefore, it seems likely the FOMC will acknowledge a March hike is a possibility…so there is also an upside risk for the dollar and yields. However, watch out for Friday’s payroll data as a possible sting in the tail. The Fed won’t have access to the data when they announce policy, and it wouldn’t be the first time the data threw a spanner into the Fed’s intentions.

Other US data in addition to the FOMC and payrolls, include ISM, ADP, housing data, personal income & spending, vehicle sales and core PCE.

That said, in the US, the focus on politics will likely remain paramount, with every Trump tweet closely scrutinized.

In addition to the busy US week, we also have policy decisions from the Bank of Japan and Bank of England, and a slew of important data releases from the Euro area including inflation data which is expected to pop higher, and in the UK parliamentary debate on Article 50 among other data and events.

Similar to the FOMC, consensus expects the BoJ to maintain the status quo, and with JGB purchases being reduced, focus turns to when it will remove the ¥80tn guideline for annual purchases. Likewise, the BoE will keep rates on hold and likely end QE, with risks that they sound more hawkish.

Summary of key global events:

A look at daily events for the coming week courtesy of DB’s Jim Reid, who notes that we’re kicking the week off in Europe with various January confidence indicators for the Euro area before we then get the first estimate of CPI for Germany in January. It’s a busy start to the week in the US with the December personal income and spending reports along with the PCE core and deflator readings. As well as that, we’ll also get pending home sales and the Dallas Fed manufacturing survey.

Tuesday morning starts in Japan where we’ll get employment indicators, housing starts, construction orders and industrial production data as well as the BoJ policy meeting outcome. During the European session we’ll get CPI, PPI and Q4 GDP in France, unemployment in Germany, net consumer credit and mortgage approvals in the UK and Q4 GDP and January CPI for the Euro area. In the US on Tuesday we’ll get the S&P/Case-Shiller house price index along with the Chicago PMI and consumer confidence.

Turning to Wednesday, the early focus in Asia will be on China where the official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI’s in January are due. During the European session we’ll get the confirmation of the final manufacturing PMI’s for the Euro area, Germany and France as well as a first look at the data for the periphery and UK. In the US we’ll get the ADP employment change reading, ISM manufacturing, manufacturing PMI and construction spending. Later in the evening we’ll of course then get the FOMC rate decision.

The data docket is fairly quiet in Asia and Europe on Thursday, however the BoE rate decision and inflation report will be of keen interest. In the US on Thursday we’ll get initial jobless claims and Q4 nonfarm productivity and unit labour costs. We end the week in Asia on Friday with the Caixin manufacturing PMI in China. In Europe we’ll then get the remaining PMI’s (services and composite) as well as retail sales for the Euro area.

We then end with a bang in the US on Friday with the January employment report  including the all important payrolls print. As well as that we’ll get the final PMI’s, ISM non-manufacturing and factory orders data.

Away from the data the only Fedspeak this week comes from Evans when he speaks on Friday afternoon. Over at the BoJ we’ll get the minutes from the December meeting on Thursday. Meanwhile at the BoE Carney will speak post the rate decision on Thursday. The other big focus this week is earnings with 106 S&P 500 companies scheduled to report accounting for 22% of the index market cap. Notable reporters include Apple, Facebook, Exxon Mobil, Pfizer, Merck and Amgen. In Europe well also get earnings reports from 58 Stoxx 600 companies including Royal Dutch Shell, Roche and Astra Zenaca. Another potentially interesting event this week is tomorrow’s House of Commons debate in the UK on the government’s draft law to trigger Article 50. The debate is set to last two days.

* * *

Goldman concludes the weekly preview with a summary of key US event highlights together with consensus estimates.

Monday, January 30

  • 8:30 AM Personal income, December (GS +0.5%, consensus +0.4%, last flat); Personal spending, December (GS +0.4%, consensus +0.5%, last +0.2%); PCE price index, December (GS +0.16%, consensus +0.20%, last flat); Core PCE price index, December (GS +0.12%, consensus +0.10, last flat); PCE price index (yoy), December (GS +1.6%, consensus +1.7%, last +1.4%); Core PCE price index (yoy), December (GS +1.7%, consensus +1.7%, last +1.6%): Personal income is likely to rise 0.5% and personal spending by 0.4% in December. Based on details in the PPI and CPI reports and the Q4 GDP report which showed the core PCE price index increased by 1.3%, we expect core PCE prices to increase by 0.12% in December, or 1.7% from a year ago. In the December report, core CPI increased by 0.23% month over month, or 2.2% from a year ago. Additionally, we expect that headline PCE prices rose +0.16% (mom).
  • 10:00 AM Pending home sales, December (GS flat, consensus +1.1%, last -2.5%): Regional housing data released so far suggest a second consecutive month of lackluster contract signings for existing homes in December, likely reflecting the recent rise in mortgage rates, which have also weighed on the new homes sales and existing homes sales reports. We expect an unchanged reading for the pending homes sales index following November’s 2.5% drop. We have found pending home sales to be a decent leading indicator of existing home sales with a one- to two-month lag.
  • 10:30 AM Dallas Fed manufacturing index, January (consensus +15.5, last +15.5)

Tuesday, January 31

  • 08:30 AM Employment cost index, Q4 (GS +0.7%, consensus +0.6%, last +0.6%): We expect the ECI to accelerate modestly to +0.7% in Q4 to a year-over-year pace of 2.4% (compared to 2.3% in Q3), reflecting firming labor markets and an uptrend in our wage tracker— a weighted average of the ECI, average hourly earnings, non-farm compensation per hour, and the Atlanta Fed’s wage growth tracker. Our wage tracker stands at 2.8% (yoy) in Q4, roughly unchanged from Q3.
  • 09:00 AM S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index, November (GS +0.8%, consensus +0.6%, last +0.6%): We expect the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index to rise 0.8% in the November report, following a 0.6% increase in October. The measure still appears to be influenced by seasonal adjustment challenges, and we place more weight on the year-over-year increase, which at 5.1% is in line with recent trends.
  • 09:45 AM Chicago PMI, January (GS 56.0, consensus 55.0, last 53.9): We expect the Chicago PMI to climb to 56.0 after pulling back to 53.9 in the December report. Our slightly-above-consensus forecast reflects the general improvement in manufacturing surveys as well as encouraging commentary from industrial firms.
  • 10:00 AM Conference Board consumer confidence, January (GS 112.6, consensus 112.8, last 113.7): Consumer confidence is likely to pull back slightly to 112.6 after the index jumped to a 15-year high in the December report, driven by what the Conference Board called “a post-election surge in optimism.” Indicators of consumer sentiment remain strong in January; University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment report reached a new cycle high, and Bloomberg’s Consumer Comfort index held roughly steady.

Wednesday, February 1

  • 08:15 AM ADP employment report, January (GS +160k, consensus +167k, last +153k): The ADP report introduced methodological changes with the October release and now offers more details by sector. We find that while the ADP employment report holds limited value for forecasting the BLS’s non-farm payrolls report, large ADP payroll deviations from consensus forecasts are directionally correlated with NFP surprises. We expect a 160k gain in ADP payroll employment in December, reflecting stable hiring trends and a reduction in initial jobless claims.
  • 10:00 AM Construction spending, December (GS +0.8%, consensus +0.2%, last +0.9%): We expect construction spending to increase 0.8% in December, following a firm 0.9% gain in November.
  • 10:00 AM ISM manufacturing, January (GS 55.3, consensus 55.0, last 54.5): Manufacturing surveys continue to signal moderate expansion in business activity, and we expect ISM manufacturing to climb to 55.3 in the January report. The Philly Fed (+3.9pt to 23.6) and Richmond Fed (+4pt to +12) manufacturing sector surveys both strengthened further following encouraging December reports. The Empire State survey (-1.1pt to +6.5) edged down and the Kansas City Fed survey held steady (+9), but both remain firmly in expansionary territory. Our manufacturing survey tracker—which is scaled to the ISM index—rose to 56.6 in January from 55.6.
  • 02:00 PM FOMC statement, January 31-February 1 meeting: As noted in our FOMC preview, the FOMC looks very likely to keep policy unchanged. We expect the post-meeting statement to remain relatively upbeat about US growth prospects in the second half, and anticipate few changes to the description of inflation-related data. The balance of risks statement and the characterization of current policy as “accommodative” are both likely to remain unchanged. Additionally, we do not expect any explicit mention of fiscal policy for the time being.
  • 4:00 PM Total vehicle sales, January (GS 17.3mn, consensus 17.6mn, last 18.3mn): Domestic vehicle sales, January (GS 13.5mn, consensus 14.0mn, last 14.2mn)

Thursday, February 2

  • 08:30 AM Non-farm productivity, Q4 preliminary (GS +1.1%, consensus +0.9%, last +3.1%): Unit labor costs (qoq), Q4 preliminary (GS +1.5%, consensus +1.9%, last +0.7%); We expect non-farm productivity to increase at an annualized rate of 1.1% in Q4, nicely above the 0.75% trend achieved on average during this cycle. We expect unit labor costs – compensation per hour divided by output per hour – for Q4 to increase 1.5%.
  • 08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended January 28 (GS 250k, consensus 250k, last 259k); Continuing jobless claims, week ended January 21 (last 2,100k): We expect initial jobless claims to fall to 250k following last week’s 22k rebound (to 259k). We believe the bulk of the seasonality-related volatility is now behind us, and we continue to expect claims to settle into a range roughly averaging 255-260k in February and early March. We expect a below trend reading for the week in question, however, reflecting seasonal factors that appear to anticipate a rise in layoffs, as well as some pullback in California, where claims jumped +13k last week, an outlier that seems is likely to normalize going forward.

Friday, February 3

  • 8:30 AM Non-farm payroll employment, January (GS +200k, consensus +175k, last +156k); Private payroll employment, January (GS +190k, consensus +165k, last +144k); Average hourly earnings (mom), January (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.4%); Average hourly earnings (yoy), January (GS +2.8%, consensus +2.8%, last +2.9%); Unemployment rate, January (GS 4.6%, consensus 4.7%, last 4.7%): We expect January non-farm payrolls to rise 200k following a 156k increase in December, with reacceleration reflecting a combination of lower-than-usual year-end layoffs, favorable weather effects, and a further improvement in employment surveys. The four-week average of initial jobless claimed fell to a 40-year low, and while we believe seasonality-related volatility drove much of the decline, our analysis suggests part of the drop reflects a reduction in year-end retail industry layoffs (and some improvement in the underlying pace of job losses). We also believe unseasonably high snowfall played a role in the softer-than-expected December payrolls report, with as many as 20-40k employees likely to return to work in the January survey period. On the negative side, we expect a below-trend payroll growth in the transportation and warehousing industry, following elevated temporary hiring related to strong online holiday shipments. We expect the unemployment rate to fall one-tenth to 4.6% – which would mark a return to the cycle low – in part driven by reduced year-end retail layoffs. We expect average hourly earnings to rise 0.3% month over month and 2.8% year over year reflecting firming wage growth and state-level minimum wage hikes. The report will also be accompanied by the annual benchmark revision to the establishment survey as well as the annual introduction of new population controls in the household survey.
  • 09:15 AM Chicago Fed President Evans (FOMC voter) speaks: Chicago Fed President Charles Evans will give a speech on current economic conditions at the Prairie State College Economic Breakfast in Olympia Fields, Illinois. Audience and media Q&A is expected.
  • 09:45 AM Markit services PMI, January final (preliminary 55.1)
  • 10:00 AM ISM non-manufacturing, January (GS 56.6, consensus 57.0, last 56.6): We expect the ISM non-manufacturing index to hold steady at 56.6 in January. In the December report, the ISM non-manufacturing index remained flat at 57.2, and following the ISM’s annual adjustments to its seasonal factors, the index decreased to 56.6 for the month. Overall, non-manufacturing surveys were stronger in January, as the Richmond Fed (+11pt to +15), Philly Fed (+7.2pt to +33.3), and the New York Fed (+8.0pt to +7.4, not seasonally adjusted) service sector surveys all strengthened at the headline level. The Markit Services PMI also expanded at the fastest pace in the last year. Our non-manufacturing tracker stands at 55.9 for January, up from 54.8 in December.
  • 10:00 AM Factory orders, December (GS +0.8%, consensus +1.1%, last -2.4%); Durable goods orders, December final (last -0.4%); Durable goods orders ex-transportation, December final (last +0.5%); Core capital goods orders, December final (last +0.8%); Core capital goods shipments, December final (last +1.0%): We expect factory orders to rebound 0.8% following a 2.4% decline in the November report. Last week’s durable goods report showed new durable goods orders softened 0.4% while core orders were firm.

Source: BofA, Goldman, DB

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Frontrunning: January 30

  • Trump aides call travel ban success despite broad criticism (Reuters)
  • Trump’s Immigration Ban Promises Constitutional Showdown (BBG)
  • Trump Team Kept Plan for Travel Ban Quiet (WSJ)
  • Trump Era May Mean Fireworks on Fed Days (BBG)
  • Bannon Seizes a Security Role From Generals (NYT)
  • Don’t let Trump embarrass our queen, say a million Britons (Reuters)
  • Countries Under Ban Aren’t Main Sources of Terror Attacks (WSJ)
  • Ukraine says more soldiers killed in deadliest clashes in weeks (Reuters)
  • Airlines Forced to Adjust Staffing After Ban (WSJ)
  • Negative effective of currency rates on company results fall in third quarter (Reuters)
  • VW Takes Global Sales Crown From Toyota Despite Diesel Crisis (BBG)
  • Eike Batista Says He Will Turn Himself In to Police (WSJ)
  • Duterte to Disband Anti-Drug Police Units After Korean Murdered (BBG)
  • Six Killed in Canada Mosque Shooting; Trudeau Calls It Terror (BBG)
  • Euro-Area Economic Confidence Hits Highest Level Since 2011 (BBG)
  • FX Guru John Taylor Is Back, Minus the $12 Million-a-Year Salary (BBG)
  • CSX, Rail Veteran in Settlement Talks (WSJ)
  • Old Cancer Drug Gets 1,227% Price Hike in Frugal U.K. (BBG)
  • Citigroup Plans to Exit Mortgage Servicing by End of 2018 (BBG)
  • As Ford and GM Stay Mum on Immigrants, a Detroit Refugee Is Torn (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Wrap

WSJ

– CSX Corp is discussing a settlement with Hunter Harrison and the activist investor backing him that could make the railroad-industry veteran its chief executive, less than two weeks after they launched a campaign for influence over the company. http://on.wsj.com/2k7lvi1

– Delta Air Lines Inc extended a freeze on many domestic departures following computer problems that extended to flights flown by its regional airline partners. http://on.wsj.com/2k7AWXE

– Brazilian businessman Eike Batista said late on Sunday he’s returning to Brazil to turn himself in to police days after being named a fugitive in a bribery case. http://on.wsj.com/2k7GCks

– Alphabet Inc’s Google, Apple Inc, Facebook Inc, Microsoft Corp, Uber Technologies Inc and other companies expressed concern about the immigration order’s effect on their employees, with some executives saying the ban violated their personal and company principles. http://on.wsj.com/2k7Fg9d

– A U.S. service member was killed and several were wounded during an operation Saturday against al Qaeda militants in Yemen that marked the first known commando mission authorized by President Donald Trump. http://on.wsj.com/2k7zTqr

– A shooting at a Quebec City mosque has claimed multiple lives and sent other victims to the hospital, Quebec City police said. Police said they had made arrests at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Quebec on Sunday night, but declined to confirm the number of dead and wounded and did not provide any details on the arrests. http://on.wsj.com/2k7mE9j

 

FT

* President Donald Trump on Sunday defended his move to ban entry of refugees and people from seven Muslim-majority nations and said the United States would resume issuing visas for all countries in the next 90 days as he faced rising criticism at home and abroad and new protests in U.S. cities.

* The former head of Financial Conduct Authority, Tracey Mcdermott, will join Standard Chartered, according to people familiar with the move.

* France’s Socialists on Sunday picked leftwinger Benoit Hamon as their candidate for the presidential election over pro-business ex-prime minister Manuel Valls, partial results showed.

 

NYT

– After the initial shock of President Trump’s order on Friday restricting entry to the United States by citizens of seven predominantly Muslim nations and all refugees, businesses and trade organizations began to respond over the weekend, some with outrage, some with caution. nyti.ms/2khXZBu

– Tech companies, which have embraced globalization, reacted more forcefully to the president’s immigration order than counterparts in other industries. nyti.ms/2khUkUp

– Gunmen opened fire in the Islamic Cultural Center of Quebec around 8 p.m., the police said, killing an unconfirmed number of people and wounding others. nyti.ms/2khYn2U

– Authorities in Tikrit are evicting the families of ISIS recruits as a form of collective punishment, a practice that has been condemned by the national government. nyti.ms/2ki03ti

 

Britain

The Times

* The American consulting engineer playing a key role in Britain’s new High Speed Two rail route, CH2M, has approached UK competitor WS Atkins about a possible $4 billion merger. http://bit.ly/2jteHJK

* The Competition and Markets Authority is expected to confirm plans to look at Tesco Plc’s planned 3.9 billion pound ($4.91 billion) takeover of Booker Group Plc . http://bit.ly/2jtda6e

The Guardian

* Thousands of steelworkers will vote on rescue proposals for the Port Talbot steelworks this week in a definitive moment for the crisis in the industry. Tata Steel has tabled a proposal to save 8,000 job in its UK business, including the Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales, by investing 1 billion pounds into modernising its operations over the next 10 years. http://bit.ly/2jtdCBK

* BT Group Plc has fired the first shot in the battle for Champions League football, saying it is determined to keep a grip on the TV rights to European football’s blue-riband club competition and accusing arch-rival Sky of having too much dominance over pay-TV sport. htt p://bit.ly/2jtn9Zl

The Telegraph

* Philip Green is understood to be close to a deal that will see him stump up more than 350 million pounds to fund the pensions of former BHS staff who have been left in limbo since the retail chain’s collapse last year. http://bit.ly/2khtD22

* The maker of the next generation of the black cab is targeting European capitals for sales of its hybrid-powered version of the iconic vehicle. London Taxi Co opens its new 300 million pound factory in Coventry, where it will produce the TX5 taxis, in March, with the vehicles rolling off the production line in the third quarter. http://bit.ly/2khuH6b

Sky News

* British Bankers’ Association has warned that market stability could be undermined if Brexit is not handled efficiently, according to Sky News. http://bit.ly/2khuPmb

* Theresa May has announced a 100 million pound deal for the development of fighter jets for Turkey, following trade talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. http://bit.ly/2khuQqg

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US Embassies In UK, Germany Suspend Visa Issuance To Citizens Of Seven Countries, Dual Nationals

In the latest fallout from Trump’s Friday executive order on immigration, the US embassies in Berlin and the UK have suspended visa issuance to nationals from the affected seven countries including dual nationals. the US embassy in Berlin said that visa issuance had been suspended to nationals, or dual nationals, of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

In an update on its Facebook page, the embassy said:

“Per US Presidential Executive Order signed on January 27, 2017, visa issuance to aliens from the countries of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen has been suspended effective immediately until further notification.”

 

“If you are a national, or dual national, of one of these countries, please do not schedule a visa appointment or pay any visa fees at this time.”

Meanwhile, overriding a Boris Statement pledge to protect dual nationals, issued a similar statement suspending “visa issuance to aliens from the countries of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen has been suspended effective immediately until further notification” and added “If you are a national, or dual national, of one of these countries, please do not schedule a visa appointment or pay any visa fees at this time.”


The Embassy of the United States of America in London Photograph

The US embassy in the UK issued the following warning on its website:

Per US Presidential Executive Order signed on January 27, 2017, visa issuance to aliens from the countries of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen has been suspended effective immediately until further notification.

If you are a national, or dual national, of one of these countries, please do not schedule a visa appointment or pay any visa fees at this time.

If you already have an appointment scheduled, please DO NOT ATTEND your appointment as we will not be able to proceed with your visa interview. Please note that certain travel for official governmental purposes, related to official business at or on behalf of designated international organizations, on behalf of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or by certain officials is not subject to this suspension.

Meanwhile, as expected, Iraq’s parliament voted to “retaliate” against the travel ban, according to snap from Reuters. Echoing a similar action taken by Iran over the weekend, Baghdad Invest reported that Iraq has banned US citizens from travelling to Iraq for 90 days. Iraq has said that once USA lifts the travel ban on citizens of Iraq travelling to the United States of America, it would do the same.

It was not immediately clear how many US citizens will revise their vacation plans as a result.

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Global Stocks, Futures Slide On US Protectionism Worries Following Trump Travel Chaos

European, Asian stocks and S&P futures all drop after traders were left with a sour taste from the potential fallout of Donald Trump’s order halting some immigration and ahead of central bank decisions from the U.S. and Japan.  Markets in Hong Kong, China, Malaysia, Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Vietnam are all shut due to the Lunar New Year public holiday, leading to a quiet Asian session. Oil rebounded after sliding as much as 0.7%.  Gold was unable to hold its overnight gains and has dipped into the red to $1,190 after rising just shy of $1,200 in early trading.

“Concerns on protectionism appear to be rising after President Trump’s executive order to restrict immigration,” said Adam Cole, head of G10 foreign exchange strategy with RBC in London.

As Bloomberg notes, Trump’s executive order halting immigration from seven predominantly Muslim nations drew criticism from world governments and some of the largest companies, bringing the geopolitical and international trade risks surrounding the new U.S. president into sharper focus.  As DB’s Jim Reid adds, the domestic affairs of the US hit the headlines all weekend with widespread global criticism and anger over President Trump’s immigration executive order.

The story will likely run and run but will the impact of it spill over into financial markets or will they purely look at the economic implications of a Trump victory and other wider macro issues? It might be interesting to see more responses from Republican members who Mr Trump will need onside for the more direct economic agenda he will soon move on to. While we continue to think a Trump victory likely means higher US growth in 2017 than we would have expected 3 or 6 months ago, we still think volatility will be a feature of the year. It just seems that there are too many uncertainties, unknowns and major policy changes attached to a Trump presidency for it to be a smooth year. Indeed we should note that the VIX (10.57) is at two and a half year lows and within a whisker of post-GFC lows and in reality not far off all time lows. We are comfortably in the lowest percentile of readings of the VIX through history (back to 1987) at the moment so in over 99 days out of every 100 it would normally be higher than this

“Trump always stated these were policies he would implement,” said James Woods, global investment analyst at Rivkin Securities in Sydney. “This renews concerns about a trade war with China that would significantly affect both the Asian and the global economy.”

Not helping sentiment was the veiled hint from last week’s GOP retreat in Philadelphia that the much anticipated Trump tax reform may not hit the 2017 calendar at all, and has been pushed back to the spring of 2018.

In addition to the Trump confusion, traders are on edge ahead of two key central bank meetings this week. The Federal Reserve holds a policy meeting on Feb. 1 and the Bank of Japan convenes this week. Neither is expected to change lending rates, though the Fed’s statement will be parsed for any reading on Trump’s impact on the world’s largest economy.

 

Looking at those markets that were active (and open), the Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.6 percent at 8:22 a.m. in London in a second day of declines. The S&P 500 futures dropped 0.3 percent after the S&P500 gained 1% last week. Japan’s Topix index slid 0.4% led by a drop in banks and exporters. The gauge advanced 1 percent last week, trading near the highest since December 2015. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index lost 0.9 percent, dragged down by technology shares.

After oil initially fell as much as 0.7%, weighed down by the reduced appetite for risk resulting from the immigration curbs and by signs of rising U.S. oil output, crude has since rebounded in a rapid move higher without any fundamental newsflow to justify the bounce. Data from Baker Hughes showed U.S. drillers added 15 oil rigs last week, taking the total to its highest since November 2015. Copper fell 0.1 percent to $5,893 a tonne, with trade also thinned by the week-long new year holiday in China.

The premium investors demand to hold French 10-year bonds rather than German hit its widest in three years after a poll on Sunday showed Fillon, embroiled in a scandal over allegations of misuse of public funds, losing ground to centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron. Both candidates are ultimately expected to beat far-right candidate Marine Le Pen if either faced her in a run-off.

Signs of accelerating inflation in Germany, which is expected to print at 4 year highs upping the pressure on the ECB to taper its QE program, pushed yields on euro zone government bonds higher. French 10-year yields hit a 16-month high in early trade after an opinion poll showed conservative presidential election candidate Francois Fillon, the favorite to win the vote, losing ground. German 10-year yields turned higher and were up 2.6 basis points at 0.49 percent after regional data lifted expectations of a pick-up in inflation in Germany as a whole. Consumer prices rose 2.3 percent year-in-year in Saxony this month. National data due at 1300 GMT is expected to show German inflation rose to hit the ECB’s 2 percent target. U.S. Treasury 10-year yields rose two basis point to 2.489 percent. The yield on 10-year Australian government bonds slid 6 basis points to 2.72 percent.

* * *

Bulletin headline wrap from RanSquawk

  • European equities start the week on the backfront as Europe reacts to President Trump’s executive order and firm regional German CPI
  • Thin markets saw the greenback being offloaded, but this has only served to give USD dip buyers better levels as EUFt/USD, USD/JPY and USD/CHF are back to rates seen Friday
  • Looking ahead, highlights include German regional and national CPI, US PCE, personal spending, pending home sales

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.3% to 2,283
  • MXAP down 0.3% to 141.61
  • MXAPJ down 0.5% to 451.80
  • Nikkei down 0.5% to 19,368.85
  • Topix down 0.4% to 1,543.77
  • Sensex down 0.1% to 27,849.56
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 down 0.9% to 5,661.52
  • Kospi up 0.8% to 2,083.59
  • German 10Y yield rose 2.1 bps to 0.483%
  • Euro down 0.07% to 1.0692 per US$
  • Brent Futures down 0.4% to $55.29/bbl
  • Italian 10Y yield fell 0.7 bps to 2.227%
  • Spanish 10Y yield rose 6.5 bps to 1.652%
  • Gold spot down 0.2% to $1,188.63
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.05% to 100.58

Top Headline News

  • Kelly Says Green Card Holders Won’t Be Stopped by Travel Ban
  • After Chaos at Airports, Homeland Security Says Order to Return
  • Trump’s Next Move on Immigration to Hit Closer to Home for Tech
  • Starbucks Plans to Hire 10,000 Refugees After Trump Action
  • GE to Google Face Uneasy Test of Doing Business Under Trump
  • Quebec Mosque Shooting Kills at Least 6, and 2 Suspects Are Arrested
  • Delta’s U.S. Grounding Lifted After Latest Computer Glitch
  • As Ford and GM Stay Mum on Immigrants, a Detroit Refugee Is Torn
  • Goldman’s Blankfein Said to Criticize May on Brexit Plans: FT
  • Frontline Confirms Stock-For-Stock Offer for DHT, Buys Share
  • Monsanto India 3Q Net Profit Rises; Shares Extend Gains

Asia equity markets traded lower amid a lack of demand in holiday-thinned trade, with sentiment also dampened following Friday’s lacklustre close in the US and after President Trump signed an executive order banning travel from 7 predominantly Muslim countries. ASX 200 (-0.9%) underperformed with broad based declines seen across all sectors and heavy losses in IT stocks, while Nikkei 225 (-0.5%) suffered from a firmer JPY with Toshiba shares the worst performer after reports that the Chairman is poised to step down and that several trust banks are preparing lawsuits against the Co. Markets in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore are all shut due to public holiday. 10yr JGBs traded subdued with the yield curve flattening amid underperformance in the short-end, although mild support was seen following today’s 2yr JGB auction which resulted in the highest b/c since May.

Top Asian News

  • Sony Says It Will Take $1 Billion Writedown on Movie Business
  • Toshiba Asset Sales After Chips Spinoff Will Cut to the Bone
  • Daiwa’s Net Income Rises on Trading, Return to Profit Abroad
  • Chinese Debt-Trap Concern Dismissed by Pakistan as GDP Rises

The week in Europe begins with EU bourses and bunds on the backfoot in the wake of regional German CPI, in which the Saxony region in particular rose to its highest level in 17-months with German inflation now expected to hit the highest in four years, reinforcing the view among the German members of the ECB council who have heightened calls for the central bank to wind down their ultra-loose monetary policy. Sentiment in equities has also also been soured by the President Trump who signed an executive order banning travel from 7 predominantly Muslim countries. Elsewhere, the FTSE has been unable to benefit from the recent declines in GBP with the index hampered by underperformance in energy and financial names which has subsequently pressured the index to its lowest level of 2017. Elsewhere, fixed income has centred around French debt, where the 10-yr yield rose to levels last seen around 2015 after the announcement that far-left candidate Hamon won in the French Socialists presidential nomination. In terms of peripheral debt, Greek bonds have seen a surge in yields following last week’s discord between Greece and their creditors with the IMF wanting more austerity from Greece, while Italian bonds failed to gain any relief from the latest BTP offering by the Italian Tesoro. Finally, Bunds have also fallen victim to the regional German CPI data in a similar vein to the price action seen in the DAX.

European Economic News

  • Spain 4Q GDP YoY 3.0%, est. 3.0%, prior 3.2%
  • Euro-zone Jan. Economic Confidence 108.2, est. 107.8, prior 107.8
  • Euro-zone Jan. Industrial Confidence, est. 0.2, prior 0.1
  • Euro-zone Jan. Services Confidence, est. 12.6, prior 12.9

Top European News

  • Euro-Area Economic Confidence Surges to Highest Level Since 2011
  • Goldman Sees European Stocks Returning Double U.S. Peers in 2017
  • QBE Says Not in Talks With Suitors After Allianz Approach Report
  • VW Takes Global Sales Crown From Toyota Amid Diesel Crisis
  • Novartis Signals Growing Ambitions for CAR-T Cancer Treatments
  • Vodafone in Talks to Merge India Unit With Idea Cellular
  • Spanish Economy Maintained Growth Momentum in Fourth Quarter
  • Merkel Faces Energized SPD as Bavarian Party Backs Re- Election
  • May to Meet U.K. Regional Leaders Denied Say Over Brexit
  • German Pride Shifts to Frustration in Role as Europe’s Motor
  • Fillon Trains Fire on Macron as Scandal Upends French Vote

In currencies, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after erasing losses of as much as 0.4 percent. The pound weakened 0.1 percent, extending a two-day decline. The yen climbed 0.2 percent to 114.89 per dollar. The Australian dollar and the kiwi were little changed. It has been a very quiet in the FX markets today, and largely a case of closing the gap left in the overnight markets in the leading USD pairs. Due to the Trump travel ban on 4 Muslim countries, thin markets saw the greenback being offloaded, but this has only served to give USD dip buyers better levels as EUFt/USD, USD/JPY and USD/CHF are back to rates seen Friday. For GBP, the usual month end flow gives a heavy bias to Cable, but demand ahead of 1.2500 has steadied the pair for now, while EUR/GBP has topped out at .8550 for now. The aggressive bearish sentiment seen a few weeks ago has now subsided as PM May continues to fly the flag for fresh trade deals, with the backdrop of healthy UK data now prompting the market to consider BoE policy ahead.

In commodities, oil futures dropped 0.2 per% ent. Crude earlier slid 0.6 percent to $52.88 a barrel amid speculation increases in U.S. drilling will boost output and curtail the effects of supply cuts made by OPEC and other producers. Gold lost 0.1 percent to $1,189.9 after rising as much as 0.4 percent earlier.

It’s a busy start to the week in the US with the December personal income and spending reports along with the PCE core and deflator readings. As well as that, we’ll also get pending home sales and the Dallas Fed manufacturing survey.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Personal Income, Dec., est. 0.4% (prior 0.0%)
  • 10am: Pending Home Sales MoM, Dec., est. 1.1% (prior -2.5%)
  • 10:30am: Dallas Fed Manf. Activity, Jan., est. 15.0 (prior 15.5)

Washington Events

  • House scheduled to vote on Congressional Review Act repeal of Interior Dept’s Venting and Flaring Rule, and Stream Protection Rule
  • Senate to vote on nomination of Rex Tillerson for secretary of State
  • Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Cmte votes on nomination of Linda McMahon to be administrator of Small Business Administration

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

The domestic affairs of the US hit the headlines all weekend with widespread global criticism and anger over President Trump’s executive order to halt the entire US refugee program for 120 days, banning all Syrian refugees until further notice and suspending entry for nationals from seven Middle Eastern/African countries for 90 days. The story will likely run and run but will the impact of it spill over into financial markets or will they purely look at the economic implications of a Trump victory and other wider macro issues? It might be interesting to see more responses from Republican members who Mr Trump will need onside for the more direct economic agenda he will soon move on to. While we continue to think a Trump victory likely means higher US growth in 2017 than we would have expected 3 or 6 months ago, we still think volatility will be a feature of the year. It just seems that there are too many uncertainties, unknowns and major policy changes attached to a Trump presidency for it to be a smooth year. Indeed we should note that the VIX (10.57) is at two and a half year lows and within a whisker of post-GFC lows and in reality not far off all time lows. We are comfortably in the lowest percentile of readings of the VIX through history (back to 1987) at the moment so in over 99 days out of every 100 it would normally be higher than this.

This morning the latest update to the weekend headlines is a statement issued by US Homeland Security confirming that all green-card holders from the countries subject to the executive order will still be allowed entry into the US. In addition, three separate federal judges have now sought to block parts of Trump’s executive order temporarily. The news has failed to stem early losses for the Greenback though with the Dollar index currently down -0.30% in the early going in Asia with the Yen (+0.58%), Euro (+0.32%) and Pound (+0.18%) all higher. In equity markets, while a number of bourses are closed for Chinese New Year, the Nikkei (-0.71%) and ASX (-0.83%) are both lower however. Gold (+0.31%) has gained and Treasuries are a touch stronger. Meanwhile US equity index futures are -0.25% in the early going. It’s worth noting that UK PM Theresa May and Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel have been amongst the political leaders verbally opposing and condemning Trump’s immigration order so it’ll be interesting to see how the European session opens up. Apple, Google, Netflix and Facebook have also voiced their own concerns and criticism over the weekend.

Away from Trump but staying on the politics theme, this weekend also saw the result of the French Socialist Presidential Primary. Former education minister Hamon has been announced as the winner with 59% of the votes versus 41% for former PM Valls. As we’ve highlighted previously, polls have suggested that the Socialist candidate will struggle in the first round of the presidential election and will likely be well out of contention for the second round. Our economists have highlighted the increasing momentum for independent candidate Macron who, according to the FT, is sitting in third place in the polls behind Le Pen and Fillon. What might be interesting however is how much Macron benefits from the wider support of left-wing supporters as we approach the May election. One to watch.

In the mean time it’s a busy week ahead with US earnings season still in full swing and Europe joining in. In the macro world we have payrolls at the end of the week and central bank meetings from the BoJ (Tuesday), Fed (Wednesday), and BoE (Thursday) alongside plenty of other data previewed in the week ahead at the end. It is also becoming pretty clear that we’ll hear a fair amount from the new US administration too to keep us on our toes.

Back to central banks, a year ago yesterday the BoJ unexpectedly cut rates into negative territory for the first time which seemed to kick off a fairly aggressive 6-8 month rally in global government bonds and a flattening of yield curves that only started to reverse around the time of the BoJ’s decision at their September meeting to adjust course and target a steeper yield curve and 10 year yield levels instead. One could say that this move 12 months ago was the beginning of the end for the post crisis regime of ever increasingly aggressive monetary policy without any complimentary action elsewhere. The reason being that from this point on it felt that ever looser monetary policy was doing as much (or maybe more) damage than good. The correlation between yields and bank equity was an obvious example as monetary policy was seriously damaging the business model at a time when fundamentals were already under pressure. We felt this damage was posing a serious risk to the European economy in 2017 if left unchecked given the link between the health of the sector and lending in the economy. However the subsequent change in BoJ policy (helped by the ECB taper in December), rises in yields and the re-steeping of yield curves from late summer/early autumn onwards certainly helped us push back our earlier concerns and European banks that were -36% from the start of 2016 to the lows in July have now rallied back +52% since this point and hit 13-month highs on Thursday. Obviously Trump’s victory reinforced the trend but the BoJ has been an important macro swing factor in the last 12 months and although this Tuesday’s meeting is unlikely to see any policy changes they are still going to be important in 2017 as investors may at some point test their resolve to hold yields as low as they are in the face of notably higher global yields now relative to when they implemented the policy in September. So the BoJ remains very important this year in our opinion.

Before we look at this week’s calendar, first a quick summary and wrap-up of Friday’s session. Much of the focus was on the Q4 GDP report in the US where the data came in a little disappointing with growth at +1.9% qoq annualized versus market expectations for a +2.2% print. In terms of the breakdown, while business investment rose +2.4% qoq and consumption +2.5%, exports pulled back -4.3% while imports rose +8.3% resulting in net exports subtracting 1.7% from growth. It was however also noted that residential investment surged +10.2% during the quarter.

Markets generally pulled back following that data. After 10y Treasury yields peaked at 2.529% in the early going, yields dipped following the data and closed at 2.484% (-2.0bps on the day). Yields did still end the week up +1.7bps. It was a similar story in Europe where 10y Bund yields ended 2.1bps lower on Friday at 0.458% but still +4.0bps higher over the course of the five days. Meanwhile the US Dollar also pared some of the early gains following the data although the Dollar index still closed +0.15%. The Mexican Peso (+1.54%) rebounded following the news of a phone call between Mexico President Nieto and Trump which helped to ease some of the tensions over the border wall debate. On the other hand Sterling (-0.33%) ended slightly weaker despite generally positive headlines from the meeting between UK PM May and President Trump with May confirmed as saying that she was “convinced a trade deal between the US and UK is the in the national interest of both countries”. Elsewhere the S&P 500 (-0.09%) and Dow (-0.04%) both ended a touch lower although the Dow did still hold above the 20,000 level for the third consecutive day. The Stoxx 600 had earlier closed -0.30% and so paring the weekly gain to a more modest +1.05%.

In terms of the rest of Friday’s data, the durable and capital goods report in the US made for fairly mixed reading. Headline durable goods were notably weaker than expected in December (-0.4% mom vs. +2.5% expected) although the core extransportation reading did rise +0.5% mom and in line with the consensus while the prior month reading was revised up to +1.0% mom from +0.6%. Capital goods orders also beat (+0.8% mom vs. +0.2% expected) along with shipments (+1.0% mom vs. +0.5% expected). Finally the University of Michigan consumer sentiment reading was revised up to 98.5 from 98.1 at the final reading. The only data in Europe was the ECB’s December M3 and credit data which were on balanced positive. M3 money supply growth rose to +5.0% yoy (vs. +4.9% expected) from +4.8% while the three month average credit impulse rose one-tenth to +1.6%.

Moving now to the week ahead. We’re kicking the week off in Europe with various January confidence indicators for the Euro area before we then get the first estimate of CPI for Germany in January. It’s a busy start to the week in the US with the December personal income and spending reports along with the PCE core and deflator readings. As well as that, we’ll also get pending home sales and the Dallas Fed manufacturing survey. Tuesday morning starts in Japan where we’ll get employment indicators, housing starts, construction orders and industrial production data as well as the BoJ policy meeting outcome. During the European session we’ll get CPI, PPI and Q4 GDP in France, unemployment in Germany, net consumer credit and mortgage approvals in the UK and Q4 GDP and January CPI for the Euro area. In the US on Tuesday we’ll get the S&P/Case- Shiller house price index along with the Chicago PMI and consumer confidence. Turning to Wednesday, the early focus in Asia will be on China where the official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI’s in January are due. During the European session we’ll get the confirmation of the final manufacturing PMI’s for the Euro area, Germany and France as well as a first look at the data for the periphery and UK. In the US we’ll get the ADP employment change reading, ISM manufacturing, manufacturing PMI and construction spending. Later in the evening we’ll of course then get the FOMC rate decision. The data docket is fairly quiet in Asia and Europe on Thursday, however the BoE rate decision and inflation report will be of keen interest. In the US on Thursday we’ll get initial jobless claims and Q4 nonfarm productivity and unit labour costs. We end the week in Asia on Friday with the Caixin manufacturing PMI in China. In Europe we’ll then get the remaining PMI’s (services and composite) as well as retail sales for the Euro area. We then end with a bang in the US on Friday with the January employment report including the all important payrolls print. As well as that we’ll get the final PMI’s, ISM non-manufacturing and factory orders data.

Away from the data the only Fedspeak this week comes from Evans when he speaks on Friday afternoon. Over at the BoJ we’ll get the minutes from the December meeting on Thursday. Meanwhile at the BoE Carney will speak post the rate decision on Thursday. The other big focus this week is earnings with 106 S&P 500 companies scheduled to report accounting for 22% of the index market cap. Notable reporters include Apple, Facebook, Exxon Mobil, Pfizer, Merck and Amgen. In Europe well also get earnings reports from 58 Stoxx 600 companies including Royal Dutch Shell, Roche and Astra Zenaca. Another potentially interesting event this week is tomorrow’s House of Commons debate in the UK on the government’s draft law to trigger Article 50. The debate is set to last two days.

via http://ift.tt/2jlW8fi Tyler Durden

US-UK Trade Talks To Begin Immediately In Defiance Of EU Rules: What’s Trump Up To?

Submitted by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Congratulations to UK prime minister Theresa May for poking a finger into the eyes of EU nannycrats.

EU rules say members cannot negotiate trade deals until exit from the block is finalized, but you can kiss that rule goodbye.

The Wall Street Journal reports British PM Theresa May Says U.K.-U.S. Trade Talks to Begin Immediately.

trump-may

High-level talks between the U.S. and the U.K. on strengthening trade ties will begin immediately, Downing Street said Saturday, following British Prime Minister Theresa May’s meeting with President Donald Trump in Washington on Friday.

 

Mrs. May’s office said a team of U.S. and U.K. officials would start scoping out what can be achieved together before the U.K. exits the European Union. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who Mrs. May met in Ankara on Saturday, made a similar commitment to increase trade links with the U.K.

 

The British leader has said the U.K. is reshaping its role in the world as it leaves the EU, including by renewing its relationship with both new allies and longstanding ones. But her trip to Washington and Ankara prompted criticism from some opposition lawmakers, who said she was cozying up to leaders whose values didn’t align with those in Britain.

 

Mrs. May on Saturday declined to comment on Mr. Trump’s executive order on refugees, saying the U.S. policy on immigration is a matter for the U.S. This prompted criticism from opposition lawmakers.

 

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the Labour Party, said Mrs. May should have stood up for Britain by condemning Mr. Trump’s order. “It should sadden our country that she chose not to,” he said.

 

Tom Brake, a Liberal Democrat lawmaker, said of Mrs. May’s reaching out to Mr. Trump and Mr. Erdogan: “This is a deeply alarming sign of her priorities for diplomacy in post-Brexit Britain,” Mr. Brake said. The pro-EU Liberal Democrats said Mrs. May is seeking trade deals with “unsavory leaders.”

 

While the U.K. is in preliminary talks on trade in more than a dozen countries, under EU law, the U.K. can’t finalize any trade deals with other countries while still a member of the bloc.

 

The U.K. has tested the limits of that rule. Over lunch at the White House on Friday, Mrs. May and Mr. Trump agreed to maintain the same trading relationship the U.S. currently has with the U.K. in the immediate aftermath of Brexit to ensure stability for businesses, Downing Street said. Mr. Trump has said he wants to agree as soon as possible to a trade deal with the U.K.

Testing the Limits or Clear Violation?

It’s hard to say why Theresa May cozied up to Erdogan (simple defiance of the EU? NATO?) , but it makes sense to start trade negotiations with the US now.

Working out a deal now to be signed the moment Brexit is official seems more like a violation of rules as opposed to “testing the limits”.

Regardless, what the hell can the EU do about it?

Yesterday, the Financial Times reported Theresa May will not find it easy to broker a US-UK trade deal … “British agriculture and financial services may suffer at hands of Capitol Hill”.

That all depends on what Trump’s primary motive is doesn’t it?

If Trump wants to assist in the collapse of the EU, he might be willing to give the UK a very favorable deal.

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Brickbat: Sorry, Little Girl

crying girlThe Columbus, Ohio, City Council has agreed to pay $780,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by the family of a 4-year-old girl who was shot by a police officer trying to shoot her dog. The officer was had gone to the family’s home because a neighbor asked for his help after the girl’s mother accidentally cut herself and was frightened by the dog.

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How Long Can China’s Debt Continue To Grow Before A Systemic Crisis Strikes?

Nearly three years ago, Morgan Stanley may have jumped the shark (a little) when its strategists Cyril Moulle-Berteaux and Sergei Parmenov declared that China’s Minsky Moment has arrived. While that may have been partially true, the fact that China managed to incur an additional $12 trillion in total debt in the interim period, suggests that Beijing at least managed to postpone the inevitable.

And since in the 3 years since little has changed, questions about how much longer the Chinese debt-fueled growth “farce” can continue have once again emerged, in their latest incarnation courtesy of UBS, whose economist Tao Wang asks “How long can debt continue to grow before a Minsky moment or systemic debt crisis?”

Here is the proposed answer:

China’s debt is set to rise further in the coming years, likely exceeding 300% of GDP within 2 years. As the government continues to rely on credit-fuelled investment growth to offset downward pressures within the domestic economy and from a subdued global environment, unless there is major debt restructuring, China’s debt/GDP ratio is set to rise further. We don’t think that there is a “magic”  level at which a debt crisis will take place. Many countries ran into debt crises at levels of debt significantly lower than China’s current level, often because debt was financed by foreign resources due to low domestic savings, and/or because of duration mismatch (Figure 11).

 

Conversely, there are countries (e.g. Japan, Figure 2) where debt levels have risen ever higher without triggering any obvious financial sector distress.

 

Four factors make a typical systemic debt crisis unlikely for China. Typical debt crises are often liquidity crises of the financial system. In China,

 

1) over 95% of debt is domestic debt financed mainly via banks;

2) there is a very high domestic savings & under-developed capital markets, so saving largely exists as deposits or quasi-deposits in the banking system to finance debt (Figure 12);

3) capital controls still exist to keep liquidity at home; and

4) a high degree of government control over the financial sector and largest borrowers (SOEs) means that debt restructuring can take place gradually with government coordination rather than in a disorderly manner forced by the market. A central bank that always stands ready also helps to shore up depositor confidence in the banking system, helping to reduce the risk of liquidity events. This is why we still think that China’s credit cycle may be a more drawn out process than one that is disrupted by a typical liquidity-related  debt crisis.

 

However, while a conventional debt crisis may be avoidable, UBS admits that ever-rising debt is problematic even if problems do not manifest themselves in a crisis.

The fact that debt is rising much faster than output year after year and an increasing share of debt is allocated in nonproductive or excess capacity sectors means misallocation of resources. Such systematic misallocation will depress long term productivity and economic growth, and wasted resources mean more potential bad debt will be created. While the aforementioned unique factors can allow China’s credit cycle to last much longer than in other economies and with less volatility, this lack of a market-clearing mechanism could depress corporate profitability and investment, leading to lower or stagnant economic growth over a prolonged period of time. Eventually, the cost of accumulating so much bad debt will have to be borne by the financial sector and savers, asset prices will have to correct, and the ultimate cost of adjustment may be substantially larger.

How will this debt cycle play out and what to watch?

In the likely scenario that China’s debt cycle is a drawn out process, the government would have to balance the need to stabilize growth and defuse debt problems by slowing credit expansion gradually, taking actions to gradually restructure the stock of debt (including by writing off bad debts, divesting some state assets and closing down “zombie” companies), and reform to encourage growth in less debt-dependent sectors. In any large credit event, banks and related financial institutions would likely be required by the government to bring some of the culprit debt on to their balance sheets, to gradually restructure its underlying assets to help the economy avoid a serious liquidity/credit crunch. If confidence in shadow bank channels drops, so long as the government retains control over the capital account, liquidity would most likely flow back to the banking system

 

Risk of a more disruptive break in the credit cycle has risen in recent years. The credit cycle could be more easily disrupted if 1) banks run out of “free” liquidity and have to rely on wholesale funding to finance balance sheet expansion, which provides less reliable funding. Banks may be forced to slow credit expansion sharply in the event of a market confidence collapse or asset price plunge; and 2) Large capital outflows persist for a prolonged period, with the resultant domestic liquidity tightening increasing banks’ exposure to international market conditions. Indeed China is experiencing rising capital outflows as a result of the government’s earlier push for capital account opening and the more recent weakening of market confidence (Figure 13).

 

The rapid shadow credit expansion is a risk. Shadow credit is less regulated and adds multiple layers of intermediation that increases risks and financing costs. More importantly, when multiple layers of shadow credit underpins the economy’s overall funding structure, it becomes much harder for the government to quickly identify where funding problems may be or as they appear, compromising their ability to promptly oversee and manage any liquidity situation to prevent it from warping into a bigger systemic issue. As shadow credit becomes increasingly important, the government’s ability to use banks to bailout the shadow banking sector will also be diminished.

So while on net UBS is not yet sounding the alarm on the imminent bursting of the world’s biggest debt bubble, here are the four warning signs investors should watch for when it comes to China: 

  1. Liquidity (LDR) in the broad banking system after adjusting for shadow credit;
  2. change in profit margins and/or return on assets in the corporate sector;
  3. size of shadow credit relative to traditional banking; and
  4. net capital outflows – persistent large outflows will erode China’s domestic liquidity buffer.

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