GLOBAL MACRO: Canada Again Vulnerable To Latest US Tariffs

Feb-10 00:35

US President Trump said that 25% tariffs on all imports of steel and aluminium imports would be announced today. Again Canada is in the firing line as its steel and aluminium make up the largest shares by far of US imports of these products. However, while the US is the world’s second largest steel importer, according to Tradeimex, it is not a major US import but domestically fabricated metals are the 7th largest sector by value added 

  • Steel imports accounted for only 1.1% of total 2023 imports and aluminium was only 0.9%. Thus these tariffs are unlikely to be a major inflationary issue for the US but will still significantly impact certain sectors who use them as inputs to production, such as autos.
  • According to Tradeimex, electronics (14.6% of the total), nuclear reactors & machinery (14.5%), vehicles (12.0%), fuel & oil (8.4%) and pharmaceuticals (5.6%) were the largest categories imported into the US in 2023. Steel and aluminium didn’t feature in the top 10 but it is not surprising that Trump has been vocal on autos.
  • The main impact is likely to be felt by the key exporters with Canada and Mexico in the top three for both steel and aluminium. In 2023, Canada accounted for 25% of US steel imports and 39% of aluminium, while Mexico was 11% and 7% respectively.
  • 10% of aluminium imports came from China and last week the US already announced a 10% universal tariff on all Chinese imports, according to TrendEconomy. It doesn’t feature in the top source of steel imports but they may be coming through a third country, such as Mexico.
  • Other APAC countries impacted include Korea, Japan and Taiwan for steel and India, Korea and Australia for aluminium. For Australia, overall aluminium exports accounted for only 4% of total exports and so US tariffs will have a minimal impact. 

US steel imports by source % total 2023

Source: MNI - Market News/Tradeimex
 

US aluminium & articles imports by source % total 2023

Source: MNI - Market News/TrendEconomy

 

Historical bullets

US TSYS: Strong Jobs & Unemployment Rate Dip Dashes Rate Cut Hopes

Jan-10 20:22
  • Treasuries gapped lower after Friday morning's larger than expected December non-farm and private payroll gains while unemployment dipped slightly.
  • The 256k in December leaves a strong recent trend, with 255k in Sep, an average of 128k for those two months (initially 132k) before surprisingly reaccelerating again. Unemployment rate: 4.086% in Dec after very small downward revisions in the prior two months, with 4.23% in Nov (initially 4.246%) and 4.14% in Oct (initially 4.15%).
  • The Dec'24 10Y contract traded down to 107-12 low (-27) well through technical support of 107-19.5 (1.618 proj of the Oct 1 - 14 - 16 price swing) next level: 107-04 (Low Apr 25 ‘24 and a key support). Curves bear flattened but finished off lows, 2s10s -3.937 at 38.383 vs. 36.572 low, 5s30s -9.612 at 37.484. 10Y yield taps 4.7860 - highest since May 2022.
  • Futures retreated towards post data lows late in the session while projected rate cuts through mid-2025 have retreated since this morning's data, current vs. morning levels* as follows: Jan'25 at -0.7bp (-1.7bp), Mar'25 -6.3bp (-10.1bp), May'25 -10.5bp (-15.9bp), Jun'25 -18.2bp (-25.6bp), Jul'25 -20.2bp (25.5bp).
  • Next week brings CPI and PPI inflation measures on Wednesday and Thursday respectively, the scheduled Fed speaker docket rather muted with the Fed Blackout next Friday.

US TSYS: Lat eSOFR/Treasury Option Roundup: Heavy SOFR Puts

Jan-10 20:09

Heavy option volumes reported Friday, SOFR outpacing Treasury flows with the former leaning towards downside puts as underlying futures retreated towards post data lows late in the session. Projected rate cuts through mid-2025 have retreated since this morning's data, current vs. morning levels* as follows: Jan'25 at -0.7bp (-1.7bp), Mar'25 -6.3bp (-10.1bp), May'25 -10.5bp (-15.9bp), Jun'25 -18.2bp (-25.6bp), Jul'25 -20.2bp (25.5bp).

  • SOFR Options
    • Block, 9,000 SFRM5 95.62/95.75 put spds, 6.0 ref 95.84
    • +20,000 0QK5 95.25/95.50 put spds 1.0-1.25 over 96.00/96.12 call spds
    • Block, +6,400 SFRZ5 97.00/98.00 call spds, 8.0 vs. 95.925/0.12%
    • +8,000 0QM5/0QU5 94.50/95.00 put spd strip 9.75 total
    • +5,000 0QM5 94.00/94.50/95.00 put flys, 2.5 vs. 95.87/0.05%
    • +10,000 SFRZ5 95.25/95.75 2x1 put spds, 3.25 ref 95.915
    • +6,000 SFRM5 96.00/96.25 call spds, 4.5 ref 95.845
    • -5,000 SFRZ5 96.56 calls, 18.5 ref 95.905
    • -6,000 0QM5 95.75 puts cvrd vs 2QM5/3QM5 95.75 put strip cvrd, 10.5 net puts over
    • +20,000 0QM5 96.37/97.00 call spds vs 95.37/95.62 put spd, 3.0 net calls over
    • -10,000 0QG5 96.00 calls, 12.0 ref 95.95
    • -20,000 0QH5 96.62 calls, 3.0
    • +7,000 0QZ5 97.25 calls, 9.5 vs. 95.87/0.14%
    • +10,000 SFRJ5 96.50 calls, 2.75 ref 95.855
    • -5,000 SRM5 96.00/96.25 call spds, 4.5 ref 95.845
    • -8,000 SFRJ5 95.75 puts, 7.0 ref 95.84
    • -10,000 SFRG5 95.68 puts, 1.5 ref 95.75
    • +5,000 SFRU5 96.50/97.00 call spds 5.0 ref 95.88
    • +10,000 SFRK5 96.50/96.75/97.00/97.25 call condors, 1.00 ref 95.91
    • Block, 5,000 SFRZ5 95.25/95.75 2x1 put spds, 3.0 net ref 95.935
    • 5,000 SFRM5 96.06/96.18 call spd vs. 0QM5 96.25/96.37 call spd
    • 10,000 SFRF5 95.87 calls, cab
    • 2,000 0QG5 95.81/95.87/95.93 put flys ref 96.02
    • Block/screen, 10,000 2QH5 95.00/95.50 put spds, 4.0 vs. 95.94/0.15%
    • +3,000 SFRH5 95.875/96.1875 call spd 3.25, ref 95.795
    • 1,500 SFRK5 95.75/95.87/96.00 put flys ref 95.92
    • Blocks, +10,000 SFRM5 95.75/95.9375/96.1875/96.375 call condor, 5.0 vs. 95.90/0.10%
    • Blocks, +18,966 SFRJ5 96.125/96.3125/96.5625/96.75 call condor, 2.50 ref 95.93
  • Treasury Options
    • 10,000 TYG5 107.5/108.25 call spds 27 ref 107-24
    • 4,000 TYG5 104.25/105.75 put spds ref 107-21
    • -10,000 TYG5 106/106.5 put strips, 14
    • 4,000 Monday wkly TY 107/107.25 put spds ref 108-03 (expire Monday)
    • over -19,500 wk2 TY 107.5 puts, 4-5 (expire today, OI 39,662)
    • 2,000 TYH5 106/108 2x1 put spd vs. 108.5/111 1x2 call spds ref 108-08.5
    • 3,150 TYH5 111/113 1x2 call spds ref 108-02.5
    • 2,000 TYG5 109.5/110.5/111.5 call flys ref 108-04.5
    • +13,000 TYH 106.5/107.5 2x1 put spd, 4 ref 108-05 (106.5 strike appr 4.95%)
    • 3,500 TYG5 108/109.5 put spds, ref 108-05
    • 5,000 TYG5 106.5/107.5 put spds, ref 108-05

JGB TECHS: (H5) Downtrend Extends

Jan-10 19:55
  • RES 3: 147.74 - High Jan 15 and bull trigger (cont)
  • RES 2: 146.53 - High Aug 6 
  • RES 1: 142.73/144.48 - High Dec 9 / High Nov 11  
  • PRICE: 140.58 @ 19:10 GMT Jan 10
  • SUP 1: 140.54 - 2.236 proj of the Aug 6 - Sep 3 - 9 price swing
  • SUP 2: 140-00 - Round number support
  • SUP 3: 139.38 - 2.764 proj of the Aug 6 - Sep 3 - 9 price swing    

A clear downtrend in JGB futures remains intact and the latest fresh cycle lows, reinforces this condition. Note too that moving average studies on the continuation chart are in a bear-mode setup, highlighting a clear downtrend. The move down exposes the 140.00 psychological handle next. For bulls, a reversal would open 142.73 and 144.48, the Dec 9 and Nov 11 high respectively.