US DATA: Composite PMI Surprisingly Strong As Serv/Mfg Divergence Builds

Dec-16 14:59
  • The S&P Global US PMI was notably stronger than expected in the flash December release, with the composite rising to 56.6 (cons 55.1) from 55.1.
  • It’s the highest for thirty-three months whilst the press release notes that “firms’ expectations output in the coming year also lifter higher, hitting a two-and-a-half year high”.
  • The latter is deemed to be "reflecting growing optimism about business conditions under the incoming Trump administration. Employment also edged higher, up for the first time in five months, as firms expanded workforce numbers amid the brighter outlook.”
  • It was driven by services jumping to 58.5 (cons 55.8) from 56.1. This index had been hovering around 55 since May before increasing to 56.1 in November. It also sees a resumption of a wider gap with the ISM Services measure which surprised lower back in November as it fell from 56.0 to 52.1 for its lowest since Aug.
  • It easily more than offset the surprise decline to 48.3 (cons 49.5) from 49.7 for the manufacturing index – the charts below show this increased divergence.
  • Mixed price implications: “Raw material cost growth spiked sharply higher in the manufacturing sector, though a further cooling of cost growth in the service sector helped to lessen overall inflationary pressures in terms of both overall costs and selling prices.”

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US OUTLOOK/OPINION: US Macro Weekly: Fed Shifts Hawkish As Disinflation Stalls

Nov-15 21:51

Our weekly US Macro publication is out (PDF):

  • US “Inflation Week” brought largely in-line results, with sequential core CPI coming in a little lower than expected, and headline CPI and core PPI a little higher than expected.
  • But overall the takeaway was that there was relatively little if any disinflationary progress in October, exacerbated by what looks like a small sequential acceleration in the core PCE reading for the month.
  • The cumulative effect of surprisingly hawkish Fed commentary combined with the slight upside in core PCE (with a helping hand from solid initial jobless claims among other data demonstrating continued resilience) saw a notable shift in rate cut pricing this week.
  • The December FOMC meeting appears to be "live", nearing 50/50 implied probability of a hold at one point Friday morning, versus closer to 20% at the start of the week.
  • At the end of this document we highlight two major shifts in FOMC tone this week: one is that a "pause" was introduced as a possibility by a senior FOMC member (Gov Kugler); the other is that there is growing concern over the implications of soaring longer-end rates.
  • Neutral rate-talk also dominated, and in a hawkish direction - Dallas Fed's Logan mused that the Fed had already perhaps already reached neutral rates.
  • It's probably still the case that the FOMC is still in the "thinking about thinking about slowing rate cuts" stage, which means a December cut is the default. But some of the groundwork for a less dovish rate cut path appears to have been laid since the US election (the potentially hawkish implications of which, FOMC members didn't venture into).
  • This week’s heavy data slate gives way to a quieter schedule Nov 18-22, with key macro highlights including flash November PMIs and housing market data, with FOMC speakers also of interest after this week’s shift (including Cleveland Fed Pres Hammack).

US OUTLOOK/OPINION: Atlanta Fed GDPNow Steady, PCE Upgraded Despite Control Miss

Nov-15 21:08

The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow estimate for Q4 remained steady at 2.5% Q/Q annualized in the Nov 15 update, reflecting higher personal consumption expenditures (now 2.8% vs 2.7% in the prior day's update), offset by downgrades to equipment/ nonresidential structure investment. 

  • The stronger PCE figure comes despite a softer-than-expected Retail Sales Control Group figure - we think this is a reflection of the higher revision to September's Control Group, which will statistically carry over into the Q4 growth rate.
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USDCAD TECHS: Bull Cycle Extension

Nov-15 21:00
  • RES 4: 1.4210 2.0% 10-dma envelope  
  • RES 3: 1.4140 1.500 proj of the Oct 17 - Nov 1 - 6 price swing
  • RES 2: 1.4122 3.0% Upper Bollinger Band
  • RES 1: 1.4106 High Nov 15
  • PRICE: 1.4077 @ 16:54 GMT Nov 15
  • SUP 1: 1.3959 High Nov 1 / 6
  • SUP 2: 1.3891/22 20-day EMA and a key S/T support / Low Nov 6
  • SUP 3: 1.3785 50-day EMA
  • SUP 4: 1.3611 Low Oct 8

A strong rally in USDCAD this week reinforces the current bullish condition. The pair has topped 1.3959, the Nov 1 / 6 high. This break confirms a resumption of the uptrend and has also resulted in a breach of 1.3977, the Oct 13 2022 high. 1.4140 marks the next upside level. Initial firm support to watch lies at 1.3891, the 20-day EMA. A short-term pullback would be considered corrective.