RATINGS: Moody's Lowers France's Outlook To Negative, Maintains Aa3 Rating

Oct-24 20:55

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Moody's has lowered its outlook on France to negative from stable. * Moody's was expected to at lea...

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FED: SF's Daly: Do Not Want To See Further Labor Market Softening

Sep-24 20:51

SF Fed President Daly's comments in Q&A suggest that she's not overly concerned about the labor market, but sees enough signs of potential weakness - and not enough signs of tariff-related inflation persistence - that she agrees with the general principle of cutting rates as "insurance".

  • Asked whether she would consider the labor market "weak",  Daly says: "I wouldn't really characterize the labor market as weak. The unemployment rate is low,... The people are finding jobs. Wage growth is still expanding at productivity plus inflation. So you have a sense that people are moving and doing things. But what is true is that it's not as speedy as it once was. So if you think three years ago, it was what we called frothy, then it got to healthy, then it got to solid. Now I'd say it's sustainable, but I do not want to see further softening. So one of the things that you see in the [September] rate cut is some insurance - you see the labor market has softened at a pretty good clip. it's come down rapidly from its highs, but the level of where it's sitting right now isn't weak. But you want to prevent that weakness, because we know, historically, once it tips into weakness, it's extremely hard to get it back out."
  • Daly: "I don't see stagflation as around the corner. What I do see is that inflation has been printing above our target for quite a while, and that people have been enduring that sense that prices are rising. They're rising at a faster clip. When I get up in the morning, I still have to think about price increases, and we have work to do there on the labor side... I'd see that's an economy that still needs monetary policy, you know, bridling, but not as much as we had. But it's not something that I see as faltering and recession risk... recession risk is very low right now... Stagflation is a very different thing."
  • Daly doesn't sound concerned about persistent tariff impacts on inflation: "We haven't seen tariffs [impact] in any sector other than the directly tariffed sectors like goods, and only the tariff parts of that. And then in services, you haven't seen it gone up. And in housing, where they have many, many inputs that are tariffed, you haven't seen the cost of housing rise rapidly. In fact, shelter inflation has been coming down, not going up. So that's, I think, evidence so far that's consistent with tariffs being a one time thing... we're seeing that if you look at the announced tariffs ... they have not come into consumer prices because ... firms take them along the supply chain, and everybody shares a little bit of that, or spreads it out over a longer period."

US DATA: Architectural Billings Suggest Weakness Ahead For Construction

Sep-24 20:30

The American Institute of Architects (AIA)'s Architecture Billings Index (ABI) remained below the 50 mark in August.

  • At 47.2, it improved from 46.2 in July. But the sub-50 reading meant that the value of new design contracts dropped for a record 18th consecutive month (the series has been published for 15 years).
  • As a leading indicator of construction activity, this is a negative sign for both nonresidential and residential (multifamily) investment over the coming year.
  • Already, construction is under duress - as of the latest data for August from the Census Bureau, private sector construction activity contracted (in value terms) for the 14th consecutive month (-0.2% after -0.5%). Overall, since peaking in December 2023, private nonresidential construction has fallen by 6.9%. 
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Source: American Institute of Architects (AIA), Data/Charts From Inside Lighting

 

USDCAD TECHS: Approaching The Bull Trigger

Sep-24 20:29
  • RES 4: 1.4019 38.2% retracement of the Feb 3 - Jun 16 bear leg 
  • RES 3: 1.3968 High May 20 
  • RES 2: 1.3925 High Aug 22 and the bull trigger
  • RES 1: 1.3907 High Sep 24 
  • PRICE: 1.3899 @ 21:11 BST Sep 24
  • SUP 1: 1.3790/3727 50-day EMA / Low Aug 29 and a bear trigger  
  • SUP 2: 1.3709 61.8% retracement of the Jul 23 - Aug 22 bull cycle
  • SUP 3: 1.3658 76.4% retracement of the Jul 23 - Aug 22 bull cycle 
  • SUP 4: 1.3637 Low Jul 25  

Wednesday’s rally in USDCAD undermines a recent bearish theme as the pair extends the recovery from the Sep 17 low. The pair has pierced resistance at 1.3890, the Sep 11 high. This exposes key resistance at 1.3925, the Aug 22 high and the bull trigger. Clearance of this hurdle would highlight an important short-term bullish break. Initial support to watch lies at 1.3790, the 50-day EMA.