ASIA STOCKS: Mostly A Sea Of Green Following US Lead, Aust Lags

Aug-13 04:10

Asian stocks markets are nearly higher across the board (with the ASX 200 and Philippines bourse the main outliers at this stage). After very strong gains in cash Tuesday trade, as speculation grew for Fed easing after the US CPI print), US futures are close to unchanged so far in Wednesday trade. Nevertheless, the positive spillover is evident for most parts of the region. 

  • Japan markets continue to rally, the NKY 225, up around +1.4% and above 43300, which is a fresh record high. The Topix is up +0.90%, while a poor 5yr debt auction has impacted sentiment at this stage. Positive spill over from US moves have been cited as a major driver so far today.
  • In US trade on Tuesday, the SOX index rose nearly 3.0%. The Taiex, in Taiwan, was up in the first part of trade, tracking to a fresh record high, but is now back around flat. South Korea's Kospi is up 0.65%, back above the 3200 level. Foreign investors have been net buyers so far today (per NBUY on BBG), while onshore institutional and retail investors have been net sellers.
  • China and Hong Kong markets are also higher. The CSI 300 last around +0.90%. Earlier we heard from the authorities who outlined plans on consumption subsidies (via subsidizing personal loans) to boost consumption. The HSI is up around +1.90%, with the tech sub index +2.35%.
  • In South East Asia, Thailand markets have returned from a two-day break and are higher by 0.75%. We have the BoT later, which is expected to cut, albeit as a close call. Malaysia and Indonesia are both up over 1%, but the Philippines is lagging.
  • In Australia, the ASX 200 is struggling, last down around 0.50%. Reported profit taking on CBA (after it posted results) is weighing on financial related stocks. 

Historical bullets

US TSYS: Asia Wrap - Quiet Session For US Bonds

Jul-14 04:10

The TYU5 range has been 110-24+ to 110-28 during the Asia-Pacific session. It last changed hands at 110-27, up 0-04 from the previous close. 

  • The US 2-year yield has edged lower trading around 3.88%
  • The US 10-year yield has edged higher trading around 4.413%.
  • The 10-year yield is again testing the 4.40/45% pivot within its wider 4.10% - 4.65% range. The market is clearly worried about inflation and the CPI this week will be a critical input into the market's thinking. A sustained close back above the 4.45% area could see more longs pared back, above here and the focus will turn back to the 4.60% area.
  • Nick Timiraos on X: “Penn’s Peter Conti-Brown: “We are in a high-stakes moment in the history of the Federal Reserve. It seems clear to me that the Trump administration, using various mechanisms, [has] now cooked up a post-hoc explanation for Powell’s removal.”
  • "TRUMP: IF POWELL TO STEP DOWN WOULD BE A GOOD THING" - BBG
  • MNI BRIEF: US Budget Surplus $27B In June; YTD Deficit $1.3T. The U.S. government posted a USD27 billion budget surplus for June, up USD98 billion from a year earlier, reflecting strong tax receipts and collections of import duties, the Treasury Department said Monday.

Fig 1: 10-Year US Yield Hourly Chart

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Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg Finance L.P

GOLD: Steady Today After Friday Strong Gain

Jul-14 04:01

Gold is little changed in today’s Asia-Pac session, after closing ~1% higher at $3355.59 on Friday.

  • This came despite US tsys finishing Friday’s session with a bear-steepener. Higher rates are typically negative for gold, which doesn’t pay interest. Cash US tsys are slightly mixed in today's Asia-Pac session, with yields 1bp lower to 1bp higher.
  • (Bloomberg) – “Gold has a raft of supportive drivers, from central-bank buying and investor inflows into exchange-traded funds to concerns about the trade war and, separately, the US fiscal outlook.
  • “Central banks and other institutions accumulated about 77 tons of gold on average each month from January through to May, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which maintained forecasts for bullion to rally to fresh records in the coming quarters.”
  • Mounting pressure on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell continues, with President Donald Trump criticising his monetary policy approach as overly restrictive.

CHINA DATA: Export & Import Trends Improve, Rare Earth Exports Rebound

Jul-14 03:38

China June trade figures were slightly better than forecast. Exports rose 5.8%y/y, against a 5.0% forecast (4.8% was the May outcome). Imports rose 1.1%y/y, versus 0.3% forecast and -3.4% for May. The trade surplus pushed higher to $114.8bn, slightly above forecasts (near $112bn), while the May print was $103.22bn.

  • In terms of commodity import volumes, we had coal down slightly to 33.04mln tonnes (36.04 was the May outcome). Crude oil rose though as did iron ore (to 105.95mln tonnes). Copper and natural gas rose, while soybeans fell slightly.
  • Our China policy team noted that H1 imports were impacted by lower commodity prices: "Bulk commodities accounted for about 30% of China's total import value, Wang said, noting the average price of crude oil, iron ore and soybeans dropped more than 10% y/y in H1, dragging down the overall growth rate by 2.7 percentage points."
  • Rare earth export volumes rose 32% in m/m terms and were +11.9%y/y. This was a sticking point from the US side around recent trade negotiations. China promised to accelerate export licenses in this space.
  • Still, overall exports to the US were still down 16.1%y/y (per BBG). The trade surplus with the US rose to $26.57bn, the first rise since March of this year.  
  • The trade surplus with the EU eased to $25.94bn from $26.62bn. the surplus with Hong Kong rose to $26.15bn from $22.97bn.
  • China also saw lower trade deficits with both Taiwan and Australia. 

Fig 1: China Export & Import Trends Y/Y

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Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P./MNI