OIL: Prices Higher, US CPI, OPEC Report & EIA US Inventories Released Later

Mar-12 04:16

Oil prices have continued rising during today’s APAC session driven by reduced excess supply expectations. WTI is 0.7% higher at $66.72/bbl after falling to $66.49 before rising to $66.84. Brent is up 0.7% to $70.03/bbl after an intraday low of $69.79 and a high of $70.13. The USD index is up 0.2%.

  • OPEC’s March monthly report is published today with the IEA’s on Thursday. OPEC’s forecasts tend to be more optimistic. On Tuesday, the US’ EIA revised down its global excess supply expectations for both 2025 and 2026 due to the projected impact of tighter sanctions and enforcement on Iran and Venezuela.
  • The supply outlook remains highly uncertain though with it still unclear if Iran and Venezuela will find ways to evade sanctions and if there will be an easing of restrictions on Russia. The US administration is also planning to increase US production, while higher tariffs have raised uncertainty around global demand substantially.
  • The US 30-day ceasefire proposal will now be presented to Russia following Ukraine’s readiness to agree but Russia has said that it will only approve it on its own terms and not the US’. If it refuses, President Trump has threatened more sanctions and also tariffs on the country.
  • Bloomberg reported that US crude inventories rose 4.2mn barrels last week after a drawdown the previous week, according to people familiar with the API data. Gasoline stocks were down 4.6mn while distillate rose 400k. The official EIA data is out later today.
  • US CPI for February is out later (see MNI CPI Preview) and forecast to show a 0.1pp moderation in headline and core to 2.9% y/y and 3.2% y/y respectively. February budget and real earnings data are also released. The BoC decision is announced and it is forecast to cut rates 25bp. The ECB’s Lagarde and Lane speak. 

Historical bullets

BONDS: NZGBS: Closed Cheaper But At Session Bests, Light Local Calendar Today

Feb-10 04:09

NZGBs closed cheaper but at session bests, with benchmark yields 1-4bps higher. 

  • The local calendar was empty today. The next event is a State of the Economy presentation by Treasury Chief Economic Adviser Dominick Stephens on Wednesday. The next data release is Card Spending on Thursday.
  • Cash US tsys are ~1bp richer in today’s Asia-Pac session after Friday’s heavy post-payrolls session. Headlines have crossed from Bloomberg, with US President Trump stating that the US will announce tariffs of 25% on all steel and aluminium imports from Monday. Trump didn't announce a time when these tariffs will take effect.
  • That aside, the focus this week is on Chairman Powell's mon-pol testimony to Congress on Tuesday-Wednesday, and CPI and PPI inflation measures on Wednesday and Thursday respectively.
  • Swap rates closed 1bp lower to 5bps higher, with the 2s10s curve steeper.
  • Markets are pricing in 48bps of easing for February, with a total of 120bps expected by November 2025.

NEW ZEALAND: Monthly Prices & Inflation Expectations Likely Focus Of This Week

Feb-10 03:57

The focus this week ahead of the February 19 RBNZ decision is likely to be January monthly prices, as they are higher frequency than their quarterly counterpart, and Q1 inflation expectations,.

  • On Thursday, RBNZ inflation expectations for Q1 published. They have been trending lower over the last two years and are around the mid-point of the central bank’s 1-3% band. Both the 1- and 2-year measures were 2.1% for Q4.
  • Thursday also sees January total and retail card spending. The RBNZ had eased monetary policy 125bp since August and the effects of this can be tentatively seen in monthly expenditure data as retail card spending rose 2.0% m/m in December to be up 0.6% y/y after a trough in June of -4.4% y/y.
  • January food prices are out on Friday along with monthly rents, alcohol & tobacco, petrol, air transport and accommodation services. The components released account for around 45% of the CPI and will be the first indication of how Q1 inflation is developing (Q1 CPI released April 17).
  • BusinessNZ’s manufacturing PMI for January prints on Friday. It has been sitting below the breakeven 50-level since February 2023 and was at 45.9 in December. The services version is released next Monday.
  • Net migration for December is also published on Friday. Inward flows have been slowing and in November were 2070, although this number is likely to be revised significantly. 

JGBS: Cash Bonds Holding A Bear-Steepener At Lunch

Feb-10 03:30

At the Tokyo lunch break, JGB futures are weaker, -9 compared to the settlement levels.

  • According to MNI’s technicals team, a clear downtrend in JGB futures remains intact and the latest fresh cycle lows reinforce 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. For now, short-term gains are considered corrective.
  • Outside of the previously outlined Current Account Balance and bank Lending data, there hasn't been much by way of domestic drivers to flag.
  • Cash US tsys are ~1bp richer in today’s Asia-Pac session after Friday’s heavy post-payrolls session. Headlines have crossed from Bloomberg, with US President Trump stating that the US will announce tariffs of 25% on all steel and aluminium imports from Monday. Trump didn't announce a time when these tariffs will take effect.
  • Cash JGBs are flat to 2bps cheaper across benchmarks, with a steepening bias. The benchmark 10-year yield is 2.2bps higher at 1.324%, a fresh cycle high.
  • Swap rates are flat to 1bp higher. Swap spreads are tighter.

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