HKD: Spot USD/HKD Back Close To Upper Limit, Hibor Rates Little Changed

Jul-02 03:55

Spot USD/HKD has been supported on modest dips so far today. We were last back close to 7.8500, after coming down a touch at the early Asia Pac/NY cross over post HKMA intervention (as USD/HKD tested the upper end of the peg band). 

  • The Hibor fix hasn't seen a sharp fix in interest rates. The week edged up to 0.19% from 0.156% on Monday (there was no fix yesterday). The 1 month was unchanged around 0.73%, while the 3 month rose a touch, but the 12 month fell to 2.91%.
  • USD/HKD spot versus US-HK rate differentials is not providing a compelling case for USD/HKD to retrace lower at this stage.
  • The chart below plots the HKMA aggregate balance versus the Hibor 1 month rate. We would expect the aggregate balance to fall as the HKMA intervenes to protect the upside of the peg band at 7.8500. Still, as history shows, the translation into higher Hibor rates (via tighter liquidity) is often varied.
  • Some sell-side analysts have noted it will take a while for Hong Kong liquidity to tighten and the authorities may be comfortable with this as it helps keep local rates low, which supports the economy (a point Nomura made back in early June). 

Historical bullets

JGBS: Belly Leads Yields Modestly Higher At Lunch

Jun-02 03:18

At the Tokyo lunch break, JGB futures are weaker, -15 compared to the settlement levels.

  • Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced a minister-level meeting to address the supply of rice and stabilise its price ahead of a summer election.
  • “Asset managers’ decision to add to their long yen position through the week ended May 27 is looking a wise one, with the currency back in rally mode and poised to gain more.” (per BBG)
  • Cash US tsys have twist-steepened, with yields -1bp lower to 2bps higher, in today's Asia-Pac session. Monday's US calendar sees ISM Manufacturing data and an appearance by Fed Chair Powell, with the June employment report looming at the end of next week.
  • Cash JGBs are flat to 2bps cheaper across benchmarks, with the 5-7-year zone underperforming. The benchmark 10-year yield is 1.5bp higher at 1.516% versus the cycle high of 1.596%.
  • Swap rates are flat to 1bp higher. Swap spreads are little changed.

CHINA: VIEW: JP Morgan Sees Some Easing In External Pressures

Jun-02 02:39

There was a slight improvement in China’s May NBS PMIs with the composite rising 0.2 points to 50.4, holding above the breakeven 50-mark. JP Morgan believes that there should be some “easing” in “near-term external pressure”. It’s “baseline scenario assumes China’s growth to moderate to an average 3%q/q saar pace through the rest of the year, with full-year 2025 GDP growth at 4.8%yoy.”

  • JP Morgan sees “the main challenges to the Chinese economy coming from structural imbalance between production, consumption and investment, and deflation pressure, calling for ongoing growth-support measures.”
  • “The manufacturing PMI recovered 0.5-pt to 49.5 upon US-China tariff de-escalation, though non-manufacturing PMI fell modestly by 0.1-pt to a 50.3 (four-month low). In all, the composite PMI rose 0.2-pt to 50.4.”
  • “The export orders component of the manufacturing PMI recovered by 2.8-pt to 47.5 upon tariff de-escalation, as surveyed corporates reported a notable rebound in export demand from the US market. The new orders and output components also ticked up in May.”
  • “The future output component recovered moderately in May, suggesting moderate improvement in manufacturers’ sentiment amid tariff de-escalation and easing of near-term external pressure.”
  • “While there have been growing concerns that escalating tariff risks could hit employment notably, it is encouraging to note that labor market conditions seem to have stabilized somewhat amid a near-term improvement in export sector sentiment.”
  • “The pricing components of the manufacturing PMI eased further in May, suggesting lingering deflation pressure.”
  • “The service activity index edged up 0.1-pt to a still subdued level of 50.2, with major drags from the real estate service sector and financial services.”

AUSSIE BONDS: Modestly Cheaper, Subdued Session

Jun-02 02:18

ACGBs (YM -1.0 & XM -2.0) are modestly cheaper after today’s domestic data drop.

  • ANZ job advertisements fell 1.2% m/m in May versus a revised -0.3% in April.
  • MI inflation index fell 0.4% m/m in May versus +0.6% in April. Inflation index rose 2.6% y/y versus +3.3% in April.
  • S&P Global manufacturing PMI falls to 51 from 51.7 in April.
  • Cash US tsys have bear-steepened, with yields flat to 3bps higher, in today's Asia-Pac session.
  • (MNI) The Federal Reserve should aim for a much smaller balance sheet in order to have a smaller footprint in financial markets and reduce the risk of inflationary bursts like the one experienced after Covid, former Fed Board Governor Kevin Warsh said Friday. The Fed's balance sheet "is trillions larger than it needs to be. We can't make this change overnight," said Warsh, who is seen as a leading candidate to replace Jerome Powell as Fed chair next year.
  • Cash ACGBs are 1-2bps cheaper with the AU-US 10-year yield differential -14bps.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is little changed across meetings today. A 25bp rate cut in July is given a 71% probability, with a cumulative 76bps of easing priced by year-end.