US: Trump Posts on "Excellent Telephone Conversation" With China's Xi

Feb-04 15:40

US President Trump posts the following on Truth Social: "I have just completed an excellent telephone conversation with President Xi, of China. It was a long and thorough call, where many important subjects were discussed, including Trade, Military, the April trip that I will be making to China (which I very much look forward to!), Taiwan, the War between Russia/Ukraine, the current situation with Iran, the purchase of Oil and Gas by China from the United States, the consideration by China of the purchase of additional Agricultural products including lifting the Soybean count to 20 Million Tons for the current season (They have committed to 25 Million Tons for next season!), Airplane engine deliveries, and numerous other subjects, all very positive! The relationship with China, and my personal relationship with President Xi, is an extremely good one, and we both realize how important it is to keep it that way. I believe that there will be many positive results achieved over the next three years of my Presidency having to do with President Xi, and the People’s Republic of China! PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP"

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UN: Sec-Gen Raises Concern About Precedent Set By US' Venezuela Operation

Jan-05 15:31

In a statement to a meeting of the UN Security Council, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says that the UN is "concerned about the possible intensification of instability in Venezuela" following the US operation that saw President Nicolas Maduro captured and transported to the US to face narco-trafficking charges. Guterres says there are also concerns regarding the precedent the operation may set for how relations among states are conducted, and whether the op respected the rules of international law. 

  • Guterres calls on all Venezuelan actors to "engage in an inclusive, democratic dialogue", and says the UN is ready to support all efforts aimed at assisting Venezuelans in finding a peaceful way forward.
  • It is unclear if a resolution will be put to a vote to condemn the US's actions in Venezuela. Even if a resolution is passed, it is unlikely to have any impact on the future actions of the Trump administration vis-a-vis the immediate control of Venezuela, and its interactions with the newly inaugurated interim president, Delcy Rodriguez.
  • The precedent set by the US's actions are being closely followed in other NATO states following President Trump's comments after the Maduro operation regarding future control of Greenland. Danish PM Mette Frederiksen said a short time ago that she believes Trump is "serious about wanting to take over Greenland", but that both Denmark and Greenland have said no. Adds that any US attempt to seize Greenland will see "everything stop" with regards to NATO cooperation. 

US DATA: Tariff Concerns Abound In Limp ISM Manufacturing Activity Data

Jan-05 15:25

The ISM Manufacturing report for December was relatively steady vs November and in line with broad expectations, quietly falling to a 14-month low (Oct 2024) in showing continued softness in activity with price pressures steadying at a high level. 

  • The headline PMI reading was a little weaker than the consensus of analysts had anticipated at 47.9 (48.4 expected, 48.2 prior), though MNI had signaled that some deterioration should be unsurprising given poor regional Fed surveys and a dip in the S&P PMI for the month.
  • This marked a 10th consecutive sub-50 reading indicating contraction in sector activity, and the sub-indices pointed to softer production but a potential bright spot in improved demand vs November. Reflecting the fairly flat headline reading, the sub-indices were relatively steady: New Orders +0.3 to 47.7, Production -0.4 to 51.0. Two standouts were backlogs up 1.8 to 45.8 with inventories down 3.7 to 45.2.
  • In trade, the volatile imports reading was down 4.3 points to a 7-month low 44.6 due to "Tariff-related pricing pressures" per the report, but conversely export orders were up 0.6 to a 9-month best 46.9 despite "softer international orders tied to tariffs and ongoing uncertainty around U.S. economic policy".
  • Attention as always was on the employment category which ticked up 0.9 to 44.9, suggesting a slower pace of contraction in manufacturing jobs. That said "For every comment on hiring, there were three on reducing head counts. Companies continued to focus on accelerating staff reductions due to uncertain near- to mid-term demand. The main head-count management strategies remain layoffs and not filling open positions."
  • Additionally prices paid were steady at 58.5, defying consensus eyeing an uptick (58.7 expected, 58.5 prior) though again this suggests continued elevated pressures due in large part to tariff policy ("The Prices Index reading continues to be driven by increases in steel and aluminum prices that impact the entire value chain, as well as tariffs applied to many imported goods.") The lack of an increase is consistent with regional Fed indices and the S&P PMI which showed a pullback in inflationary pressures albeit at high levels.
  • The anecdotal comments from various respondents were universally negative, with many citing soft demand and price pressures due to tariffs (that aren't able to be fully passed on, impacting margins). On New Orders, "For every positive panelist comment about new orders, 1.3 comments indicated concern about near-term demand, driven by tariff costs and other uncertainties."
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STIR: Marginally Dovish Impact From Small ISM Mfg Miss

Jan-05 15:15
  • US rates have seen little net impact from the ISM manufacturing report for Dec, continuing to shy away from fully pricing a next FOMC cut with the April meeting and instead still comfortably pricing a next move in June under the new Fed chair.
  • FF cumulative cuts from 3.64% effective: 4bp Jan, 14bp Mar, 20bp Apr, 34.5bp Jun, 51bp Sep and 60bp Dec.
  • SOFR futures have mostly firmed 1 tick since the release, currently ranging from -0.0075 (Z5) to +0.035 (Z7) from Friday’s close when looking out to end-2027. The latter is back to levels at the start of the US session whilst the terminal implied yield of 3.10% (Z6) remains within some recent narrow ranges.
  • Today’s moves have been dominated by broad FI gains following the US capturing of Maduro before a short-lived paring of those gains from a combination of corporate issuance and Kashkari (’26 voter) sounding patient on the prospect of further rate cuts on CNBC.
  • The ISM manufacturing index disappointed slightly although wasn’t a huge surprise considering some softer alternative indicators, whilst the prices paid index was unchanged and new orders saw a very small improvement at still contractionary levels. 
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