ASIA FX: USD/Asia Pairs Higher, Inflation Data Weighs On The Yuan

Mar-10 05:26

USD/Asia pairs have spent most of the first part of Monday trade tracking higher. Negative spill over has been evident from a weaker yuan trend, while regional equity markets have been mixed. This leaves the region somewhat underperforming softer USD trends against the majors, although aggregate moves have been modest, with G10 currencies away from best levels against the USD and dollar indices up from session lows. 

  • USD/CNH has firmed back above 7.2600. Earlier dips sub 7.2400 were supported. The USD/CNY fixing rose, despite weaker USD index levels from Friday, while Sunday's inflation data for China reminded markets of the still challenging economic backdrop. headline and core CPI slipped back into deflation. China and HK equities have also been weaker. Upside focus for USD/CNH may rest at the 50-day EMA near 7.2750.
  • Spot USD/KRW has gravitated higher, following the weaker yuan and ignoring the firmer yen trend. The pair was last in the 1454/55 region, off around 0.35% in won terms. Local equities are higher but only modestly. Trade/US recession fears are likely weighing at the margin on KRW sentiment in recent sessions as well.
  • USD/THB is back to 33.80, off around 0.45% in baht terms. The local FinMin continued to reiterate a desire for a weaker FX to boost tourism and export flows. We are currently close to the 20-day EMA resistance point, while the 100-day day is higher, near 34.10.
  • USD/INR got to 87.32 in the first part of trade, but sits back lower now, near 87.20/25. This is still 0.40% weaker in INR terms. USD/IDR is up to 16335/40, off by 0.25% in IDR terms.
  • USD/SGD and USD/PHP have tracked higher, but have been relative outperformers in the past month in the Asia FX space. USD/SGD was last near 1.3325/30, while USD/PHP tracked close to 57.35/40. SGD's high beta with respect to G10 FX moves has been evident in the past month. 

Historical bullets

AUSSIE 10-YEAR TECHS: (H5) Resistance Remains Intact

Feb-07 23:15
  • RES 3: 96.501 - 76.4% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 2: 96.207 - 61.8% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 1: 95.665/851 - High Feb 5 / High Dec 11 
  • PRICE: 95.575 @ 16:37 GMT Feb 7
  • SUP 1: 95.275 - Low Nov 14  (cont) and a key support 
  • SUP 2: 94.477 - 1.000 proj of the Dec 11 - 23 - 31 price swing
  • SUP 3: 94.495 - 1.0% 10-dma envelope

The Aussie 10-yr futures contract continues to trade below the Dec 11 high of 95.851. A stronger bearish theme would expose 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish theme. For bulls, a confirmed reversal and a breach of 95.851, the Dec 11 high, would instead reinstate a bull cycle and refocus attention on resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.  

FED: Gov Kugler: "Prudent" To Hold Rates "For Some Time"

Feb-07 21:40

Gov Kugler (permanent voter, leans dovish) said Friday that rates were likely to be held for "some time" - making her the latest FOMC participant to express little impetus for a cut in the near-term.

  • "The cautious and the prudent step is to hold the federal funds rate where it is for some time, given that combination of factors, given that the economy is solid, given the fact that we haven't achieved our 2% target, and given the fact that we may have uncertainties and other factors that may be pushing up inflation or maybe reducing output and growth into the future."
  • "We reduced our policy rate 100 basis points through December, but the recent progress on inflation has been slow and uneven, and inflation remains elevated. There is also considerable uncertainty about the economic effects of proposals of new policies." She noted in a Q&A that inflation has recently "firmed a little bit."
  • She noted that the January jobs report is "consistent with a healthy labor market that is neither weakening nor showing signs of overheating,"

 

FED: Federal Reserve "Earnings" Briefly Go Positive, But Hole Is Still Large

Feb-07 21:35

The Federal Reserve posted positive net earnings in the week to Feb 5, the first time it has done so since September 2022. The $0.4B uptick compares with an average of negative $1.3B over  the preceding 6 months.

  • Technically, this was a less negative "deferred asset". When the Fed "earns" money on its asset holdings after netting out expenses, it remits this money to the Treasury. With the Fed posting negative earnings for the past 2+ years, it is falling in to deeper and deeper cumulative negative earnings, a "deferred asset" which means that until the figure goes back into a positive balance, no remittances are made to Treasury.
  • The "deferred asset" is currently $220.8B.
  • The variability of earnings is due to the relationship between rates paid on Fed liabilities versus those paid on its assets.
  • The post-GFC rise in the balance sheet saw ZIRP policy and a large set of Treasury and MBS holdings, meaning Fed remittances to the Treasury rose from  0.2% of GDP and 1.3% of government receipts in 2007 to 0.6% and 3.4%, respectively, in 2015, per St Louis Fed calculations. The 2015-18 tightening cycle saw a pullback in remittances, with about $900B remitted to the Treasury over the course of the 2011-20 period.
  • The pandemic balance sheet expansion and return to ZIRP saw remittances pick up strongly again, but they have since pulled back. The 52-week average of weekly remittances has shifted, from showing about $10B in monthly "losses" in late 2023/early 2024, to around $6B on a monthly basis now.
  • This reflects first the inversion of the yield curve amid the Fed's tightening cycle, and the slow normalizing of the curve since then.
  • Unless the Fed easing goes much further, the Fed is unlikely to transmit cash to Treasury for some time.

 

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