http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-19/futures-dragged-down-stronger-yen
Futures Dragged Down By Stronger Yen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/19/2014 07:03 -0500
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-19/ukraine-region-declares-independence-sending-dollar-bonds-record-low-russian-ruble-t
- Australia
- Bank of England
- BOE
- Bond
- British Pound
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- China
- Congressional Budget Office
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- France
- Gilts
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Iraq
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- Nikkei
- POMO
- POMO
- Reality
- Sovereign Debt
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- United Kingdom
- Yen
After surging yesterday for no reason whatsoever because as we explained on several occasions, there were no surprises in the Tuesday BOJ statement, and the doubling and extension of its loan facilities was implicit and factored into the doubling of its monetary policy (as goldman explained quite well), both the Nikkei and the USDJPY has been forced to revert, with the latter all important carry funding pair back to 102 and in danger of sliding lower, as a result ES is now below yesterday's lows. Which is why the 102 USDJPY "invisible hand" tractor beam will be all important today especially if the market finally starts paying attention to the proxy civil war that has gripped the Ukraine.
Stocks traded lower, albeit in a relatively range-bound range this morning, with the Spanish IBEX-35 underperforming. Banking names remained under pressure, with focus still on yesterday’s reports that Spanish banks' bad loans marked a fresh record, together with comments by ECB's Weidmann, who said that sovereign debt purchases would constrain the central bank via political pressure. Similar view was also echoed by ECB’s Nowotny, who said that government bond buying US Fed-style would be difficult to do under ECB's mandate.
Much of the focus this morning has been on UK related macroeconomic events, with the release of the latest jobs report, which showed an uptick in the ILO Unemployment Rate, coinciding with the MPC minutes which revealed that Carney did not ask MPC to vote on new forward guidance policy. As a result, GBP came under broad based selling pressure, with Bunds and USTs also dragged higher by consequent rally by Gilts. Going forward, market participants will get to digest the release of the latest housing data from the US, FOMC minutes, as well as the API inventories report after the closing bell on Wall Street.
US Event Calendar
- 7:00am: MBA Mortgage Applications, Feb. 14, est. -2.0%
- 8:30am: Bureau of Labor Statistics issues redesigned PPI; PPI m/m, Jan., est. 0.1% (prior 0.1%); PPI Ex Food and Energy m/m, Jan., est. 0.1% (prior 0.0%)
- 8:30am: Housing Starts, Jan., est. 950k (prior 999k); Housing Starts m/m, Jan., est. -4.9% (prior -9.8%); Building Permits, Jan., est. 975k (prior 986k, revised 991k); Building Permits m/m, Jan., est. -1.6% (prior -3%, revised -2.6%)
- 12:15pm: Fed’s Lockhart speaks on economy in Macon, Ga.
- 1:00pm: Fed’s Bullard speaks in Washington
- 2:00pm: Fed releases minutes from Jan. 28-29 FOMC Meeting
- 7:00pm: Fed’s Williams speaks on economy in New York Supply
- 11:00am: POMO - Fed to inject only $1b-$1.25b into Singapore Private Wealth accounts
Bulletin news summary from Bloomberg and RanSquawk
- GBP underperformed its peers following the release of worse than expected ILO Unemployment Rate, while the minutes showed that Carney did not ask MPC to vote on new forward guidance policy on Feb. 6…
- Bunds moved off the best levels of the session after Buba failed to get bids for maximum target at its 2024 Bund auction…
- ECB's Nowotny says that government bond buying US Fed-style would be difficult to do under ECB's mandate
Treasuries gain for a second day, 10Y leads, with yield at lowest in a week; FOMC minutes and discussion of QE tapering in focus, especially as recent economic data has disappointed. - Britain’s unemployment rate rose to 7.2% in 4Q, first increase since February of last year, from 7.1% in 3Q
- Germany failed to get bids for maximum target at auction of 10Y bunds; received EU4.33b, max target EU5b; percentage retained by Bundesbank jumped to 24%, highest since Sept. 2012
- The Fed approved new standards for foreign banks that will require the biggest to hold more capital in the U.S., joining other countries in erecting walls around domestic financial systems
- Clashes in Ukraine between police and anti-government activists killed at least 25 people and left hundreds injured in the bloodiest episode of the country’s three- month standoff
- A JPMorgan employee fell to his death from the roof of Chater House, the investment bank’s Asia-Pacific headquarters in Hong Kong
- China reduced its holdings of U.S. Treasury debt in December by the most in two years as the Fed announced plans to slow asset purchases
- Sovereign yields mostly lower. EU peripheral spreads wider. Asian stocks mixed; Nikkei -0.5%, Shanghai +1.1%. European stocks fall, U.S. stock-index futures decline. WTI crude higher, gold and copper lower
Asian Headlines
The Nikkei 225 underperformed its peers amid touted profit taking following yesterday’s gains, with JGBs finishing in minor positive territory as a result. Of note, good sized swaps receiving was noted in 5s, which was said to haven been linked to yesterday's decision by the BoJ to allow banks to borrow from the central bank at a 0.10% fixed rate for four years. (IFR)
UBS see no hard landing or financial crisis in China this year, as firming exports and recovering consumption should offset slower investment in infrastructure. (BBG)
EU & UK Headlines
ILO Unemployment Rate (Dec) 3M 7.2% vs Exp. 7.1% (Prev. 7.1%)
UK Jobless Claims Change (Jan) M/M -27.6K vs. Exp. -20.0K (Prev. -24.0k, Prev. -27.7K)
BoE February minutes showed MPC voted 9-0 to leave rates and bond purchases unchanged. Carney did not ask MPC to vote on new forward guidance policy on Feb. 6.
ECB's Weidmann said sovereign debt purchases would constrain the central bank via political pressure. (FAZ)
This follows the German constitutional court's ruling on the OMT, stating that bond-buying may exceed the ECB's mandate.
ECB's Nowotny says need unanimity to agree non-sterilisation of SMP bond purchases and are getting close to that. He also added that government bond buying US Fed-style would be difficult to do under ECB's mandate. (RTRS/BBG)
Bunds failed to sustain upward traction and moved off high after Buba failed to get bids for maximum target at its 2024 Bund auction. In terms of the bidding data: b/c 1.1 (Prev. 1.8) and avg. yield 1.64% (Prev. 1.77%),
retention 24.1% (Prev. 16.5%).
retention 24.1% (Prev. 16.5%).
US Headlines
President Obama’s proposal to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 per hour would cost 500,000 jobs in 2016, according to a report released Tuesday by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. (The Hill)
Equities
The release of an encouraging earnings report by Credit Agricole, which outperformed in France, failed to support other financials in Europe, with the sector under performing on a broader EU-wide breakdown. On the other hand, utilities traded in the green, as the cautious sentiment buoyed investor demand for high dividend yielding stocks.
FX
Combination of worse than expected macroeconomic releases from the UK, as well as expiring options between 1.660-50 levels meant that GBP has underperformed its peers this morning. Elsewhere, touted profit taking following yesterday's sharp gains, together with somewhat cautious sentiment saw EUR/JPY and USD/JPY trend lower this morning.
Commodities
India may cut their gold import duty by between 2% and 4%. (WSJ)
Morgan Stanley said that China iron ore demand is seen picking up, maintaining its forecasts, whilst seeing a surplus in H2, and suggested not to panic over China iron ore stockpiles. (BBG)
Libyan PM Ali Zaidan commented that Libya reached an agreement to end stand-off with militia, without providing any further details. (BBG)
Iraq has resumed crude exports via the Turkish port of Ceyhan, as the pipeline has been repaired, with oil flow to return to normal at 300,000-325,000 bpd today. (BBG)
* * *
We conclude with the overnight recap from Db's Jim Reid
Policy expectations ahead of the National People’s Congress on the 5th March is spurring a move higher in Chinese stocks. The Shanghai Composite is just over 1% higher as we type and is over 5% higher since trading resumed after the Chinese New Year holiday. Looking across our screens this morning, the performance across Asian equity markets have been a bit weaker elsewhere. The KOSPI (-0.4%) and the Nikkei (-0.8%) are both lower. Gains in the JPY is probably weighing on the latter but in reality there could be also some profit taking following yesterday’s 3% rally.
Elsewhere, the markets in Australia (+0.2%) and Indonesia (+0.4%) are both higher. In FX land, the RMB is at its weakest in two months after the PBOC reduced its daily fixing by 0.05% to 6.1103. Treasuries are little changed overnight with the 10yrs hovering around 2.70%.
On the M&A front, the board of Peugeot yesterday approved a EUR3bn capital raising exercise. The plan would see Chinese state-owned Dongfeng Motor become one of PSA’s largest shareholders. Both Dongfeng and the French government will pay c.EUR800m for a 14% stake each in the company. Staying on the corporate theme, Tesla shares closed at a record high of nearly $204/share amid reports of a 2013 meeting held between Tesla’s CEO and Apple’s head of M&A. A potential takeover, a strategic partnership on batteries (a common area of focus for both companies), or a potential new product category such as accelerating hybrid and electric vehicles are all ideas that have been floated by various media outlets previously/overnight. Certainly an interesting story to follow if anything comes out of it. In the meantime, Tesla’s Q4 results briefing today will be interesting.
After the recent rally back in risk around the globe it feels like we're now entering no mans land where the market is waiting for answers that may not be available for a while. In particular the US data is in limbo while the polar vortex and associated storms pass through. US data was again weak yesterday (see below) but there is very little historical context to try to assess the impact of the weather. We suspect that some of the weakness relative to expectations is part of a multi-year structural issue but we won't know for a few weeks.
Briefly recapping yesterday’s data flow, it was certainly disappointing for the market to see the weakness in both housing and manufacturing. The NY Fed Empire Manufacturing survey fell more than expected to 4.48 from 12.51. Broad-based weaknesses were evident across new orders, shipments and employment although outlook indicators showed improvement. The NAHB Housing Market index fell to 46 from 56 in January while the consensus was looking for a steady month in February. Joe LaVorgna noted that all three subcomponents of the housing data fell, as did all four regions of the country: current conditions (51 vs. 62), prospective buyers (54 vs. 60), buyer traffic (31 vs. 40); Northeast (33 vs. 41), Midwest (50 vs. 59), South (46 vs. 53) and West (57 vs. 71). The weather has certainly dampened builders sentiment but trying to work out how much is near impossible.
The data picture yesterday was also fairly subdued on the other side of the pond. Germany’s ZEW survey expectations index fell more than expected (55.7 v 61.5). In the UK, headline CPI (+1.9% v +2.0% yoy expected) were softer than expected with core inflation down to its lowest reading (+1.6% yoy v +1.9% expected) since mid-2009. Overall it was an uninspiring day for European and US equity markets yesterday with the S&P 500 up by 0.12% and the Stoxx600 closing flat on the day.
Looking ahead to today, we have housing starts/permits in the US as well as the PPI reading for January. On Fed activities, the FOMC minutes of the last meeting is due today while Lockhart and Bullard are scheduled to speak. In Europe the BoE meeting minutes in the UK will probably be the main focal point.
Ukraine news.....
Ukraine Region Declares Independence Sending Dollar Bonds To Record Low; Russian Ruble Tumbles To 5 Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/19/2014 07:24 -0500
The events in the Ukraine continue to deteriorate. Moments ago Lawmakers in Ukraine’s Lviv region, declared independence after backers evicted appointed governor overnight. Lviv’s parliament formed executive committee with department heads in Governor Oleh Salo’s administration that will take over functions of regional government, Oksana Dmetryv, a spokeswoman for Speaker Petro Kolodiy, said today by phone from Lviv. Protesters also seized headquarters of security services in Lviv, a region of 2.5 million people bordering Poland. Elsewhere, there were reports of more military vehicles crossing through Kiev: if there are any more Molotov Cocktail video follow ups we will be sure to capture them.
Still, to expect president Yanukovich (or Putin) to just sit there and let the country be torn apart by secessionists is naive. As Reuters reportrs, Yanukovich accused pro-European opposition leaders on Wednesday of trying to seize power by force after at least 26 people died in the worst violence since the former Soviet republic gained independence. European Union leaders said they were urgently preparing targeted sanctions against those responsible for a crackdown on protesters who have been occupying central Kiev for almost three months since Yanukovich spurned a far-reaching trade deal with the EU and accepted a $15-billion Russian bailout.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman insisted the Kremlin was sticking to a policy of not intervening in Ukraine, although his point man has called for action to crush the protests. The Kremlin said Putin and Yanukovich spoke by telephone overnight, calling the events an attempted coup. Moscow announced the resumption of stalled aid to Kiev on Monday with a $2-million cash injection hours before the crackdown began.
So far, however, the implicit Russian backing of the Ukraine as is is not doing much as both the Ukraine Dollar short-bonds due June 2014 have fallen more than 2 points to a record low of 94.25 according to Tradeweb, while the Russian Ruble has just tumbled to its lowest levels against the dollar since 2009.
The market is finally starting to notice, and realize that nothing in the Ukraine is contained, and the consequences form a prolonged civil war would be dire for everyone involved. Which, as is the case in every proxy war, just happens to be everyone.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/blog/2014/feb/19/ukraine-25-dead-after-police-storm-kiev-protest-camp-live-updates
Summary
Here’s a summary of the latest developments:
- EU foreign ministers are to hold an emergency meeting to discuss imposing sanctions on Ukraine’s political leadership in protest at the latest violent crackdown against demonstrations in Kiev. France, Germany and Poland have all indicated they back target sanctions and travel bans.
- The bloodiest night in independent Ukraine‘s history left at least 25 people dead and more than 200 injured, after further violent clashes in the centre of Kiev. Armed riot police clashed with protesters armed with clubs and molotov cocktails as they tried to take back Independence Square, the hub of the protests against President Viktor Yanukovych‘s government over the past three months. By morning, they had taken back about a third of the square, which has become a scene of charred devastation.
- Russia has threatened to use its influence in Ukraine to bring the violence to an end. Russia’s foreign ministry said: “Ukraine is a friendly brother state an a strategic partner, and we will use all our influence in order for peace and calm to reign.”
- There have been sporadic clashes between riot police and protesters in Kiev as both side regrouped after a night of violence. Overnight there were large explosions, with reports of tear gas, flash grenades, and molotov cocktails as police advanced on protesters in the square, clashing at the front line. Water cannons were brought in and used unsuccessfully to try and douse fires which also burned down the Trade Union Hall.
- President Viktor Yanukovych has laid the blame for deaths at the opposition, and called for them to disassociate themselves from “radical forces.” He said some members of the anti-government opposition had crossed a line when they called on supporters to bring weapons to the demonstration in Kiev.
- Opposition leader Vitali Klitschko addressed around 20,000 protester camped out at Independence Square, and urged them to hold their ground. He also said he’d walked out of talks with Yanukovych after the president demanded protesters leave the square unconditionally.
- There has been widespread international condemnation of the violence. UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon said he was shocked and gravely concerned. US vice president Joe Biden called Yanukovych to urge him to “pull back” the security forces. Pope Francis said he was watching with a “worried soul”.
Thai protesters rally at PM's office
Move comes day after 5 killed in clash with Bangkok police; prime minister to face corruption charges over rice scheme
- Topics:
- International
- Asia-Pacific
- Thailand
Policemen charge against anti-government protesters at a barricade near Government House in Bangkok, Feb. 18, 2014. A police officer was killed and dozens of other officers and anti-government protesters were wounded in gun battles and clashes in the city on Tuesday. Damir Sagolj/Reuters
Protesters seeking to oust Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra rallied at her temporary office on Wednesday, but the premier stayed away from the potential flashpoint one day after five people were killed in gun battles in Bangkok.
A senior security official told Reuters that police would not attempt to retake more protest sites after Tuesday's "Peace for Bangkok Mission" saw the deadliest clashes since the anti-government demonstrations began in November.
Problems continue to mount for Yingluck after an anti-corruption agency filed charges against her on Tuesday over a soured rice subsidy scheme that has stoked middle class anger and left hundreds of thousands of farmers, her natural backers, unpaid.
She is accused of improperly handling a rice subsidy program, a populist move to pay farmers above-market prices that has proved hugely expensive.
Tuesday's violence erupted after police moved into several locations around Bangkok to detain and remove protesters who have been camped out for weeks to press for Yingluck's resignation.
The move was made possible under a state of emergency declared in January. Thousands of police officers, including armed anti-riot squads, were deployed across the city Tuesday in an operation the government called Peace for Bangkok.
Five people were killed after gun battles erupted between Thai police and anti-government protesters as authorities made their most determined effort yet to drive demonstrators from the streets.
Hundreds of riot police attempted to clear out protest sites around the capital, triggering clashes that left dozens injured.
The Erawan Medical Center, which monitors Bangkok hospitals, said on Wednesday one police officer and four protesters had been killed and 65 wounded. Emergency medical services had earlier put the death toll at four, including a journalist for Hong Kong's Phoenix TV.
Multiple gunshots were heard near the prime minister's offices, where riot police had started to remove protesters and dismantle a makeshift stage. Witnesses said shots were fired by both sides. Police later withdrew.
The protests are the latest installment of an eight-year political battle broadly pitting the Bangkok middle class and royalist establishment against the mostly rural supporters of Yingluck.
"We came here because we do not want Yingluck to use the Defence Ministry complex any more," Chumpol Jumsai, a protest organizer, told around 3,000 supporters. "We're asking soldiers to stop letting Yingluck use this facility."
In late December, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra was forced to abandon her offices in Government House by the protesters, who have blocked major Bangkok intersections since mid-January.
Yingluck's elected government has attempted to avoid violence to keep the powerful military from stepping in. Thailand has been racked by political unrest since 2006, when Yingluck's brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was ousted by a military coup after being accused of corruption and abuse of power. Since then, his supporters and opponents have vied for power, sometimes violently.
Earlier Tuesday, 144 protesters near the Energy Ministry in the northern part of the city were peacefully detained and herded onto police trucks to be taken away for questioning, police sources said.
"There was no resistance," said National Security Council chief Paradorn Pattanatabut. "They were overwhelmed by the police force."
The arrests mark the largest roundup of demonstrators since the protests began in November. At least 15 people have been killed and hundreds injured since then.
Yingluck called snap elections in December and has since led a caretaker administration with limited powers.
The elections took place on Feb. 2, but the main opposition party boycotted them, and protesters disrupted them in parts of Bangkok and the south, the power base of the opposition. It may take several months before there is a quorum in parliament to elect a new prime minister.
The military has remained aloof from the latest crisis, but has a long history of intervening in politics, generally in support of the Bangkok establishment that includes the top brass, royal advisers and old-money families.
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