Thursday, April 3, 2014

Overnight data from Asia April 3 , 2014 --- HSBC China Composite PMI Tumbles To 28-Month Lows As Services Fell (& Rose) , Aussie Retail Sales missed by the most in 9 months , small and focused stimulus offering from China ..... check to the ECB !


Nothing burger from the ECB....



ECB Remains All Talk, No Action: Leaves All Rates Unchanged

Tyler Durden's picture





 
All talk, no action. That's what, as usual, happened at the ECB today where after much bluster and QE rhetoric from everyone including former permahawk Jens Weidmann, the ECB did precisely as most had expected. Nothing.
Monetary policy decisions

At today’s meeting the Governing Council of the ECB decided that the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the interest rates on the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility will remain unchanged at 0.25%, 0.75% and 0.00% respectively.

The President of the ECB will comment on the considerations underlying these decisions at a press conference starting at 2.30 p.m. CET today.
As for that rapidly deteriorating inflation chart in Europe, don't worry. It will fix itself.

As will Europe's non existant private sector loan creation.

Because quite frankly, the actual economy doesn't matter as long as Greece can issue bonds at the same rate it did a decade ago, but only with 20% more unemployment.
Expect even more nothing from Draghi at the press conference next at 8:30 am.










http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-04-02/hsbc-china-composite-pmi-tumbles-28-month-lows-services-fell-rose


HSBC China Composite PMI Tumbles To 28-Month Lows As Services Fell (& Rose)

Tyler Durden's picture






For the 4th month in a row, China's composite PMI fell (with new orders tumbling) - this time to the lowest levels since Nov 2011 and firmly in contractionary territory. However, in the exact antithesis of the manufacturing PMI data, tonight's non-manufacturing data saw the official government data miss expectations and drop (manufacturing rose) while HSBC's services PMI rose (HSBC's manufacturing dropped). This was enough (along with an Aussie retail data miss) to send AUDJPY into conniptions jerking lower then higher then lower as the algos just could not comprehend the levels of absurdity that was flooding their valves. Japanese PMI strolled along in its neither here nor there zone and Aussie PMI tumbled back into contraction after one month of exuberanceIn the famous words of Frank Valli, oh what a night.

Chinese Services PMI rose (and fell)...

But it was not enough to save the Composite PMI from its lowest level since Nov 2011...

Aussie Retail Sales missed by the most in 9 months...

And that schizophrenia sent AUDJPY mad...


And for all those who were hoping for the massive stimulus to save the world from China... they just fired the world's smallest and most focused bazooka - we suspect the money-hungry will be disappointed (for sure Chinese stocks are at the moment)...
China's government has acted for the first time this year to boost economic growth after a string of disappointing data led to fears of a slowdown.

The government said it will cut taxes on small firms and speed up the construction of railway lines.

The measures had previously been included in China's economic work plan for 2014.

However, they had not before put them together in a package aimed at boosting growth.

"We will find innovative ways including fiscal and financial methods to...steady economic growth," the cabinet said in a statement on the government's website.
After its weekly meeting on Wednesday, the government announced the measures, including an 18% increase in the total number of railway lines being built compared to last year. Most of those tracks will be laid in central and western regions of the country.

To finance the railway investment, the government will sell 150 billion yuan ($24.6bn; £14.5bn) worth of government bonds.

As further stimulus, Chinese authorities said they will also extend tax provisions granted to small businesses into 2016.

"We must roll out policies that spur businesses' vitality, effectively increase demand and boost jobs," the government said.

...

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has sought to reassure markets that the government remains prepared to act, and has previously emphasized that creating jobs - as opposed to a specific growth target - was the most important item on his agenda.
$24 billion, financed by selling bonds... not even freshly printed funny money ? And funneled to very specific industries as opposed to flooded into the market... that will not do at all.


http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-04-02/ecb-preview-expect-more-talk-and-no-action

ECB Preview: Expect More Talk And No Action

Tyler Durden's picture






New cycle lows in Eurozone inflation along with disappointing ISMs across various nations raise the probability of a dovish ECB meeting tomorrow, in Citi's view. However, as Deutsche expands upon, they do not see an obvious trigger for "actual" policy easing in the data and events since the last ECB Council meeting and any"action" will take the form of words, not deeds. Despite all the hope in the world, Deutsche warns there would have to be a substantive deterioration relative to current forecasts to elicit an asset purchasing/QE response from the ECB. Instead, more comments on Euro strength, stronger forward guidance, confirmation of the magic of OMT are more likely but so far the market is absolutely calling Draghi's bluff and saying 'put-up-or-shut-up' especialy in terms of EUR strength.
The FT does a great succinct explanation of where we are and what expectations are...
Citi seems a little more hopeful for a dovish ECB meeting and lays out a few reasons why (and what that 'dovishness' might look like)...
The chances of dovish ECB meeting have increased in our view after HICP inflation hit new cyclical lows in March and excess liquidity drain pushed money market rates higher again. The ECB could deliver a dovish statement and comments focusing on euro's recent strength; stronger forward guidance and measures that could fuel expectations of more unconventional policies like a suspension of SMP sterilization and an FLS-program. With markets taking euro shorts off the table, EUR could come off again in the wake of the ECB. EURUSD could correct lower still in the run-up to NFP. Unchanged ECB could lead to further short covering pushing EUR close to recent highs against majors.

The short squeeze in EUR could continue for now despite weaker HICP print for March as markets remain wary of potential disappointments ahead of the ECB. This also means, however, that market positioning need not stand in the way of more EUR weakness by the time of the meeting. We think that President Draghi could surprise on the dovish side and trigger renewed move lower in EUR.

Reasons for the ECB to be more dovish in April than in March/Feb:

1/ Weaker than expected March HICP - Temporary factors may have played a role (e.g. early Easter boosting March inflation in 2013) and a payback in the form of stronger inflation print maybe due in April. That said, the March print goes against ECB’s expectations of low but stable inflation ahead. In addition, core CPI corrected to the downside again reversing previous increase (Figure 1). Recent history would suggest the ECB has responded to cyclical lows in HICP inflation by cutting rates last May and November. Core CPI revisited levels that were associated with ECB action in the past as well. We think that President Draghi could highlight on Thursday that downside risks to inflation have grown of late. A rate cut (not Citi’s central case) cannot be excluded either.


2/ The drain of Eurozone excess liquidity is pushing money market rates higher again highlighting the need for more action in the form of suspended SMP sterilization (Figure 2). Credit crunch remains a worry and sentiment indicators came off their recent highs in March in part because of recent weakness in Eurozone's main trading partners. It would be difficult for the Governing Council to argue that growth and the credit outlook could improve significantly from here. We think that President Draghi could send strong signals that a suspension of SMP sterilization or FLS program are now more likely.


What would constitute a dovish ECB-outcome:

1/ Clear indications that the inflation outlook has deteriorated in March and signals that it could deteriorate further from here especially if EUR-appreciation persists.

2/ Concerns about the lack of credit growth in the Eurozone and worry about the weaker global recovery could add to the dovish ECB tone.

3/ Measures that could include a 10-15bp refi rate cut, a suspension of SMP sterilization and/or FLS-type of program. The latter two could be perceived to signal that the ECB is willing to consider additional unconventional measures like QE and LTRO.

4/ Stronger forward guidance and indications that the council has discussed measures like QE or negative deposit rates at this meeting.
And Deutsche Bank notes the hurdle to policy action is higher than they thought.
The ECB is in a policy ‘dead zone’. There are some easy policy options, like a refi rate cut or ending the sterilization on SMP. But the returns on these policies are small and hardly commensurate with fighting deflation, if it were deemed to be a risk. Jens Weidmann’s comments on QE drew a lot of attention this week. The heart of his message is that the Bundesbank is intellectually ready to contemplate QE. This in itself is an important stepping stone. This means that should the need arise, the political or “theological” hurdles to QE should not be overstated. The level of insurance we have from the Eurosystem is high, if things turn sour. This does not mean that QE can at this stage be a baseline expectation, but asset purchasing of some form is definitely a non-negligible risk this year. We can fairly easily see the central bank being dragged into QE, rather than enthusiastically and preemptively embracing it.

Beyond dovish rhetoric, we are not expecting the ECB to ease policy in April. The lessons from the last couple of months are that the ECB is difficult to ready and the hurdle to easing policy is high. The ‘easy’ policy options like a refi rate cut or ending SMP sterilization are hardly commensurate with fighting deflation even if it were deemed a risk. On the other hand, the major policies like ABS purchasing, targeted liquidity, negative deposit rates and asset purchasing/QE each have their own complexities and costs. In our view, the data and events since last month do not give the ECB reason to re-assess the costs and benefits.

For now, ECB policymaking will remain largely in the verbal arena. We can imagine a twin track communications strategy emerging from the April press conference.

First, there is the “de facto loosening” argument.Because of spare capacity, the ECB says it will leave policy on hold further into the recovery. All else unchanged, this also moves interest rate differentials in favour of euro depreciation. The virtue of policy inactivity will be pushed further by reference to the AQR/EBA exercise: a successful exercise improves the monetary transmission mechanism, adding more “de facto” loosening. Second, we expect ongoing allusion to policies like negative deposit rates and asset purchasing/QE.


If the euro exchange rate were to rise, a negative deposit rate might materialize. Comments from both Weidmann and Liikanen this week gave the option renewed focus. But having managed to avoid a negative deposit rate so far, one wonders whether the ECB will ever have the appetite for it. The imponderables might be too great — what happens if even one systemically relevant institution is not technically ready to implement such a policy and financial stability is threatened?

There would have to be a substantive deterioration relative to current forecasts, we would argue, to elicit an asset purchasing/QE response from the ECB. One trigger to have in mind would be if the range of the ECB staff inflation forecasts at the end of the 3 year forecast horizon lay completely below the “below but close to 2%” target. At the moment, the upper end of the range is about 2.3%. To move this below 1.9% will require either a strong shock or time for a slow erosion of expectations. In the absence of the former — Ukraine does not yet qualify — it will take time if QE is to emerge. The next re-assessment of staff forecasts takes place in June. Even that may be too soon.


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