Thursday, June 6, 2013

Overnight summary - focus on Asia as Japan hits bear market status for their equity markets... slight bounce for Europe and US Futures as we prepare to tread water before Jobs data on friday ...


http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-06-06/markets-edge-following-no-dead-japanese-cat-bounce-ahead-ecb-and-payrolls


Markets On Edge Following No Dead Japanese Cat Bounce, Eyeing ECB And Payrolls

Tyler Durden's picture




Another day, another sell off in Japan. The Nikkei index closed down 0.9%, just off its lows and less than 1% away from officially entering a bear market, but not before another vomit-inducing volatile session, which saw the high to low swing at nearly 400 points. Hopes that a USDJPY short-covering squeeze would push the Nikkei, and thus the S&P futures higher did not materialize. And while the weakness in Japan is well-known and tracked by all, what may come as a surprise is that the Chinese equities are down for the 6th consecutive session marking the longest declining run in a year. Elsewhere in macro land, the Aussie Dollar continues to get pounded on China derivative weakness, tumbling to multi-year lows of just above 94 as Druckenmiller, who called the AUDUSD short nearly a month ago at parity shows he still has it.
There was little news out of Europe except for another disappointing factory order print this time out of Germany (April -2.3%, Exp. -1.0%, March +2.3%), although the continent is focused squarely on the ECB meeting today, when nothing much is expected to happen. The US will be pretending to care about Initial claims as the last economic data point before tomorrow's NFP report, although trading will be be defined largely by Mrs Watanabe whose every Nikkei move translates into the S&P500.
Previewing Mario's monthly presentation, SocGen says that the ECB meeting today must not be downplayed given its relevance for policy signals and future intentions as the economic landscape in the eurozone changes; however, we suspect the bar for another move today is quite a bit higher following the May rate cut. With no visibility yet on the July updated inflation and growth forecasts, it is the ongoing state of flux in FX, bonds and stocks driven by developments across the pond and in Asia, not across the Channel, that will determine where we end up today. The signs are not good as risk assets continue to fret over a Fed exit, and the Nikkei has just lost another 0.9%. The BoJ's ‘super easing' effort is starting to backfire as the Nikkei sits only a handful of points above the 3 April close before the central bank announced its ambitious QQM programme.
"We do not wish to detract from the ECB's active discussion on the level of interest rates or negative deposit rates, but we were told by central bank sources this week that there is no agreement on further stimulus or narrowing of the rate corridor. Instead, we are looking for Draghi to elaborate a bit more during the Q&A on plans to revive credit growth, or the intention not to put the ECB balance at the heart of an effort to revive lending growth and narrow the borrowing gulf between the North and South. Overcoming German resistance to fresh stimulus has been the least of the ECB's worries as we have found but with the election a mere three months away, the cards may soon be stacked differently than six months ago."
As to the palpable shift in the global mood in recent days, here are Jim Reid's (Deutsche) summary thoughts:
The prevailing mood in markets has definitely changed since Bernanke's congressional Q&A session on May 22nd. This was where the question around the potential for tapering by "Labor Day" was not dismissed. Prior to this point the ever increasing wedge between the technicals and fundamentals was being aided by a benign view on the Fed's 2013's actions. So for us the last two weeks are a reminder of just how important liquidity is to the health of markets around the globe. Yes markets can continue to go up but the odds of this lowers dramatically if central bankers start trying to withdraw support. My personal view is that the Fed is somewhat trapped into keeping high levels of QE going for longer than most expect and although they may indeed want to take more of a step back the risks are high if they do due to 1) the whole spectrum of global assets that will be impacted (as an example look at EM of late), and 2) the fact that other countries will likely continue to be regularly pumping on the liquidity gas. The Fed is not operating in a vacuum.

If I'm correct then the liquidity story isn't likely to go away but it now feels like we've moved into a new phase where the perception of unconditional  liquidity has been replaced by the belief that we might only be a few good data points away from the Fed taking a step back. It’s going to be tough to put the tapering genie back totally in the bottle for a while now. This probably calls for more volatility over the summer and data sensitivity being high. Indeed tomorrow's payrolls number kicks off a summer of high impact data. Before this, today brings what should be an interesting ECB meeting which will tell us a bit more about how dovish the ECB might be over the next few months.

For the record, DB’s Wall and Moec do not expect any policy announcements from the ECB today, but they expect the tone to remain dovish with the likelihood that they will keep their options open. They continue to expect another 25bp refi rate cut in either July or August. Nevertheless, Wall and Moec believe that negative deposit rates may be a closer call than the market thinks given that the debate has moved on from one focused on “the unintended consequences” to the ECB seeking to better understand the costs and benefits. So this discussion on negative deposit rates will probably be the most important thing to listen out for today.
Some more overnight highlights in bulletin format via Bloomberg:
  • Treasuries gain before BoE and ECB rate decisions, Draghi press coference, with USD/JPY holding below 100 and EUR/USD retreating from session highs after German factory orders miss forecasts.
  • ECB will probably keep rates on hold today as economic data haven’t been bad enough to trigger fresh action; likely discussion of possible deposit rate cut may benefit short-end rates, economists and strategists say
  • German factory orders fell 2.3% in April vs expectations for 1% drop
  • BoJ divided over whether to authorize a measure designed to quell bond-market volatility, with some officials concerned it would return the BOJ to a pattern of incremental steps that failed in the past, according to people familiar with the discussions
  • The EU is considering whether to hand oversight of scandal-ridden Libor to the European Securities and Markets Authority
  • Levels of investor concern in equities, commodities, bonds and currencies as measured by Bank of America Corp.’s Market Risk index of cross-asset volatility are below readings from about 75% of days since 2000, according to data compiled by Bloomberg
  • Supporters of Turkey’s government attacked a group of protesters in Prime Minister Erdogan’s hometown of Rize on  the Black Sea, and in Ankara clashes between demonstrators and police extended into the night
  • Sovereign yields mostly lower. Nikkei -0.85%, leading Asia equity markets lower; Shanghai Composite fell for sixth day, longest losing streak this year.  European stock markets, U.S. equity index futures gain. WTI crude gains, copper and gold fall
Recapping the rest of the overnight action with DB:
Back to markets yesterday was a very poor day for risk assets. The S&P 500 (- 1.38%) fell to a one-month low whilst the Dow (-1.43%) closed below 15,000 for the first time in a month. We continue to get somewhat mixed signals about the US recovery which perhaps added more uncertainty to all the Fed taper chat. Indeed the latest ADP employment headline disappointed on the downside (135k v 165k) but the Fed’s Beige Book sounded a little bit more positive on the manufacturing and the retail sectors. The ISM non-manufacturing (53.7 v 53.5) came in broadly in line with consensus but we do note that the employment component fell to the lowest level since July 2012. On the back of this and a riskoff mode in equities we saw the 10yr UST rally 6bp on the day to 2.089%. The 10yr is now about 14bp off the recent highs. The rates story was quite different in EM though which continues to come under selling pressure. The 10yr USD yields of Mexico and Venezuela rose 31bp and 45bp respectively.
Moving on to the overnight session the risk sell-off is extending into Asian trading with equities lower across the region. The Nikkei (-1.0%) is down for  he second straight day and is trading below the 13,000 mark for the first time in about 2 months. The index has fallen about 17% from its recent peak and all eyes continue to see if we break into bear market territory on Japan anytime soon. Elsewhere in Asia, the Hang Seng and Shanghai Composite are down -1.1% and -0.6% respectively. Chinese equities are down for the 6th consecutive session marking the longest declining run in a year. Similarly Asian credit continues to come pressure with the Asia iTraxx 6bp wider on the day as the technical picture on EM hard currency debt flows continue to worsen. In Asian FX, the Indian Rupee is now at a one year low against the Dollar while the JPY continues to strengthen and has now appreciated about 4% against the Greenback from its recent lows.
In other headlines, the FT is reporting that a number of quant hedge funds have been hit by the recent selloff in US bond yields during the month of May. Shares in Man Group closed 17% lower yesterday after it was reported that one of its flagship funds lost more than 10% of its NAV in the last two weeks (FT). Returning to Europe, the ESM is likely to set a cap on the amount of funds it can use for direct bank recap at between EUR50-70bn, a relatively small percentage of its EUR500bn lending capacity, according to a Reuters article. The cap is designed to “preserve the ESM’s high creditworthiness and its lending capacity for other instruments”. We’ll likely get further details on this when the Eurogroup meets later this month.
In terms of today, German factory orders and US jobless claims are the main data highlights. All eyes will be on the ECB and Draghi though. The ECB’s policy announcement is expected at 12.45pm today London time with Draghi’s press conference to be followed 45 minutes later. The Bank of England’s policy statement is also due at noon but the market is expecting no changes in Governor King’s final rate meeting. Elsewhere we will hear from Philly Fed’s Plosser (a nonvoter) later today but the key event for markets will likely be the payrolls report tomorrow.










http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-06-06/japanese-stocks-hit-bear-market


Japanese Stocks Hit Bear Market

Tyler Durden's picture




Joining its partner in economic destruction and currency devaluation (Argentina), Japanese stocks have just crossed over to the dark-side. After a glorious "well, the market is up, so everything must be great" rally of 85% in six months, the Nikkei 225 is now down over 20% from its highs - signifying a 'bear market'. This is the largest 10-day plunge in 27 months as volume has exploded on the downside. We wonder how the herds representing these five charts are feeling now? At the same time, JPY has broken back below 99 against the USD (and AUDJPY is at 5 month lows) as the entire JPY-funded rampage comes undone - seems like the message from the FX option market was spot on againThis is the lowest level in two months since Kuroda first spoke at the BoJ. Get that porta-potty ready, Abe... What next? Blame speculators? Short-sale ban? Shorting ban?

Initially sparked by a 5.0 earthquake - which was quickly saved - once the Japan's 30Y bond sale had passed (and ramped JGBs), equities started to fade rapidly... then the desperate defense of USDJPY 99 began (which sent JGBs lower)...

and then "it" happened... (just look at the two 250-300 point ramps that were tried to spark some momentum before it finally failed)...

From its highs at 16,020 on 5/22, the Nikkei 225 has now dropped 20% (12,815) - officially entering bear market territory. The low before it bounced was 12,810.


This is the first time near the 100DMA (green line) since the rally began...

leaving the Nikkei return (hedged for JPY) only 7.2% YTD... (and at three-month lows)...

It seems the BoJ has indeed lost control of the triumvirate of JPY, JGBs, and Stocks - as the latter now place each other in jeopardy at a higher and higher beta to JPY's swings.

Charts: Bloomberg






http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-06-05/japanese-stocks-end-morning-dead-cat-bounce-session-near-lows


Japanese Stocks End Morning 'Dead-Cat-Bounce' Session Near Lows

Tyler Durden's picture




After getting within 40 points of the 20% correction level, the Nikkei 225 - aided by a 60 pip ramp in JPY - staged a solid 400 point rampapalooza off the pre-market lows. But... JGBs started to sell off in a hurry as equities surged and something had to be done. By the close of the morning session, TOPIX is back at its opening levels -1% from the close, Nikkei 225 -0.5% (down 250 from the earlier highs), JGBs are unchanged, and JPY is practically unchanged, Japanese corporate credit spreads are notably wider (worse).



and the Nikkei 225 bounced off the 20% correction in pre-open trading but is fading fast now...


Whocouldanode? Well, it seems credit markets did?
Charts: Bloomberg



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