Macro Morning: Bond market conundrum

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It’s all about the Fed, the FOMC minutes and Fed Chairman Bernanke this morning as FX markets in particular are reacting in a remarkable fashion to a perception that the Fed has been more dovish in the minutes to the recent FOMC meeting and that the Fed Chairman has likewise entered a note of caution into the debate.

I think this is a complete misinterpretation of what the minutes portray and what the Fed Chairman is trying to do. Rather I think the signal being sent right here and now is that there is a clear disconnect between taper and higher rates in the US. They were never the same thing but you would have thought so if you looked at the US bond rates and US mortgage rates and the Fed and its Chairman are clearly trying to signal the disconnect between the taper – which is coming – and higher rates, which are not.

The minutes say:

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…several members judged that a reduction in asset purchases would likely soon be warranted, in light of the cumulative decline in unemployment since the September meeting and ongoing increases in private payrolls, which had increased their confidence in the outlook for sustained improvement in labor market conditions.

BUT CRUCIALLY FOR THE LONG TERM OUTLOOK FOR RATES:

Many members indicated that decisions about the pace and composition of asset purchases were distinct from decisions about the appropriate level of the federal funds rate, which would continue to be guided by the thresholds in the Committee’s statement.

So we can get the taper without higher rates but we’ll still get the taper if 195,000 jobs last week have anything to do with it but the fed is signalling that rates won’t rise and Bernanke has explicitly said in his talk, or questions at least, that a 6.5% unemployment rate is not a trigger for higher rates necessarily and also that the tightening in financial conditions that has occurred since talk of the taper has been so strong is unhelpful for the US economy and its recovery and will be dealt with.

Unfortunately what appears to be happening is a kind of reversal of Alan Greenspan’s 2005 “bond market conundrum”. Despite Greenspan raising interest rates then, bond and mortgage rates refuse to rise because global capital flows kept them down. Now we have a Fed chairman trying to exit extraordinary stimulus without raising rates yet the money flooding out of bonds is sending real rates through the roof.

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In time I expect the taper and, hopefully, for bond rates to fall back into line.

But you would swear that Bernanke and the FOMC just said they are going to buy more bonds and there is no taper if global FX market price action this morning is anything to go on. The moves have been amazing in the magnitude of the US dollars pummeling in such a short space of time.

The euro was already rallying from the recent lows and was at 1.2842 afew hours ago but sits at 1.3017 now. Sterling is also up at 1.5052 from 1.4907 a few hours back and the Aussie is 0.9227 off a low of 0.9091 a few hours back. It is all very messy with the Aussie having traded through about a 130 point range twice in the past few hours which is very destructive price action.

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I made about 120 odd points yesterday trading the Aussie from the short side mostly based on the hourly charts. You can see the levels of the past few days in the chart above. What you can also see is that there is quite a bit of clear air on the topside if this rally wants to get a wriggle on but just like yesterday at some point today I will be happy to go short above 92 cents again but with a caveat of only while it is below 0.9237 (high just now).

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The euro looks a good sell while below 1.3035 and Sterling while below 1.5062. But a word of warning. Mandlebrot warns us that volatility begets volatility so this is not a time for positioning heroics or forgetting one’s stops.

In other markets the Dow and S&P were up a little but basically unchanged, Europe was under pressure.

Nymex Crude
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As noted above Nymex crude is at levels not seen for the best part of 18 months but equally as you can see above there is some overhead resistance. The rally is fundamentally based in some very solid draws over the past 2 weeks of an average of 10 million Bbls.

Gold is up at $1263 on the back of USD weakness as well.

Data

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Today sees Kiwi PMI data, Japanese foreign investment, machinery orders and BoJ monetary policy and employment in Australia. German wholesale prices, French CPI, the ECB monthly report and US export and import prices together with initial jobless claims.

Twitter: Greg McKenna