Australian dollar plunges towards global recession

Advertisement

DXY is once again a rocketship:

AUD is the opposite. That JPY is still so weak tells us that this crash is only just getting started:

The CFTC short is still only moderate:

Advertisement

Oil eased:

Metals are beginning to fret:

Miners were smashed:

Advertisement

EM stocks too:

Junk jumped off the proverbial cliff:

As short-end yields exploded. The curve is inverted again from three years. Recession!

Advertisement

Stocks are ready for suicide:

BofA gives us the rub:

Advertisement

Headline CPI prices surged by 1.0% (0.97% unrounded) mom in May, beating consensus expectations of a 0.7% increase. Energy prices spiked 3.9% mom as gasoline prices reached record levels and food prices increases 1.2%. Yoy headline CPIinflation made anew 40-year high of 8.6%.The core CPI also beat expectations, rising 0.6% (0.63% unrounded) mom versus consensus at 0.5%. The yoy rate dropped from 6.2%to 6.0%, because of base effects. The strength in core inflation was across the board. Core commodities rose 0.7% on the back of 1.0% and 1.8% increases in new and used car prices, respectively. Along with the sharp drop in auto sales last month, this suggests that the auto industry was hit by a fresh bout of supply shortages last month. Meanwhile apparel prices increased 0.7% and other goods were up 0.8%. Core services were also very strong in May, increasing by 0.6%. The main drivers were 0.6% increases in OER and rental prices, and a 0.4% rise in medical care services. The reopening-related components showed continued large increases. Lodging was up 0.9% and recreation services increased 0.5%. Airfares spiked 12.6%, contributing nearly 11bpto the core. In the last three months alone, airfares have risen 48%. Some of this strength is likely to reverse in the coming months.

Stepping back, we are struck by the fact that there were almost no pockets of weakness in this report. The data are consistent with our view that inflation is no longer just a function of goods supply-chain disruptions. Inflation is also being driven by strong consumer demand because of a red hot labor market and strong wage inflation. Accordingly, inflation has become embedded in the more cyclical service sectors (e.g.,housing) as well. The Fed has telegraphed 50bp rate hikes in June and July. Its next decision point is in September. Although our base case remains a 25bp hike, today’s print increases the risk of another 50bp increase. The market is pricing a more aggressive Fed response on the back of today’s print. FOMC OIS now reflects 155 bps rate hikes through the September FOMC, assigning some probability to a 75bps hike in July.

There is only one trade in town now. Buy DXY. Even the perennially DXY bearish Goldman has capitulated:

Friday’s data and subsequent price action were a microcosm of the broader market environment: inflation is far too high in major developed markets, and central banks need to tighten financial conditions to slow the economy down and lower inflation. Our modeling suggests the distribution of risks to policy rates in the US is still skewed to the upside over the medium-term, based on the range of possible outcomes for US inflation (Exhibit 1; we simulate inflation outcomes through a Taylor Rule, where the inflation distribution is calibrated to match the Philly Fed’s Survey of Professional Forecaster). At some point financial conditions will tighten enough and/or growth will weaken enough such that the Fed can pause from hiking. But we still seem far from that point, which suggests upside risks to bond yields, ongoing pressure on risky assets, and likely broad US Dollar strength for now.

It is increasingly likely that this cycle is going to end in a firey credit event mushroom cloud. Perhaps it will be macro-led. Candidates present themselves all over:

Advertisement
  • renewed European fragmentation risk;
  • Chinese recession and CNY collapse risk;
  • BOJ and JPY collapse risk
  • broad EM external crisis risk;
  • Tether and BTC meltdown risk;
  • global house price bust risk.

Or, it might just be an old-fashioned credit market and/or bank seizure.

Who knows? We only know that the risk is known and AUD is in its way.

Advertisement
About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.