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FOMCUSD

Trader thoughts - an inflection point in markets

Chris Weston
Head of Research
May 3, 2023
US regional banks have come crashing back onto the radar, and while there were always likely legacy concerns from the First Republic saga, the incredible moves we’ve seen in US regional banks seem driven predominantly by speculators

– short sellers, it seems, have gone to town, and as any equity trader will attest to - when you know there is a wall of sellers out there you stand aside and you wait for consolidation and better levels to emerge.

(KRE ETF – Daily chart)

Preview

Reports that some 50% of all positions in the KRE ETF (US regional bank ETF) are positioned for downside have been widely talked up, where this figure stood at 42% last week. A speculative attack on bank equity will not sit well with Biden, the Fed, or the FDIC, as rapid declines in equity just accelerate depositor concerns and potentially push more capital into money market funds and the Fed’s RRP facility.

Some have suggested that we’re closer to a point where US authorities could look at curbs on short selling of bank equity. I’d argue the barriers here are high, where since the GFC the Fed has put out numerous white papers on the efficacies of short selling and see the function as a net positive to financial markets.

However, the move in bank equity certainly brings the focus back on instability risk, at a time when the Fed were likely going to skew its focus back on growth and inflation.

(Market pricing per Fed meeting)

Preview

We’ve seen a reaction in interest rate markets to the move in bank equity – so, while the market sees a 25bp hike in today’s FOMC meeting, we can look forward and see nothing priced for the June FOMC meeting, with cuts starting to be priced in July. Looking forward and Fed funds futures price 45bp of cut into December and SOFR futures are pricing a punchy 210bp of cuts between August 2023 and December 2024.

Market pricing almost sets us up for a rerun of yesterday’s RBA meeting, where very little is priced and should the Fed offer any sort of tightening bias in its outlook – and overlook the financial stability risk – then the skew is very much in favour of a hawkish reaction – i.e. we initially see US bond yields and the USD higher, with gold sellers in the mix.

I would assume that this initial move would be short-lived as any decent spike in US bond yields would see bank equity take another leg lower and traders will simply reapply USD and crude shorts and buy gold and JPY as a hedge. The need to be agile and nimble has never been higher.

We also know the debt ceiling is also a growing issue. There seems very little chance we get a bipartisan agreement by early June and we’re already seeing real stress play out in the US Treasury bills maturing in early June, with yields in these short-term debt markets rocketing higher. That stress is not yet seen in VIX June or July futures or FX forward implied volatility – that should change soon.

The wash up is the Fed’s statement will need to be balanced and more importantly Fed chair Jay Powell will need to absolutely nail his communication in the press conference and recognise the moves in regional bank equity as something they are closely watching - or we could see a re-run of the anxiety seen in March.

The narrative is incredibly fluid, but we’re clearly at an inflection point and things can change rapidly – an open mind to react to price action will serve you well.

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