差價合約(CFD)是複雜的工具,由於槓桿作用,存在快速虧損的高風險。81.3% 的散戶投資者在與該提供商進行差價合約交易時賬戶虧損。 您應該考慮自己是否了解差價合約的原理,以及是否有承受資金損失的高風險的能力。

USDTreasuriesEquities

January CPI Recap: Hot Inflation Sparks Hawkish Repricing

Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
2024年2月13日
The eagerly-anticipated January US CPI report delivered a rather nasty surprise for policymakers, and riskier assets, with data printing hotter-than-expected across the board, sparking a knee-jerk hawkish repricing, as markets pushed back expectations of the first Fed cut into June.

Headline CPI rose 3.1% YoY in January, down from the 3.4% pace seen at the tail end of last year, though significantly hotter than the 2.9% consensus, making this the second straight inflation print to surprise to the upside. Core prices, more worryingly, remained unchanged on an annual basis, rising 3.9% YoY for the second month running, likely raising some concern over the potential ‘stickiness’ of inflation, particularly with ‘supercore’ inflation also remaining unchanged on the month at 3.9% YoY.

Preview

Meanwhile, on a monthly basis, which helps to remove the base effects involved in the YoY calculation, the picture was similarly disappointing for those hoping the ‘immaculate disinflation’ narrative would continue.

Headline prices rose 0.3% on the month, modestly hotter than the 0.2% seen in December. Of more concern, though, is again the core (ex-food and energy) measure, which rose 0.4% MoM, the fastest monthly rise since last May.

Preview

Annualising these MoM rates helps to paint a ‘truer’ picture of underlying inflationary pressures.

Once again, these are likely to raise some concern among FOMC members, with the 3-month annualised core CPI rate now running at 3.9%, its highest since last June, and the 6-month rate now running at 3.5%, its highest level since September.

Preview

Unsurprisingly, this hotter than expected data sparked a knee-jerk hawkish reaction across financial markets, with the figures casting some significant doubt on the disinflation narrative which had been dominant since the turn of the year, while also, once again, raising the prospect that rates will have to remain ‘higher for longer’ in order to finally squeeze inflation out of the economy. As had been previously flagged as a risk, the ‘last mile’ of returning inflation to the 2% target does indeed look as if it may well prove the hardest.

This hawkish repricing was most evident in the USD OIS market, with money markets having now pushed back the timing of the first 25bp rate cut to June (and briefly into July), while also pricing fewer than 100bp of cuts this year.

Preview

Taking into account Chair Powell’s rhetoric at the January FOMC presser, and the desire for the Committee to seek more ‘confidence’ in incoming data that inflation is indeed on its way back to target, the hawkish repricing of rate expectations was unsurprising. Nevertheless, it’s important to recognise that policymakers will be focused on the trend in the data, rather than a single print, and are unlikely to over-react to one month’s worth of data.

Nevertheless, as is all too common, markets are prone to over-reaction, as was in evidence as the CPI report dropped, and the ‘soft landing’ ideal begun to turn into a ‘no landing’ scenario.

Treasuries, of course, epitomised this, with rates selling-off across the curve, led by the front-end, as 2s rose over 15bp from pre-release levels, briefly trading north of 4.6%, while 10-year yields comfortably cleared the 4.25% barrier. Presumably, positioning helped this move along, with many on the sell-side having likely been positioned for a cooler than expected print before the data dropped.

Preview

In any case, the Treasury sell-off in turn sparked sizeable demand for the greenback across the G10 board, with the DXY rising to a new YTD high north of the 104.80 mark. Gains in the buck were broad based, with cable slipping beneath the 1.26 handle once more, the EUR probing 1.07 to the downside, and USDJPY surging north of the 150 figure – though, any BoJ/MoF intervention seems unlikely at this point, with the move in line with underlying macro fundamentals.

Preview

It remains the case, in my view, that there is little else worth owning in the G10 universe other than the greenback at the present juncture, particularly against lower yielders such as the JPY and the CHF, especially the latter as the chances of the SNB cutting as soon as next month rise after substantially cooler than expected CPI figures (in contrast to the US) on Tuesday morning.

Meanwhile, in the equity space, the hawkish repricing sparked sizeable downside on Wall Street, with the S&P future falling over 1% to break back below 5,000, and the tech-heavy/rate-sensitive Nasdaq tumbling almost 2%.

Preview

It will be interesting to see if, or indeed when, the dip in equities is bought. Monday’s price action displayed some warning signs, with spoos flat on the day, yet the VIX ticking 1pt higher, not a common combination. Given the strong performance seen YTD, it would not be entirely surprising to see some longs use this as an opportunity to take profit, particularly considering this week’s bumper data docket (retail sales, PPI, UMich sentiment still to come), and as markets look ahead to NVDA earnings next week.

Despite this, I remain bullish over the medium-term, and would expect the market to continue to perform well, benefitting from what is clearly an incredibly resilient, and well-performing, US economy.

In summary, the phrase ‘one swallow doesn’t make a summer’ springs to mind as markets digest the latest inflation figures. While, clearly, hotter than expected at a core level, and moving in the opposite direction to that which policymakers seek, one print alone should not be over-interpreted, especially given how prone to revisions the data remains. Policymakers are unlikely to over-react to one print, and nor should market participants.

The fact remains that this is a flexible FOMC. They can cut whenever they feel they have enough evidence of inflation being set to return to 2%. After this data, that shan’t be in March, though that was always unlikely to be the case, particularly after the blowout January NFP print; any cut at that meeting would now be 50bp or more, and likely the result of some degree of financial instability.

Policymakers remain data-dependent, and naturally so do financial markets; one poor jobs figure and/or a cool inflation print next month, and all of a sudden, we’ll all be talking about a May cut once more.

這裡提供的資料並未根據旨在促進投資研究獨立性的法律要求進行準備,因此被視為市場營銷溝通。儘管它不受任何在投資研究傳播之前交易的禁制,我們不會在向客戶提供資料之前尋求任何優勢。

Pepperstone不代表這裡提供的材料是準確、及時或完整的,因此不應依賴於此。這些資訊,無論來自第三方與否,不應被視為建議;或者買賣的提議;或者購買或出售任何證券、金融產品或工具的招攬;或參與任何特定的交易策略。它不考慮讀者的財務狀況或投資目標。我們建議閱讀此內容的讀者尋求自己的建議。未經Pepperstone的批准,不允許複製或重新分發此信息。