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MNI EUROPEAN OPEN: China Equities Up Modestly Post LNY Break

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Fig. 1: USD/CNH (Inverted) & CSI 300 Equity Index

Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg

U.K.

HOUSE PRICES (BBG): UK home sellers increased their asking prices for a second month amid further signs the property market is building momentum after its worst year since the financial crisis.

EUROPE

RUSSIA/UKRAINE (BBC): Ukraine says its troops have withdrawn from Avdiivka - a key eastern town besieged by Russian forces for months.

SPAIN (RTRS): Spain's opposition conservative People's Party retained its absolute majority in its stronghold in the northwest region of Galicia on Sunday in a close-run regional election. The PP won 40 seats in the 75-seat regional assembly, the electoral board said with over 98% of votes counted.

FRANCE (BBG): Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire lowered France’s 2024 economic growth forecast to 1% and announced plans to cut spending by €10 billion ($10.8 billion).

POLITICS (ECONOMIST): On Monday Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the European Commission, is expected to formally declare her intention to run for a second five-year term atop the EU’s powerful executive arm. The Christian Democratic Union of her native Germany is poised to back her candidacy ahead of elections to the European Parliament in June.

GERMANY (POLITICO): Germany is Europe’s leading aid donor to Ukraine, and Berlin wants other countries to catch up.

U.S.

GEOPOLITICS (BBG): President Joe Biden blamed US lawmakers’ failure to approve emergency aid to Ukraine for the fall of Avdiivka, which handed Russia a significant battlefield victory after months of fighting for control of the city.

GEOPOLITICS (BBC): US President Joe Biden has assured his Ukrainian counterpart that $60bn in military aid is on its way. The measure still needs to pass a final congressional vote, but Mr Biden told Volodymyr Zelensky that he was confident it would be approved.

EQUITIES (BBG): Just months after setting a 2024 target for the S&P 500 Index, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists have boosted their forecast for a second time as the stock market eclipsed the significant 5,000 milestone this month.

FED (MNI INTERVIEW): The Federal Reserve will watch and wait for consumer inflation expectations to ease somewhat further, even as a recent decline in price expectations has helped fuel a surge in consumer sentiment, the head of the University of Michigan's Survey of Consumers told MNI.

FED (MNI): San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said Friday policymakers must avoid cutting interest rates too early and work remains in the inflation fight. "To finish the job will take fortitude. We will need to resist the temptation to act quickly when patience is needed and be prepared to respond agilely as the economy evolves," Daly said in prepared remarks for a National Association for Business Economics conference in Washington. "The economy is healthy. Price stability is within sight. But there is more work to do."

OTHER

MIDEAST (RTRS): A visit by the commander of Iran's elite Quds Force to Baghdad has led to a pause in attacks on U.S. troops by Iran-aligned groups in Iraq, multiple Iranian and Iraqi sources told Reuters, saying it was a sign Tehran wants to prevent a broader conflict.

ISRAEL (BBG): Israel will launch a ground offensive in the Rafah area of Gaza unless the hostages still held by Hamas are released by the Ramadan holiday in March, Israeli Minister Without Portfolio Benny Gantz said on Sunday.

JAPAN (MNI): Recent Bank of Japan communications and results from spring wage negotiations have increased the chance of policy adjustment at the upcoming March 18-19 meeting, a former BOJ board member told MNI.

AUSTRALIA (MNI): Recent soft data has iced further rate hikes, but uncertainty – particularly on future productivity growth – could still see the Reserve Bank of Australia leave the cash rate steady at 4.35% over 2024, former staffers told MNI.

NEW ZEALAND (BBG): New Zealand Treasury Secretary Caralee McLiesh has issued a warning about the state of the country’s finances, saying it needs to address long-term fiscal pressures now even as persistent budget deficits make that more difficult.

CHINA

POLICY (BBG): China refrained from cutting a key policy interest rate as its central bank sought to shield the yuan from volatility, underscoring the challenges policymakers face as they try to manage economic risks and pressures from deflation.

POLICY (BBG): Chinese Premier Li Qiang called for “pragmatic and forceful” action to boost the nation’s confidence in the economy, underscoring the government’s concern with a struggling recovery and stocks rout. Li used a meeting of the State Council, China’s cabinet, on Sunday to urge officials to “do more things that are conductive to boosting confidence and expectations, and ensure policymaking and execution are consistent and stable,” the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

TRAVEL (BBG): Chinese travel and spending during the Lunar New Year holiday exceeded levels from before the pandemic, adding to signs that consumption in the world’s second-largest economy is improving.

HOUSING (SECURITIES TIMES): China’s existing home sales in 50 key cities rose more than 70% from a year earlier during the Lunar New Year holiday, Securities Times reports Monday, citing data from Beike Research Institute.

ECONOMY (SECURITIES TIMES): Local governments around China are pledging to step up efforts to boost the economy in 1Q, the Securities Times reports, citing economic work meetings held following the Lunar New Year holiday.

CHINA MARKETS

MNI: PBOC Drains Net CNY68 Bln Via OMO Mon; Rates Unchanged

The People's Bank of China (PBOC) conducted CNY32 billion via 7-day reverse repo and on Monday, with the rates unchanged at 1.80%. The reverse repo operation has led to a net drain of CNY68 billion reverse repos after offsetting CNY100 billion maturity today, according to Wind Information.

  • The seven-day weighted average interbank repo rate for depository institutions (DR007) fell to 1.7656% at 09:27 am local time from the close of 1.8057% before Chinese New Year holiday.
  • The CFETS-NEX money-market sentiment index, measuring interbank money-market liquidity, closed at 41 on Sunday, compared with the close of 40 before Chinese New Year holiday. A higher reading points to tighter liquidity condition, with 50 representing an equilibrium.

The People's Bank of China (PBOC) set the dollar-yuan central parity rate lower at 7.1032 on Monday, compared with 7.1036 set before Chinese New Year holiday. The fixing was estimated at 7.1946 by Bloomberg survey today.

MARKET DATA

JAPAN DEC. CORE MACHINERY ORDERS +2.7% M/M; Expected +2.5%; PRIOR -4.9%
JAPAN DEC. CORE MACHINERY ORDERS -0.7% Y/Y; Expected -1.3%; PRIOR -5.0%

NZ JAN. BNZ SERVICES PSI RISES TO 52.1; PRIOR 48.8

MARKETS

US TSYS: Futures Steady Ahead of President's Day

TYH4 is currently trading at 109-24+, up + 00+ from New York closing levels.

Treasury futures are little changed in Asia trading, we have remained in a very tight range as volume has stayed on the light side. There has been little in the way of Asia data, the US is out today for President's day with no Cash treasury trading.

  • Mar'24 10Y has traded in a tight range hitting a low of 109-23 in early trading before hitting a high of 109-27 as we head into Asia lunch we trade right in the middle of the range at 109-24+.
  • Looking at technicals the break lower last week has confirmed a resumption of the down trend that started Dec 27. The 110-00 handle has been cleared and sights are on 109-17 while we tested this on Friday a clear break would open 109-05+, the Nov 28 low further down we would be looking at 108-19+ (61.8% of the Oct 19 - Dec 27 bull phase). While to the upside initial firm resistance is at 111-02+, the 20-day EMA.
  • Looking head this week: President's Day today, while on Tuesday Philadelphia Fed Non-Manufacturing Activity and Leading Index (-0.1%, -0.3%). Treasury supply: $79B 13W, $70B 26W and $46B 52W bill auctions.

JGBS: Twist-Flattening, 20Y Supply Tomorrow, Wage Neg. Increase Chance Of March Policy Move

In Tokyo afternoon trade, JGB futures are unchanged compared to settlement levels on Friday.

  • There hasn’t been much in the way of domestic drivers to flag, outside of the previously outlined Machinery Orders.
  • (MNI) Recent BoJ communications and results from spring wage negotiations have increased the chance of policy adjustment at the upcoming March 18-19 meeting, a former BoJ board member told MNI. “The BoJ stands ready to exit from easy policy anytime,” noted Makoto Sakurai in an interview, pointing to a recent speech by Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida and recent releases, such as the January meeting’s summary of opinions. “Everything is all arranged, and a final decision depends on Governor (Kazuo) Ueda’s determination.” (See link)
  • With the domestic calendar light today and cash US tsys closed for the Presidents Day holiday, local market dealings have been subdued.
  • Cash JGBs have twist-flattened, pivoting at the 7s, with yields 1.5bps higher to 3.2bps lower. The benchmark 10-year yield is 0.3bp lower at 0.732% versus the February low of 0.665% and the Nov-Dec rally low of 0.555%.
  • Swaps and swap spreads are virtually unchanged.
  • Tomorrow, the local calendar sees Tokyo Condominiums for Sale data, along with 20-year supply.

AUSSIE BONDS: Little Changed, Subdued Dealings, RBA Minutes Tomorrow

ACGBs (YM +1.0 & XM +0.5) are little changed in the Sydney session, amidst an overall subdued trading environment. Today, the domestic calendar has been light, and with cash US tsys closed for the Presidents Day holiday, local market activity has been quiet and lacking clear direction.

  • Cash ACGBs are 1bp richer, with the AU-US 10-year yield differential 3bps lower at -9bps. At -9bps, the cash AU-US 10-year yield differential currently sits in the bottom half of the range of +/-30bps which has been observed since November 2022.
  • Swap rates are flat to 1bp lower.
  • Bills are little changed, with pricing +/- 1 across the strip.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is little changed across meetings. A cumulative 35bps of easing is priced by year-end.
  • Tomorrow, the local calendar will see the RBA Minutes of the Feb. Policy Meeting, ahead of the Wage Price Index (WPI) on Wednesday.
  • The Q4 WPI is expected to rise 0.9% q/q with the annual rate rising to 4.1% y/y up from 4.0% in Q3. The RBA said in its February meeting statement that it didn’t expect wages growth “to increase much further” and that it “remains consistent with the inflation target” assuming productivity growth improves.

NZGBS: Cheaper, NZ Treasury Secretary Warning About Long-Term Fiscal Pressures

NZGBs closed at session cheaps, with benchmark yields 2bps higher. That said, the session was subdued and directionless with the domestic calendar relatively light and cash US tsys closed for the Presidents Day holiday.

  • Swap rates closed 4bps higher, with implied swap spreads wider.
  • RBNZ dated OIS pricing is 1-9bps firmer across meetings, with November leading. A cumulative 38bps of easing is priced by year-end from a terminal rate of 5.64%. This compares with around 100bps of easing from an expected OCR peak of 5.53% in late January.
  • NZ bonds held by foreigners rose to 61.6% in January from 61.3% prior.
  • (Bloomberg) -- NZ Treasury Secretary McLiesh has issued a warning about the state of the country’s finances, saying it needs to address long-term fiscal pressures now even as persistent budget deficits make that more difficult. (See link)
  • (Bloomberg) -- NZ Government is taking action “to curb the surge in welfare dependency that occurred under the previous government”. (See link)
  • Tomorrow, the local calendar is empty, ahead of PPI data on Wednesday.
  • RBNZ Governor Adrian Orr will speak at a Business Canterbury lunch on March 1. He will discuss factors impacting NZ’s economy from both a domestic and international perspective, and what to expect from the year ahead.

FOREX: USD Down Modestly, NZD Continues Outperformance

The dollar index sits lower, the BBDXY last near 1243.60, albeit up from earlier lows. Even with China markets returning today from the LNY break, it has been a relatively muted start to the week in terms of FX.

  • With US markets closed later, there has been no cash Tsy trading today. Futures have been quiet, TYH largely unchanged versus end Friday levels in NY. US equity futures are positive, but away from best levels.
  • NZD/USD has outperformed at the margins. The pair was last 0.6140, which is marginally above Friday highs and towards the top the monthly range. The 0.6150/55 level has been the barrier over the last month, a break above there could signal a test of the intraday highs from Jan 31 of 0.6174. While we trade above the 20 and 50-day EMAs of 0.6120/6135.
  • Earlier local bank BNZ pushed back the timing of RBNZ cuts to November from August. The services PMI rebounded to 52.1 in Jan, from 48.8 prior.
  • AUD/USD has lagged somewhat, albeit still marginally higher for the day. The pair was last 0.6540 , with weaker metal prices potentially weighing at the margin. SGX iron ore futures are off over 3%. Mixed anecdotes around China property sales through the LNY period may be a factor.
  • For USD/JPY we have drifted lower, last near 150.00. We opened near 150.20. Speculation continues around the BoJ NIRP exit. The latest MNI policy insight is at this link, which looks at the chances of a shift at the March meeting.
  • Looking ahead, US markets are closed later and there isn't much in the way of event risk elsewhere.

CHINA/HONG KOGN EQUITIES: Hong Kong Underperforming Mainland Equities Post LNY Break

China Mainland equities reopened today but failed to deliver on expectations of a push higher. Mainland stocks outperformed Hong Kong equities, which gave up gains from last week.

  • As we head into the Asian lunch session, equities are mixed. Hong Kong equities are lower across the board, with the HSI down 1.00%, the HS Tech index lower by 2.71%, and mainland Property underperforming the market, down 3.00% today, erasing all gains from Friday. China Mainland equities have fared better today but fell short of the expected lofty heights. The CSI300 is currently trading up 0.37%, while the ChiNext trades 0.10% higher, and the CSI1000 is unchanged.
  • Chinese property-developer shares declined due to weak holiday home sales following last week's rally. Home sales during the Lunar New Year holiday dropped 40%, indicating ongoing weak demand, leading to a retreat in Hong Kong-listed developers' stocks
  • Consumer spending data looks promising, as state-owned media reported a 19% jump in travel during the LNY period compared to 2019. Box office sales reached 8.02 billion yuan, a record high, and railway travel surged 36% from the 2019 period.
  • Looking ahead, Tuesday will see the 1-Year and 5-Year Loan Prime Rate due in China, while Hong Kong has Unemployment Rate data."

ASIA PAC EQUITIES: Regional Asian Equities Mostly Higher, South Korea Outperforms

Regional Asia Equities are mostly higher today, after a slow start this morning. The BBG Asia index 0.29% higher.


  • Japan equities are mixed today, after a slow start this morning the weaker yen has helped equities move off their lows of the day. There has been little in the way of data today outside of Machinery orders coming in, inline with expected at 2.7% MoM, while a slight beat on YoY orders coming in at -0.7% vs -1.3%. The Nikkei 225 trades -.10%, while the Topix is 0.40% higher
  • Taiwan is trading slightly higher today, led by Finance and Insurance names. While Spirox, who provide solutions and products to semiconductor sector is trading up 10% on very little news. Taiex is up 0.23%.
  • South Korean equities are the top performers in the region today, hitting new highs not seen since May 2022. Foreign inflows have rebounded from a lull last week hitting $323m today, on expectations that the government will continue to support the market and close the "Korea Discount", Kospi is up 1.08%.
  • Australian Equities are slightly higher today, up 0.26% led by the mining and industrials sectors. A2 Milk is up by 12.48% after an earnings beat.
  • Thailand released GDP earlier coming in at 1.7% vs 2.6% estimated, equities trading 0.20% higher
  • Elsewhere in SEA, New Zealand equities are the worst performers of the region down 0.60%, Philippines equities down ~0.20%, while Malaysia equities trade close to flat for the day

OIL: Crude Down As Excess Supply & Demand Uncertainties Drive Market

Oil prices have given up some of Friday’s gains during the APAC session today as China returned from holidays. Brent is down 0.7% to $82.87/bbl and has struggled to trade above $83 with equity sentiment mixed and demand again overtaking geopolitical concerns. WTI is 0.8% lower at $77.87 falling below $78 when China/HK markets opened. Trading is likely to be thin with the US closed for a holiday. The USD index is down slightly.

  • The IEA wrote in its monthly report published last week that it expects demand will ease through 2024 and that the market will be in surplus throughout the year. China’s demand outlook remains a significant point of uncertainty.
  • Geopolitical issues persist with no progress being made in resolving the conflict in the Middle East but they are yet to impact energy supplies apart from delays from rerouting around southern Africa. UKMTO reported today another vessel had been struck by Houthi rebels off the coast of Yemen with the crew abandoning the ship. The US said that it has struck five Houthi targets.
  • The US and Canada are closed for holidays. There are no ECB or BoE speakers either. Attention this week is likely to be on geopolitical developments, US inventory data, the FOMC minutes and preliminary February PMIs.

GOLD: Friday’s Gains Extended In Today’s Asia-Pac Session

Gold is 0.4% higher in the Asia-Pac session, after closing 0.5% higher at $2013.59 on Friday.

  • Trading volumes have likely received a boost today as markets in China reopen following a week-long break.
  • Bullion rose on Friday despite US Treasury yields spiking to their highest levels for the year following the release of higher-than-anticipated PPI data.
  • The 2-year yield surged to 4.72% following the data release before concluding 7bps points higher at 4.64%. Meanwhile, the 10-year yield experienced a 5bps increase to 4.28% after reaching an intraday peak of 4.33%.
  • Cash US Treasuries are closed today for the Presidents Day holiday.
  • The market’s focus is now likely tuned to the release of the Federal Reserve minutes of its recent meeting midweek.
  • While gold has edged back above its breakout level, a bearish theme does remain intact overall, according to MNI’s technicals team. The yellow metal needs to clear resistance at $2065.5, the Feb 1 high, to reinstate a bullish theme.

UP TODAY (TIMES GMT/LOCAL)

DateGMT/LocalImpactFlagCountryEvent
19/02/20240700/0800***SEInflation Report
19/02/20241330/0830*CAIndustrial Product and Raw Material Price Index
20/02/20240900/1000**EUcurrent account
20/02/20241000/1100**EUConstruction Production
20/02/20241000/1000**UKGilt Outright Auction Result
20/02/20241015/1015UKBOE's Bailey et al at TSC to discuss MPR
20/02/20241330/0830***CACPI
20/02/20241330/0830**USPhiladelphia Fed Nonmanufacturing Index
20/02/20241630/1130*USUS Treasury Auction Result for 26 Week Bill
20/02/20241630/1130*USUS Treasury Auction Result for 13 Week Bill
20/02/20241800/1300*USUS Treasury Auction Result for Cash Management Bill
20/02/20241800/1300**USUS Treasury Auction Result for 52 Week Bill
21/02/20242350/0850**JPTrade

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