The week that was
Another week has run its course, and it did not do so quietly.
Soon after Iran announced the Strait of Hormuz was open on Friday, Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated that, until the US lifts the blockade on Iranian ships, the waterway would be closed again from Saturday afternoon.
While the situation remains fluid and fragile, I think that as long as we are moving towards a resolution and the ceasefire holds without renewed conflict, markets are likely to continue to look through the ‘noise’.
Last week saw a huge upside move in risk sentiment: global equities caught a meaningful bid, the continued unwind of USD-haven demand, and oil prices were heavily weighed into the close – a different picture this morning, of course.
Meanwhile, spot gold has maintained a gradual bullish tone since pencilling in a low of US$4,098 on 23 March. As I have noted several times, the yellow metal has been largely driven by moves in real US yields and central bank expectations. When yields fall, the opportunity cost of holding gold decreases, and, to some extent, the fact that Fed rate hikes have been priced out has helped.
Review of last week’s data
The US March PPI inflation was a talking point last week and came in better than feared, with YY at 4.0% and MM at 0.5%. This follows US February PCE inflation remaining around the 3.0% level, and a jump higher in headline US YY CPI data to 3.3%. However, it is worth noting that YY core CPI numbers were relatively contained; therefore, second-round effects are not yet growing.
ECB minutes reaffirmed pretty much what we already know: despite money markets discounting at least two rate hikes this year, Lagarde and Co are not in any rush to move just yet. The minutes, however, did show that the central bank is focussed on upside inflation risks, while also closely watching downside risks to growth. April’s policy meeting is expected to keep rates on hold, while June could very well be in play for a 25-bp increase. But this would be conditional on inflation increasing, particularly on the core front.
Down under, the March Australian jobs report showed unemployment remained at 4.3%, in line with market consensus, as well as matching the RBA’s forecast for this year. Employment increased by 18,000, just shy of the 20,000 median value, while the participation rate dipped 0.1% to 66.8%. Looking at the details, full-time positions came in above 50,000 and offset the 35,000 decline in part-time roles, suggesting a tight labour market. This, coupled with increased inflation expectations, has led markets to price in a rate hike at the next meeting in May, which should technically keep the AUD underpinned.