MARKET FLASH:

"It seems the donkey is laughing, but he instead is braying (l'asino sembra ridere ma in realtà raglia)": si veda sotto "1927-1933: Pompous Prognosticators" per avere la conferma che la storia non si ripete ma fà la rima.


lunedì 12 marzo 2018

Global Markets Rally, S&P Back Over 2,800 On "Goldilocks" Mood Ahead Of Treasury Deluge

The "goldilocks" mood that was unleashed after Friday's jobs report (high growth, low inflation) has spread around the globe, sending Asian and European markets higher as trade-war concerns took a back seat to economic optimism. The dollar slipped and Treasuries held strady even as the US Treasury prepares to sell $145 billion in debt today (including both 3Y and 10Y Paper), while most commodities fell.


"Friday's U.S. employment data was about as perfect a set of figures as you can get from a policy maker's point of view. The increase in jobs was nothing short of amazing," said ACLS Global's Marshall Gittler. "In other words, it was a 'Goldilocks' report: not too hot, not too cold, just right."

"Our customers are still bullish," Chris Brankin, chief executive officer at TD Ameritrade Singapore, told Bloomberg TV. "You saw the jobs report last Friday, which was a perfect scenario -- you had an uptick in wages, but not too much. Investors have taken that opportunity to buy the market dips and we look for the bull market to continue."

European shares shot up across the board, following their Asian counterparts, while emerging market currencies strengthened as investors bought up so-called riskier assets and sold safe haven securities such as gold and government bonds. After the S&P surged 1.7% on Friday - its second best day of the year - S&P futures have continued to levitate overnight, and are back above 2,800 and fast approaching their late January all time highs of 2,883.


The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose for a sixth day, poised for the longest winning streak since October as utility companies set the pace following a bid by EON for RWE's Innogy.Germany's DAX led gains in Europe, rising 0.9% while MSCI's world equity index hit a two-week high. Concerns over tariffs have been weighing on European stocks, with the main European stock index hitting a seven-month low at the start of the month. It has recovered somewhat from that trough to rise 0.3% on Monday.

Earlier, the MSCI Asia-Pacific ex-Japan Index climbed 1.4 percent, poised for a third session of gains. South Korea rose 1%, while Australia's main index added 0.7 percent, boosted by mining shares on news that Australia could be exempt from new U.S. trade tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. Hong Kong stocks climbed with other Asian markets after Friday's U.S. jobs report showed an increase in hiring without rapid wage gains: the Hang Seng gained 1.9%, its third day of gains, and the highest since Feb. 5. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index jumped 2.1%, also up for third session, while on the maindland, the Shanghai Composite added 0.6% and the ChiNext Index of smaller shares rose 1.4%.

In global FX, investors shifted their focus to politics sending the Aussie higher after the country secured an exemption from U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum and as politicians from a wide range of other countries joined the chorus to also be on the list of Trump tariff exemptions. Meanwhile, as noted last night, the yen jumped after Japan's Finance Minister Taro Aso refused to step down despite news that his name and that of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe were removed from documents connected with a land-sale scandal, creating uncertainty around the future of Abenomics. The advance however was pared after Aso said he won't resign.

Commenting on the USDJPY, Masashi Murata, a currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in Tokyo said that "The theme for 2018 is the risk of the dollar-yen breaking 100," adding that the yen above that level "wouldn't look excessive from the perspective of its fundamentals." Separately, Goldman analysts said that the BOJ and the Japanese government have "very limited" policy options for reining in yen appreciation, and they are most likely to take a wait-and-see stance until the latest round of gains comes to an end.

Investors had trimmed holdings of yen last week on news U.S. President Donald Trump was prepared to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, a potential breakthrough in nuclear tensions in the region. U.S. officials on Sunday defended Trump's decision, saying the move was not just for show and not a gift to Pyongyang. "Now the U.S. is back to goldilocks at least for now, the tariffs are less severe, and Kim and Trump are to meet," said Shane Oliver, Sydney-based chief economist at AMP. "We still expect more volatility this year as many of these issues have further go run, but the broad trend in shares likely remains up."

The dollar edged lower a second day as markets digested Friday's jobs report, which kept stocks in Asia and Europe underpinned.

In geopolitical news, North Korea reportedly wants a peace treaty and to build ties with US, while its leader Kim also wants a US embassy in Pyongyang.

In Brexit news, UK and EU companies reportedly could face an additional GBP 58bln in annual costs in the event of a no-deal Brexit. Meanwhile, UK consumer spending suffered its weakest start to the year since 2012, according to data compiled by Visa.

In rates, the yield on 10-year Treasuries climbed less than one basis point to 2.90%,the highest in more than two weeks. Germany's 10-year yield dipped one basis point to 0.64%, while Britain's 10-year Gilt rose less than one basis point to 1.493 percent.

Today, US rates traders will have a very busy day with the US set to sell $145BN in sells 3- and 6-month bills, as well as a 3-year notes and 10-year notes reopening. Big concessions into the auctions are expected to help soak up the massive supply. As a reminder the last time that the market faced a 3y and 10y auction on the same day last year Treasuries sold off following weak demand in the latter auction.

Oil prices pared back gains seen on Friday with WTI (-0.5%) and Brent (-0.6%) seen lower amid concerns of rising US output looming in the market despite a slowdown in rig drilling activity recorded at the back end of last week. In the metals complex, following the US steel and aluminium tariffs, Chinese iron ore future fell for a 3rd straight session hitting near four-month lows closing down 2.6%. The steelmaking raw materials are under pressure from softer demand and high product inventories held by trading companies. The WSJ reported that OPEC is reported to be divided regarding views on the right price of oil with Iran said to prefer USD 60/bbl, while Saudi Arabia would prefer prices to be at USD 70/bbl. There were also reports that Iran Oil Minister Zanganeh stated that OPEC could agree in June to begin relaxing oil output cuts for 2019.

Bulletin Headline summary from RanSquawk
DAX outperforms amid multi-billion revamp in German utility sector.
USD-index hovers around 90, having trimmed earlier losses.
Looking ahead, highlights include the Eurogroup meeting, 3- and 10-year note auctions from the US

Market Snapshot
S&P 500 futures up 0.3% to 2,798.25
STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3% to 379.19
MXAP up 1.6% to 178.46
MXAPJ up 1.4% to 588.82
Nikkei up 1.7% to 21,824.03
Topix up 1.5% to 1,741.30
Hang Seng Index up 1.9% to 31,594.33
Shanghai Composite up 0.6% to 3,326.70
Sensex up 1.2% to 33,713.20
Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.6% to 5,996.12
Kospi up 1% to 2,484.12
German 10Y yield unchanged at 0.649%
Euro up 0.2% to $1.2328
Italian 10Y yield rose 2.5 bps to 1.753%
Spanish 10Y yield unchanged at 1.436%
Brent futures down 0.6% to $65.10/bbl
Gold spot down 0.3% to $1,320.39
U.S. Dollar Index down 0.1% to 89.98

Top Overnight News
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wants to sign a peace treaty and establish diplomatic relations with the U.S., which includes having a U.S. embassy in Pyongyang, Dong-A Ilbo newspaper reports, citing an unidentified senior official at South Korean President Moon Jae-in's office
China's trade minister Zhong Shan warned that a trade war with the U.S. would bring disaster to the global economy, but said his nation won't start one and that talks with the Trump administration continue
China, Canada and Hong Kong are among the economies most at risk of a banking crisis, according to early-warning indicators compiled by the Bank for International Settlements
Add one more thing to the list of worries for the world's most indebted nation: weakening demand at its bond auctions. While there's no danger of the U.S. being unable to borrow as much as it needs, over the past two years, the drop-off has been unmistakable
Britain may soon start to see the beginning of the end of austerity, as the Chancellor of the Exchequer prepares to announce the smallest deficit in a decade during his Spring Statement on Tuesday
London house prices are falling at the fastest pace since the depths of the recession almost a decade ago, with the capital's most expensive areas seeing the biggest declines, according to a report published by Acadata on Monday

Asia stocks were higher across the board as the region took its first opportunity to react to Friday's rally on Wall St and jobs data from US where NFP smashed expectations, but wage growth slowed which in turn provided a goldilocks backdrop for stocks. ASX 200 (+0.6%) was led by commodity names after crude rallied over 3% on Friday and PM Turnbull confirmed Australia is to be exempted from US tariffs. Nikkei 225 (+1.6%) outperformed but closed off its best levels as the cronyism scandal continued to haunt PM Abe after Japan's Finance Ministry confirmed documents had been doctored in a land-sale to a school operator which allegedly used ties to PM Abe's wife to get a cheap deal on state-owned land. Elsewhere, Hang Seng (+1.5%) and Shanghai Comp. (+0.7%) also gained although the mainland got off to a slow start as US-China trade war concerns somewhat lingered and as participants also mulled over Xi's power consolidation after China's legislature voted to formally scrap presidential term limits from its constitution. Finally, 10yr JGBs are flat with demand constrained amid the heightened appetite for risk, while the BoJ were also in the market but kept its Rinban amounts unchanged from the prior. The PBoC injected CNY 50bln via 7-day reverse repos and CNY 40bln via 28-day reverse repos; the PBoC also set CNY mid-point at 6.3333 (Prev. 6.3451).

As reported last night, Japanese Finance Minister Aso is under pressure to resign over a report regarding alleged favours to a school with connections to the Japanese PM Abe. The prime minister told parliament in February last year that he'd resign if any link emerges between himself or his wife Akie and the land deal.

Top Asian News
China Banking Crisis Warning Signal Still Flashing, BIS Says
JPMorgan Sees Busiest Mideast Year With IPOs, M&A Driving Deals
Japan Finance Minister Under Fire as Abe School Scandal Deepens; Stock Investors Are Nonchalant for Now as Abe's Scandal Deepens
China's Mystery Russia Oil Partner Seen Delaying $9 Billion Deal

The European cash open mimicked the strong positive sentiment seen in Asia and in the US on Friday following US NFP data beating expectations but wage growth slowing down providing a goldilocks backdrop for stocks. Major bourses are in the green (Euro Stoxx 50 +0.45%) with the exception of the FTSE 100 underperforming weighed down by a strong sterling. DAX 30 is supported by the utilities sector outperforming following reports of RWE (+8.8%) agreeing to swap control of Innogy (+12.9%) for renewable assets with rival E.ON (+5.4%). E.ON has agreed to purchase Innogy from RWE as part of a deal valuing at EUR 20bln, marking one of the largest shake-ups of the European power supply market. This could however place doubt on the deal between Innogy's Npower and UK listed SSE (-2.2%). Following months of attempted takeover, Melrose (-2.9%) has submitted their final offer to engineering group GKN (+0.8%) of GBP 8.1bln following their previous offer of GBP 7.4bln which GKN described as "fundamentally" undervaluing its business and the approach as "entirely opportunistic".

Top European News
Elkem to Raise $670 Million in Biggest Norway IPO Since 2010
May Faces Calls to Retaliate Against Russia After Spy Attack
Ruble Is Top Pick for $25 Billion Investor After Czech Bonanza

In FX, it has been a quiet start to the week, but the Greenback is weaker vs all G10 counterparts bar the Loonie, as Usd/Cad hovers above 1.2800 after last Friday's mixed US and Canadian jobs data (to recap, the former blew away forecasts at 300k+, but latter just missed and would have been negative without part-time workers). The Kiwi is outperforming amidst equity market gains and mostly risk-on trade as it regains 0.7300 status vs the Usd, but Usd/Jpy has pulled back from marginal 107.00+ highs post-NFP to around 106.50 on the land sale scandal involving PM Abe and Finance Minister Aso. Note also, tech resistance around the 21 DMA at 106.79 is capping the pair, but hefty option expiries at 107.00 run off this Thursday and could keep the headline afloat. Aud another relative gainer and firmer within a 0.7845-80 range as Australia negotiates a security deal with the US to avoid aluminium and steel tariffs. Usd/Chf is probing back below 0.9500, Eur/Usd is sitting in a tight band above 1.2300 and Cable is holding between 1.3850-80 ahead of Tuesday's UK Budget. Back to option expiries, but for today there is 1 bn either side of 1.2300 in Eur/Usd at 1.2275 and 1.2330 and just over 300 mn in Nzd/Usd at 0.7300. 

In commodities, oil prices pared back gains seen on Friday with WTI (-0.5%) and Brent (-0.6%) seen lower amid concerns of rising US output looming in the market despite a slowdown in rig drilling activity recorded at the back end of last week. In the metals complex, following the US steel and aluminium tariffs, Chinese iron ore future fell for a 3rd straight session hitting near four-month lows closing down 2.6%. The steelmaking raw materials are under pressure from softer demand and high product inventories held by trading companies. The WSJ reported that OPEC is reported to be divided regarding views on the right price of oil with Iran said to prefer USD 60/bbl, while Saudi Arabia would prefer prices to be at USD 70/bbl.There were also reports that Iran Oil Minister Zanganeh stated that OPEC could agree in June to begin relaxing oil output cuts for 2019.

Looking at the day ahead, as is the norm post payrolls, it's a quiet start to the week on Monday with the only data of note being the US monthly budget statement for February. Politics should remain at the forefront, however, with Germany's Chancellor Merkel expected to sign a coalition pact with the Social Democrats in Berlin and Italy's Democratic Party due to hold a leaders' meeting to replace Matteo Renzi. EU government officials will also kick off the four-day meeting to discuss the EU's Brexit position.

US Event Calendar
10:30am: U.S. to Sell USD45 Bln 6-Month Bills
10:30am: U.S. to Sell USD28 Bln 3-Year Notes
12pm: U.S. to Sell USD51 Bln 3-Month Bills
12pm: U.S. to Sell USD21 Bln 10-Year Notes Reopening
2pm: Monthly Budget Statement, est. $216.0b deficit, prior $192.0b deficit

DB concludes the overnight wrap

So, another week and another hotly anticipated US inflation print for markets to be wary of. In fact, it should be a fairly busy week ahead with plenty of US data despite it being a post payrolls week, bumper Treasury supply which should be a decent test for bond markets and of course unpredictable politics to keep everyone on their toes. Indeed, no doubt the uncertainty fuelled by steel and aluminium tariffs tit-for-tat could continue, while markets will also be waiting for potential further details about President Trump's meeting with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un. One of the big question marks is where they'll meet exactly and we can't help but feel that we could see some sort of Olympics style pitch between nations to host this hotly anticipated event.

On a more serious note the reaction to the proposed meeting has actually been fairly mixed. The optimistic view is that a summit between the US and North Korea could offer a genuine opportunity to reduce tensions on the Korean peninsula, particularly in light of the failures of past agreements. However there appears to be an equal amount of scepticism with some suggesting that it could be an opportunity for North Korea to secure sanctions relief and buy time on nuclear efforts. Only time will tell but it's clearly a very significant moment for geopolitics globally. Over the weekend CIA Director Mike Pompeo confirmed that the US will be making no concessions to North Korea and that discussions, if they do indeed occur, "will play out over time".

Back to that big data release for this week, as of this morning the market consensus is for a +0.2% mom headline reading and +0.2% core reading for US CPI on Tuesday. Our US economists expect +0.1% mom and +0.2% mom respectively. The latter should hold at +1.8% yoy should we see that, and in fact our colleagues add that the annual growth rate of core CPI will mechanically rise by around 20bps in the March data release just from annualizing the -10% decline in wireless telephone services.

Meanwhile, also due tomorrow is the Special Congressional election in Pennsylvania which shouldn't be underestimated as it will likely be seen as a decent bellwether for the prospect of Republicans holding onto majorities in the House and Senate at the November midterms. So that should be interesting. On the same day we'll have the UK Spring Statement although our rates team and economists aren't expecting any big policy announcements. The market should instead be focused on the publication of the 2018-19 Gilt remit. You can see a preview of the Statement here. In terms of other snippets, Germany's Merkel and the Social Democrats are expected to sign a coalition pact today, while Italy's Democratic Party will also start the search for their new party leader. Brexit related newsflow should also continue with the European Council and European Commission expected to make a statement on Tuesday while the four-day EU ambassadors meeting kicks off today.

All that to look forward to then. Over the weekend it's actually been fairly quiet for newsflow with the most notable coming from China with the – as expected – announcement that the presidential term limit has been repealed, which in turn will allow President Xi Jingping to in theory hold onto power indefinitely. The other story worth noting is the latest BIS quarterly report which notes that China, Canada and Hong Kong are among those economies most at risk of a banking crisis, based on early warning indicators. The report also pointed towards the dangers of increased passive investing, particularly with regards to "encouraging aggregate leverage". Elsewhere, on the big protectionist theme reverberating through markets at the moment, China's trade minister Zhong noted "there are no winners in a trade war…China does not wish to fight a trade war, nor will China initiate one, but we…will resolutely defend the interests of our country". In Germany, Economy Minister Zypries noted "Trump's policies are putting the order of a free global economy at risk" and that Europe needs to avoid being divided by Trump's offer to exempt some countries such as Canada, Mexico and Australia.

So, with the likely highlight for markets this week being Tuesday's CPI report, it of course follows the softer than expected average hourly earnings data from Friday's employment report. In fairness, it only just missed consensus as the unrounded +0.1498% mom compared to expectations for +0.2% mom however downward revisions to prior months meant the annual rate dropped to +2.6% yoy from +2.8% and back to the lowest since November. On the other hand, the other big takeaway from the report was the bumper payrolls number. The 313k print not only smashed expectations for 205k but was also the highest since July 2016. The two prior months were also revised higher by a cumulative 54k. Away from those usual headline grabbers' one interesting aspect of the report, and which typically flies more under the radar, that our US economists pointed out was the increase in prime-age participation. Fed Chair Powell previously noted in his testimony that still low prime-age labour force participation is one remaining potential source of labour market slack. However, it was noticeable to see this climb four-tenths last month and to the highest since mid-2010. The bottom line is that this could still lend argument to the fact there is still some slack left in the labour market.

All-in-all a bit of a double-edged sword sort of report then. Markets certainly appreciated the goldilocks nature of it with the S&P 500 rallying to a +1.74% gain by the close of play – and touching the highest level since February 1st -and 10y Treasuries climbing to 2.895% (+3.7bps). Fed Funds contracts are now implying odds of just under 25% for 4 rate hikes this year. We'll of course find out in 9 days time at the next FOMC meeting if the data is enough to support an increase in the median dot to 4. Speaking of bond markets, it's worth noting that the Treasury market is likely to face a bit of a supply test today as we'll get both a 3y and 10y auction. As a reminder the last time that the market faced a 3y and 10y auction on the same day last year Treasuries sold off following weak demand in the latter auction.

This morning risk assets are broadly higher in Asia following the positive US lead, with the Nikkei (+1.49%), Kospi (+0.99%), Hang Seng (+1.48%), ASX 200 (+0.55%) and China's CSI 300 (+0.49%) all up as we type. Markets in Japan have pared back gains slightly following news that Finance Minister Taro Aso is supposedly coming under pressure to quit according to Bloomberg due to his involvement in a scandal related to the sale of public land to a school.

Moving on. In terms of other markets on Friday. The Nasdaq rose +1.79% and to a fresh record high. European equities were broadly higher with the Stoxx 600 up for the fifth straight day (+0.43%) while the DAX was the laggard (-0.07%). Government bonds were weaker with core 10y bond yields up 2-3bp (Bunds & Gilts +1.9bp) while peripherals slightly underperformed. In FX, the USD dollar index fell 0.10% while the Euro was marginally down and Sterling gained 0.28%. Finally, WTI oil was up for the first time in three days (+3.19% to $62.09/bbl) while precious metals gained slightly.

Away from markets, three unnamed sources told Reuters that ECB staff put forward a scenario to policy makers at last week's ECB meeting suggesting the bank will end QE this year after winding down for three months followed by a rate increase in the middle of next year. One source noted these are "assumptions…. (and they) don't have policy relevance because they are not commitments". Notably, sources noted the hypothesis was met favourably by policy makers from the Euro area's richer Northern countries, but less so by the Southern neighbours.

On Friday we also heard from a couple of Fed speakers post the employment report. The Fed's Rosengren noted that "I expect that it will be appropriate to remove monetary policy accommodation at a regular but gradual pace – and perhaps a bit faster than the three (rate hikes) envisioned for this year". He also added that as the labour market continues to tighten "….one would expect to see continued upward pressure on wages". Elsewhere, the Fed's Evans noted the payroll report was a "very strong number" and was "looking forward to strong wage growth". On rates, he noted that he continues to be nervous about inflation running below the Fed's 2% target and believes "…we have the ability to be cautious".

With regards to the other economic data on Friday. In the US, the unemployment rate was steady mom at its 17 year low and slightly higher than expected at 4.1% (vs. 4.0%). Elsewhere, the final reading for January wholesale inventories was revised up 0.1ppt to 0.8%. Factoring in the above, the Atlanta Fed's estimate of Q1 GDP growth was revised down 0.3ppts to 2.5% saar. In Europe, the January IP was broadly lower than expectations. In Germany, it was -0.1% mom (vs. +0.6% expected) weighted down by lower activity in the construction sector. Notably, annual growth is still solid at +5.5% yoy. France and the UK's IP were both lower than expected at +1.2% yoy (vs. +3.8% expected) and +1.6% yoy (vs. +1.9% expected) respectively. Elsewhere, Germany's January trade surplus was less than expected at €17.4bln (vs. €18.1bln) as exports weakened in the month, while the UK's January trade deficit was -£3.1bln (vs. - £3.4bln expected).

As is the norm post payrolls, it's a quiet start to the week on Monday with the only data of note being the US monthly budget statement for February. Politics should remain at the forefront, however, with Germany's Chancellor Merkel expected to sign a coalition pact with the Social Democrats in Berlin and Italy's Democratic Party due to hold a leaders' meeting to replace Matteo Renzi. EU government officials will also kick off the four-day meeting to discuss the EU's Brexit position.

Is A Dollar Funding Crisis Imminent: Libor-OIS Blows Out The Most Since 2012

Call it the latest paradox of bizarro centrally-planned markets.

On the same day when the Nasdaq hit a new all time high, when the Dow soared and when the payrolls report reincarnated the Goldilocks narrative with one flashing red average hourly earnings headline ("surging jobs + subdued wage growth = an economy that can handle 10Y yields at or above 3.0%"), one of the most closely followed leading indicators of an imminent funding crisis and global credit crunch finally broke above its 6 year range, when the USD Libor-OIS spread jumped 2bps on Friday, rising to 44.23bps.


This was the widest this key spread has been since January 2012, when the latest European sovereign debt crisis was roiling the markets and forced the Fed to open unlimited swap lineswith the rest of the world to avoid a global dollar funding crisis and, well, effectively bail out the world - which according to the BIS is synthetically short the USD to the tune of over $10 trillion - for the second time in 4 years.

The move will not come as a surprise to readers, as we have been covering it in the past.

However, while the overall move wider was expected, the speed of the blow out has taken most analysts by surprise, and the result has been a scramble to explain not only the reasons behind the move, but its sharp severity.

While this is a simplification of the various catalysts behind the spike in Libor-OIS, here is a quick summary of what is going on - the expansion of Libor-OIS and basis swaps have been impacted by a complex array of factors, which include:
an increase in short-term bond (T-bill) issuance
rising outflow pressures on dollar deposits in the US owing to rising short-term rates
repatriation to cope with US Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and new trade policies, and concerns on dollar liquidity outside the US
risk premium for uncertainty of US monetary policy
recently elevated credit spreads (CDS) of banks
demand for funds in preparation for market stress

In recent posts (see above) we have taken a detailed look at each of these components, of which 1 thru 3 are the most widely accepted, while bullets at 4 through 6 are within the realm of increasingly troubling speculation, and suggest that not all is well with the market, in fact quite the contrary.

Whatever the cause of the ongoing blow out in Libor-OIS, this move is having defined, and adverse, consequences on both dollar funding and hedging costs. This alone will have a severe impact on foreign banks, because as DB wrote recently, "the rise in dollar funding costs will damage the profitability of hedged investing and lending by [foreign] financial institutions. Most of the bond investors we have talked with shared a strong interest (and concern) in this topic." However, the most immediate consequence is that it is now more economical for Japanese investors to buy 30Y JGBs, with their paltry nominal yields, than to purchase FX-hedged 30Y US Treasuries which as of this moment yield less than matched Japanese securities. The same logic can be applied to German Bunds, as the calculus has made it increasingly unattractive for European investors to buy FX_hedged Treasuries.


It's not just rates: the consequences of rising dollar funding costs will eventually impact every aspect of the fixed income market, even if simply taken in isolation due to the ongoing spike in 3M Libor which still is the benchmark reference rate for hundreds of trillions in floating-rate debt.

The reality, however, is that without a specific diagnosis what is causing the sharp surge wider, and thus without a predictive context of high much higher it could rise, and how it will impact the various unsecured funding linkages of the financial system, it remains anyone's guess how much wider the Libor-OIS spread can move before it leads to dire consequences for the financial system.

* * *

And while we wait to see if this sharp move will continue, or it will moderate and perhaps reverse, here is a useful primed courtesy of Bloomberg on "why it matters that the Libor-OIS spread is widening."


Short-term borrowing costs in the U.S. have risen to levels unseen since the financial crisis, and recent moves in two closely watched indicators -- the London interbank offered rate and its spread with the Overnight Index Swap rate -- are causing some consternation. The spread has expanded to its widest level in more than a year, raising questions about whether risks might be brewing within credit markets. While the recent widening may be technical and doesn't suggest a systemic risk, several factors in funding markets are likely to prevent a "lasting retracement," according to analysts.

1. What is Libor?

The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, is a benchmark that's regarded as a gauge of credit market conditions. Every day, various major banks submit to an administrator estimates of what interest rate they would have to pay to borrow in the interbank market, and these are compiled to establish benchmark rates in five different currencies across seven different loan periods. Those benchmarks underpin interest rates on a range of financial instruments and products from student and car loans to mortgages and credit cards.

2. What's OIS?

The Overnight Index Swap rate is calculated from contracts in which investors swap fixed- and floating-rate cash flows. Some of the most commonly used swap rates relate to the Federal Reserve's main interest-rate target, and those are regarded as proxies for where markets see U.S. central bank policy headed at various points in the future.

3. Why does the Libor-OIS spread matter?

It's regarded as a measure of how expensive or cheap it will be for banks to borrow, as shown by Libor, relative to a risk-free rate, the kind that's paid by highly rated sovereign borrowers such as the U.S. government. The Libor-OIS spread provides a more complete picture of how the market is viewing credit conditions because it strips out the effects of underlying interest-rate moves, which are in turn affected by factors such as central bank policy, inflation and growth expectations.

4. Why are people worried?

The Libor rate for three-month loans in dollars has climbed to 2.03 percent, a level it hasn't reached since 2008. Its spread over the OIS rate has also widened quite dramatically following a Congressional deal on the U.S. budget and debt ceiling on Feb. 8. That gap widened by 15 basis points in February and was at 44 basis points on March 9. It is the speed of the move that is giving some investors pause for thought.

5. What pushed it up?

Several factors. One has to do with the torrent of Treasury bill supply that the government has unleashed since lawmakers last month resolved their impasse over the nation's borrowing limit. With that crisis passed, the Treasury has been replenishing its cash balance and that has meant a flood of debt sales, particularly of shorter-dated securities. That has driven up borrowing costs not just for Uncle Sam, but also for other borrowers in the short-term market who rely on instruments such as repurchase agreements and commercial paper.

6. So that's the only reason it's widening?

No, the tax legislation passed by Congress in December is also playing a role. The new law offers incentives forcorporations to bring money back to the U.S. that they had previously stashed overseas. Much of that offshore hoard has tended to be kept in short-term instruments like commercial and bank paper, and a dwindling of those overseas cash piles is likely to mean reduced demand for these products. And that means higher borrowing costs.

7. Anything else?

Yes. The Federal Reserve is shrinking its $4.4 trillion balance sheet, which means there will be less reserves sloshing around in the financial system. As the U.S. central bank pulls back from providing support, banks are going to have to compete more for funding, and that could force short-term rates higher.

Japan Markets Roiled As Moritomo Scandal Returns, Abe May Be Forced To Resign

It was exactly one year ago that the previously unshakeable administration of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was rocked by a crisis which prompted some to ask if Abe's government was on the rocks, and with it - Abenomics: the crisis was not one of bungled economic policies, party in-fighting or any of the other calamities that have brought down Japanese leaders in the past, including Abe's first administration as prime minister. No, Abe was struggling to shake off a scandal involving a kindergarten.

As we reported last March, Abe had been riding high in the polls and making plans to run for an unprecedented third term as head of the dominant Liberal Democratic Party, when questions first began to be asked about Moritomo Gakuen, a kindergarten operator in Osaka with what was initially described as a conservative curriculum, prompting the prime minister to declare that he shared many of the philosophies of the school's president, Yasunori Kagoike.

It would emerge in swift succession that the premier's wife, Akie Abe, had been named honorary principal of a new school being planned by Kagoike; that the school was being built on land purchased from the government by Moritomo Gakuen for a fraction of its estimated value; that Abe's wife Akie allegedly donated 1 million yen to the foundation in September 2015 on behalf of her husband, and that the operator's philosophies imposed upon his young pupils were not just conservative, but tended towards far-right pre-war nationalism. 


The scandal raged for several months, resulting in Abe's approval rate tumbling, however at the last possible moment, Kim John Un's ICBM launches successfully distracted the Japanese population, and Abe's militant response was sufficient for the public to forgive and forget the entire Moritomo incident.

Until now... because as the Japanese press reported over the weekend, the Moritomo scandal involving PM Abe's connections with the operators of the right-leaning school implicated in fraud are again roiling markets in Japan.

As NHK reports, while Abe is not the focus of the current investigation and his position remains secure for now, fresh allegations that tax authorities involved may have even fabricated reports in favor of Moritomo could force the resignation of Deputy PM and Finance Minister Aso as the National Tax Bureau reports directly to him.

Specifically, Japan's Finance Ministry will admit to the Diet on Monday that alterations were made to documents on the controversial state land deal. As we reported a yea ago, the land in Osaka Prefecture was sold to private school operator Morimoto Gakuen in 2016 for only a fraction of its market value. The transaction sparked allegations of favoritism in part because the wife of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was acquainted with the school operator.

After the scandal came to light last year, the Finance Ministry submitted to the Diet settlement documents for the deal. But, earlier this month, a newspaper alleged that the papers had been altered before being submitted to the Diet. The ministry has since questioned its employees involved in the matter and concluded that changes were made to some wording in the documents.


In reaction to the Morimoto scandal coming back from the dead, six of Japan's opposition parties will demand Finance Minister Taro Aso step down to take responsibility for the matter, NHK reports. They also plan to demand the government release all related documents and that Nobuhisa Sagawa, who resigned last week as head of the National Tax Agency, be summoned to give testimony at the Diet. He was the ministry's Financial Bureau chief when the land deal was made.

Meanwhile, the ruling parties are urging the opposition parties, which have been boycotting Diet sessions since last week, to make facts clear through the debate in the Diet.

Meanwhile, analysts have already warned that a resignation by Aso would take the legs out of the current Abe administration, perhaps even forcing the PM to eventually resign as well, and forcing changes at the BOJ.

Furthermore, hitting much closer to home, Kyodo reported that Abe's wife Akie was among names deleted from altered Finance Ministry documents pertaining to the sale of public land to Moritomo, putting Abe himself in jeopardy.

And one look at Japanese markets shows that investors are starting to get spooked with the USDJPY suddenly sliding taking a hit from concern that deepening of a scandal over alleged favors to a school with connections to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe may prompt a retreat of Abenomics, said David Lu, director at NBC Financial Markets Asia in Hong Kong...


... while Japanese stocks are paring some of their strong early gains; while the implications of any Aso resignation are hard to fathom at this point, many believe the Nikkei would plunge, and risk-off sentiment could return fast, sending the JPY higher once again.

This, according to Reuters, would be especially the case now, with investors already nervous over possible trade wars and recent stock market volatility.

Who Is Lying?

It was a good week to be bullish and the buying was ferocious and on the surface it appears that bulls won a major victory and bears look to have flailed again. Correction over. New highs on Nasdaq with $SPX recapturing all key moving averages including the 50MA, the 21MA, the weekly 5EMA and all is looking rosy again. Next week bullish OPEX, a sheepishly dovish Fed again the week after and then mark-ups for the month and quarter end. One can firmly smell the standard bullish seasonal script.

Or is it all a big lie? And if so, who is lying? After all, nothing is more ferocious than bear market rallies. Bear market are you nuts? 

Just look at $AMZN. To the moon Alice, to the moon.

Let's have a look at the larger picture shall we?

First off, was the bullish outlook this week a surprise? No, it wasn't if you paid attention to the signals and charts.

Larger market readings were still very oversold at the beginning of the week and I highlighted an example of this on twitter on Monday:


If you're still surprised by today's ramp, don't be....pic.twitter.com/DEX9sYakYE

— Sven Henrich (@NorthmanTrader) March 5, 2018

These readings actually were consistent with major recent lows and may well be this time too, but it's not that simple from what I'm seeing, but I'll get to that in a minute.

But chart structures told us to be bullish, after all we saw very specific bullish structures as I outlined in Fog Monster:

"…if you want to be bullish here you can envision a series of inverses to play something like this":


Indeed we saw a similar script unfold throughout the week:


The Cohn resignation dip was bought quickly and $ES played a 2nd inverse right back toward end of February highs with $SPX breaking above its trend line:


All seems well.

But if you zoom out a bit $SPX just managed to get back to its longer term trend line:


And right here it gets very interesting. Tech and various components raced to new highs and in doing so repeated a pattern we saw in March 2000. New highs on $NDX but not on $DJIA. I described this coming event this week in Market Paradox.

And indeed look at the various other index components, nowhere near new highs:

$DJIA:


And while $DJIA cracked above its 50MA, look at other indices:

$NYSE:


$TRAN:


These are a very large market divergences we are witness to here.

Even small caps, as strong as they were this week, did not make new highs yet and their underlying volatility index tagged their descending trend line:


$JNK barely played along:


What's it all mean? Well, from my perch bulls still have a lot to prove here.

Lets's dig a bit deeper into the leader of this rally, the Nasdaq:


$NDX is close to its upper trend line dating back to 2015 and new highs came on a very distinct negative divergence.

One that is very pronounced on the weekly chart:


Why is this relevant? Because it speaks to weakness of new highs underneath.

And we can see it in the internals.

Nasdaq new highs- new lows are weaker than during previous highs:


Fewer components are above their 50 and 200 day moving averages:


And even tech's monster, $AMZN, is showing signs of divergences that have spelled trouble in the past:

Check the history:


Add that $AMZN is tagging its 2009 trend line it too has a lot to prove here and is risking a revisit to the weekly 50MA based on its weekly negative divergence history. This would constitute a massive drop on the stock and by extension the $NDX itself.

What all these charts are saying is that the rally, as strong as it appears, has major problems in internals, something I highlighted in Broken.

Here's the updated chart:


And despite the rally the descending trend in equal weight has not improved:


Bottomline: From my perspective the rally of last week, while making perfect sense from a technical perspective, has not rung the all clear. Far from it. There are deep internal issues in markets that suggest that further gains, while certainly possible, may find themselves seriously tested by the pull of history. In this case this is a rally that bears wanted and want, to alleviate oversold conditions and bring about the negative divergences that have spelled major trouble in the past.

After all yields have not dropped here and the ultimate bear ratio chart still stands unresolved:


And $SPX is retesting its 1987 trend line:


Volatility has subsided again and the coast is clear. Or is it?


That's a ghost print on the $VIX there seemingly tagging its trend line. Perhaps we will see a proper tag this week, after all its OPEX week, but $VIX remains above the descending trend line and we will soon find out who is lying. Further gains are therefore possible, but without new highs across the board and continued questionable internals the rally is questionable.