Bank of Canada Interest Rate Decision Next

Wednesday May 30: Five things the markets are talking about

The Bank of Canada (BoC) is expected to leave its benchmark interest rate unchanged (+1.25%) during its policy meeting today (10:00 am EDT) amid concern over slowing housing markets and stalled Nafta trade negotiations.

However, market consensus expects the BoC’s next rate increase to come in July, as long as Q2 economic growth looks strong and housing markets begin to stabilize.

Note: The BoC has lifted its key rate three-times since last summer, most recently in January. Last month, Canadian policy makers said further rate increases would likely be warranted over time, but added that the BoC would remain cautious and use incoming economic data to guide their decisions.

Currently, Canadian house prices are cooling in many cities following the introduction of tougher mortgage financing rules earlier this year. Sales of existing homes have fallen nearly -3% in April y/y, while prices on an annual basis rose at the slowest pace in nearly a decade.

Net result, a slight softening in recent economic data along with uncertainty over trade with the U.S is expected to keep the BoC on hold.

Elsewhere, the sovereign bond market is showing signs of stabilization overnight after the impressive rout in Italian debt sent investors seeking the exit doors. U.S Treasuries have fallen back with the ‘mighty’ dollar as the haven bid subsided, the EUR has climbed and Euro stocks are somewhat steady.

In technical terms, the market is catching its breath while the prospect of snap Italian elections – which could effectively become a referendum on the ‘single’ unit – continues to threaten, the market sees the intraday selloff as overdone while the timing of any vote remains unclear.

On tap: E.U trade chief Cecilia Malmstrom and U.S Commerce Secretary Ross are scheduled to meet today in an informal WTO meet in Paris. Bank of Canada (BoC) monetary policy announcement at 10:00 am EDT.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei tumbled to six-week low overnight after political turmoil in Italy sparked concerns over the stability of the eurozone, hitting financial and exporter shares in particular. The Nikkei ended -1.5% lower and managed to stay above its 75-day moving average, which has become the index’s immediate support level. The broader Topix fell -1.4%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks did not fall as much as others in the region as the S&P/ASX 200 fell for the eight consecutive session. It dropped -0.5% as financials shed -1.4% and hit a 18-month low amid the global selloff seen amid worries about Italy and the subsequent slump in U.S Treasury yields. In S. Korea, the Kospi was one of Asia’s bigger decliners overnight. The Kospi fell -2%, the most since late March and an eight-week closing low, as Samsung slid a further -3.5%. That put the week’s drop to date at -6.1%.

In Hong Kong, stocks fell to a three-week closing low overnight; with investor sentiment dampened by the political crisis in Italy and renewed fears over a Sino-U.S. trade war. The Hang Seng index fell -1.4%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.6%.

In China, equities fell the most in more than two months overnight, with the Shanghai Composite Index hitting a 19-month closing low, amid a global selloff provoked by global geopolitical worries. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -2.1%, while the Shanghai Composite Index dropped -2.5%.

In Europe, regional bourses have opened broadly flat with a hint of positivity. Waning concerns over periphery elections supports is supporting stocks, with Italy and Spain outperforming core Europe.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3,424, FTSE +0.1% at 7,642, DAX +0.4% at 12,711, CAC-40 -0.6% at 5,406; IBEX-35 +0.3% at 9,555, FTSE MIB +0.8% at 21,517, SMI -0.3%, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%

2. Oil slips, as threat of OPEC boost weighs, gold lower

Oil has slipped again overnight, under pressure from expectations that OPEC will pump more and as Italy’s political crisis increased investors’ aversion to risk.

Brent is down -3c at +$75.36 a barrel, after trading as low as $74.81 earlier. U.S crude is up +3c at +$66.76.

Brent crude has dropped -$5 from its four-year high of +$80.50 a barrel on May 17, after reports that OPEC and Russia may increase supply at next month’s OPEC meeting (June 22), reversing policy after 17-months of cutting supplies.

Note: OPEC and non-OPEC producers have had a pact to curb output by about -1.8m bpd since January 2017. The cutbacks have largely removed excess global inventories.

Amid concerns the price rally has gone too far, Saudi Arabia and Russia are discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil output by around +1m bpd.

Ahead of the U.S open, gold prices have edged a tad lower overnight as a robust U.S dollar weighed on the market, but concerns about political turmoil in Italy and Sino-U.S trade conflict is limiting losses. Spot gold is -0.2% lower at +$1,296 per ounce, while U.S gold futures for June delivery are down -0.3% at +$1,295.40 per ounce.

3. Yield trading not for the faint of heart

Italian bond are rebounding, with the 10-year yield falling as much as -19 bps, to +2.98% as global panic eases. The U.S. benchmark bonds have given up some of yesterday’s gains to send yields back above +2.80%.

Italian government bond yields have pushed away from their multi-year highs from yesterday as the market uses the opportunity to snap up cheap paper.

The two-year government bond, the focus of recent selling, was down -33 bps at +2.095%, having hit its highest level in five-years in early trading.

Note: The closely watched Bund/BTP 10-year bond yield spread has tightened -13 bps to +269 bps compared to yesterday’s close of +283 bps.

Elsewhere, the yield on U.S 10-year Treasuries has climbed + 7 bps to +2.85%, the biggest increase in more than two-weeks. In Germany, the 10-year Bund yield has climbed +7 bps to +0.33%, the first advance in more than a week and the largest surge in almost six weeks. In the U.K, the 10-year Gilt yield has gained +6 bps to +1.197%, the biggest climb in almost two-weeks.

4. Dollar bulls book some profit

The overnight session has seen a slight reversal in the recent risk aversion flows, with the ‘big’ dollar subject to consolidation as some of its interest rate support has eased with the U.S yield curve flattening. Despite Italian and Spanish political uncertainty, there seems to be less volatility in their respective yield curves.

Earlier this morning, Euro inflation data for May appears to have provided some support for the ‘single’ unit. The EUR/USD has moved back above the psychological €1.16 handle (€1.1615) to recover from its recent ten-month lows.

GBP/USD little changed at £1.3266 while USD/JPY trades atop of ¥108.78 ahead of the N.Y open.

In EM markets, the TRY has jumped +0.6% to $4.5211, the strongest in more than a week.

5. Indonesia raises interest rates again

Indonesia’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the second time in two-weeks, in their latest attempt to tame the effects of a stronger dollar.

Bank Indonesia (BI) has lifted the seven-day reverse repo rate to +4.75% from the previous +4.5%, a move that had been widely expected.

Note: It had earlier raised the rate by +25 bps on May 17.

This move is being considered as a pre-emptive, front-loading and ahead-of-the curve policy response.

The INR has strengthened +0.1% outright after falling to a three-year low last week, driven by a broad-based advance in the ‘big’ dollar.

Note: The INR has depreciated -3% outright so far this year, despite BI spending billions of dollars to curb that slide. The currency fell as much as -4.5% for the year at its low last week.

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Dean Popplewell

Dean Popplewell

Vice-President of Market Analysis at MarketPulse
Dean Popplewell has nearly two decades of experience trading currencies and fixed income instruments.
He has a deep understanding of market fundamentals and the impact of global events on capital markets.
He is respected among professional traders for his skilled analysis and career history as global head
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Dean Popplewell