• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
February 8th - European Central Bank (ECB) Executive Board member Giuseppe Cipolone stated that the ECB will assess the impact of the recent euros appreciation on consumer price growth in its quarterly forecasts to be released in March; however, the euros recent volatility has been relatively limited. According to a record published on the ECBs website on Sunday, the Italian policymaker said that officials consider the exchange rate as one of the factors "forecasting inflation dynamics." "We will observe how the new forecasts unfold and what impact they will have." At the same time, Cipolone emphasized that the ECB has not set a specific target for the euro, and that the euro exchange rate has been fluctuating around $1.17 to $1.18 for nearly a year. "After the volatility a few weeks ago, the euro exchange rate has now fallen back to the levels of the previous months," Cipolone said.1. Monday: ① Data: Japans December trade balance, Switzerlands January consumer confidence index, Eurozones February Sentix investor confidence index; ② Events: ASEAN Finance Ministers and Central Bank Deputy Working Group meeting held until February 13. 2. Tuesday: ① Data: US January New York Fed 1-year inflation expectations, January NFIB small business confidence index, December retail sales month-on-month, Q4 labor cost index quarter-on-quarter, December import price index month-on-month, November business inventories month-on-month; Frances Q4 ILO unemployment rate; Chinas January M2 money supply year-on-year rate (pending); ② Events: ECB President Lagarde participates in discussions. Fed Governors Waller and Bostic deliver speeches. New York Fed releases its Q4 2025 household debt and credit report. ③ Earnings Report: Hong Kong Stock – SMIC (00981.HK). US Stocks – BP (BP.N), Spotify (SPOT.N), Coca-Cola (KO.N), AstraZeneca (AZN.O), Robinhood (HOOD.O), Ford Motor (FN). 3. Wednesday: ① Data: US API crude oil inventories for the week ending February 6th, EIA crude oil inventories for the week ending February 6th; US January unemployment rate, seasonally adjusted non-farm payrolls, average hourly earnings month-on-month, final reading of the 2025 non-farm payrolls baseline change; China January CPI year-on-year rate; ② Events: EIA releases monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook report. Feds Hamak and Logan deliver speeches. OPEC releases monthly oil market report. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu will meet with Trump on Wednesday to discuss the Iran issue. ③ Holiday: Tokyo Stock Exchange closed. ④ Earnings Reports: Hong Kong Stocks – NetEase (09999.HK), Cloud Music (09899.HK). US Stocks – T-Mobile US (TMUS.O), NetEase Youdao (DAO.N), Cisco (CSCO.O), McDonalds (MCD.N). 4. Thursday: ① Data: US 10-year Treasury auction to February 11; UK Q4 GDP annualized rate (preliminary), December three-month GDP monthly rate, December manufacturing output monthly rate, December seasonally adjusted goods trade balance, December industrial production monthly rate; US initial jobless claims for the week ending February 7, January existing home sales (annualized), EIA natural gas storage for the week ending February 6; ② Events: Bank of Canada releases monetary policy meeting minutes. IEA releases monthly oil market report. ECB Executive Board members Schnabel, Cipollone, Chief Economist Lane, and Governing Council member Stournaras deliver speeches. ③ Holiday: No trading on the Taiwan Stock Exchange. ④ Earnings Reports: Hong Kong Stocks – Hua Hong Semiconductor (01347.HK), Lenovo Group (00992.HK). US Stocks – Rivian (RIVN.O), Coinbase (COIN.O), Applied Materials (AMAT.O), Airbnb (ABNB.O); 5. Friday: ① Data: Swiss January CPI month-on-month rate; Eurozone Q4 GDP annual rate revision, Eurozone Q4 seasonally adjusted employment quarter-on-quarter final value, Eurozone December seasonally adjusted trade balance; US January unadjusted CPI year-on-year rate, seasonally adjusted CPI month-on-month rate, unadjusted core CPI year-on-year rate, seasonally adjusted core CPI month-on-month rate; ② Events: Federal Reserve Chairman Logan and Federal Reserve Governor Milan attend events. Chinas National Bureau of Statistics releases monthly report on residential sales prices in 70 large and medium-sized cities. The Central Bank of Russia announces its interest rate decision. Bank of Japan policy board member Naoki Tamura delivers a speech. ③ Holidays: No market trading on the Taiwan Stock Exchange, no night trading on the Shanghai Gold Exchange, Shanghai Futures Exchange, Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange, and Dalian Commodity Exchange. ④ Earnings Report: US Stocks – Moderna (MRNA.O) 6. Saturday: ① Data: Total number of US oil rigs for the week ending February 13; CFTC releases weekly positioning report. Market news: The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre downgraded the magnitude of the earthquake in Cuba to 5.5, with a focal depth of 15 kilometers.February 8th - Despite the silver price plunge that has almost wiped out its astonishing gains at the beginning of the year, retail investors still poured nearly $500 million into the silver market over the past week. According to data analysis from Vanda Research, retail investors poured $430 million into the largest silver ETF, SLV, in the six trading days ending Thursday, including over $100 million on January 30th, when silver prices fell 27%, marking the largest single-day drop in history. StoneX analyst Ronna OConnell stated, "People are drawn to the allure of silver." She added that silvers appeal was further amplified by its "massive sell-off," with some investors seeing it as a buying opportunity at lower prices.The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre reports a 5.9-magnitude earthquake in the Cuba region.

Global Macro and Crude Oil Analysis - Today, the Market Feels Even More Capitulatory

Daniel Rogers

May 12, 2022 10:58

截屏2022-05-12 上午10.08.27.png

Global Macro

Inflation may have declined from its prior record, but the sluggish rate of decline will further increase fears that, despite statistics and the CPI peak, the Fed still has a problem with persistent inflation.

 

Inflation in the United States almost definitely peaked in March, but a little decline in April statistics does not suggest the inflation menace has passed. If anything, the concentration on data is generally intensified on the way down.

 

Still, the core CPI climbed by 0.57 percent month-over-month in April, considerably above expectations and the highest pace since January; the market will be concerned that the Fed's hawkish tone will not soften, and it will want to continue with 50bp rate hikes. It will also keep rumors of a 75bp rate hike alive in the market, despite the Fed's efforts to stifle this chatter in order to avoid a severe market shock.

 

Today, the markets are even more despondent, as they are confronted by three significant difficulties. First, investors will need to account for a longer Fed raising cycle. Two, the danger that the Fed may become excessively hawkish, so stifling growth and creating a recession. And third, traders still must navigate QT.

 

For the greater part of a decade, stock pickers have relied on quantitative easing (QE), and now, without it, nobody knows where equities will settle; therefore, traders will continue to conduct the reverse of QE trades until proven differently.

 

In the interim, there is always the relief rally crew, but even if volatility rolls in, stocks may not experience a significant bounce. "TINA" no longer applies.

Fundamental Analysis of Oil

Oil prices rose as the European Union argued over a crude oil embargo against Russia, while fuel supplies fell predictably ahead of the US summer driving season.

 

However, the favorable downward bend in China's covid curve looks to have reversed the trend for oil markets this week, at least until oil traders experience another mood swing toward a bearish outlook.

 

As the Fed works to reduce inflation, a US recession is practically certain. Rates of interest are an extremely blunt instrument, and QT's tightening of financial conditions is a prescription for economic calamity.

 

Until we see substantial policy support from China or authorities embrace an alternative strategy to Covid (which seems highly improbable), oil prices could stay constrained in the near future.