- MON: Swiss CPI
(Dec), EZ Retail Sales (Nov), Sentix (Jan), Japanese Tokyo CPI (Dec), Chinese
Trade Balance (Dec) - TUE: EIA STEO; German
Industrial Output (Nov), US NFIB (Dec). - WED: CNN
Republican Debate; Norwegian CPI (Dec), Chinese CPI/PPI (Dec), Chinese M2
(Dec). - THU: US CPI
(Dec), IJC (w/e 5th Jan), Japanese Current Account (Nov). - FRI: UK GDP
(Nov), US PPI Final Demand (Dec), Canadian Housing Starts (Dec). - SAT: Taiwan
Presidential/Parliamentary Elections.
NOTE: Previews are listed in day order
Swiss CPI (Mon):
November’s release was markedly cooler than
expected at 1.4% Y/Y (exp. 1.7%), even given the influence of the Rental Rate
increase from mid-2023. However, the SNB’s December forecasts (provided after
the November data) look for inflation to tick up to an average of 1.8% across
Q1-2024. Though, crucially, inflation is seen within the 0-2% target band for
the entirety of 2024. December’s data will be assessed to see if the November
M/M decrease at -0.2% continues, a decline that was driven by reduced fuel, hotel
and holiday pricing with the bulk of this stemming from imported products.
While the Rental Rate remains the headline point for those watching Swiss CPI,
the nation’s statistics office only updates on this quarterly and is next
scheduled for February’s CPI, due around two-weeks before the March SNB policy
announcement.
China Trade (Mon):
There are currently no expectations for the
December Trade Balance (prev. 35.39bln in USD terms) and the Imports/Exports
breakdown (prev. -0.6% and +0.5% respectively). The data will be eyed for a
diagnosis of foreign and domestic demand. In terms of the prior month’s
metrics, exports in November saw a surprise increase (in USD terms) of 0.5% Y/Y
(exp. -1.1%), which ended a six-month streak of consecutive declines. The
unexpected strength in exports was attributed to China’s increasing share in
the global export market, despite overall falling global trade volumes. Key
factors include a shift towards EVs, although some desks suggest Chinese
exporters face challenges such as lower profit margins and limited scope for
further price reductions, potentially impacting export performance in 2024.
Imports last month remained weak and continued to raise concerns surrounding
Chinese domestic demand.
Norwegian CPI (Wed):
December’s print is expected to continue the
incremental downward trend in the Norges Bank’s main measure of CPI-ATE
inflation, which printed at 5.8% Y/Y in November, a figure which matches the
January 2023 reading but was markedly below the 2023 peak of 7.0% from June.
December’s policy announcement from the Norges Bank saw a somewhat unexpected
hike to a likely 4.50% peak, though high inflation and NOK downside were cited
as potential drivers for further tightening. For reference, the Bank’s Q4-2023
CPI-ATE view is 5.83%, roughly in-line with November’s figure. In terms of
December, SEB forecasts a Y/Y print of 5.6% writing that the expected modest
upward surprise has not occurred in the series.
China Inflation (Wed):
The prior month’s release saw inflation print
below expectations across the board, with CPI Y/Y at -0.5% (exp -0.1%), M/M at
-0.5% (exp -0.1%), and PPI Y/Y at -3.0% (exp -2.8%). The decline in consumer
price inflation was driven by a further decrease in food prices, from -4% to
-4.2% Y/Y, and a 0.5% M/M decrease, after accounting for seasonality. Energy
prices also fell by 2.7%M/M, contributing to the deflation. Core inflation,
excluding food and fuel, remained steady at 0.6% in November. Analysts cited by
SCMP expect Chinese inflation to remain low in the near term, but do not
anticipate a deflationary spiral, and suggest core inflation is likely to
increase in the first half of 2024 due to a rise in policy support, potentially
boosting domestic demand and services inflation. SCMP also posits that food and
energy price deflation is expected to lessen due to changing base effects, with
CPI inflation forecast to average 1% in 2024, up from 0.3% so far this year.
US CPI (Thu):
US headline CPI is expected to rise +0.2% M/M in
December (prev. +0.1%), while the core rate is seen rising +0.3% M/M, matching
the rate seen in November. Traders will be looking to see if there is any
resurgence in price pressures that could knock the market’s dovish view of the
Fed’s rate trajectory (currently, the market has priced six 25bps rate cuts in
2024, but the FOMC’s December projections sees only three). November’s report
saw headline inflation continuing to fall, though analysts at JPM noted that
core inflation remains sticky at a level higher than what the Federal Reserve
wants, as elevated wages in the services sector continue to add an element of
stickiness; after that November data, JPM said that it appeared less likely
that the Fed will implement a rate cut in the upcoming March 2024 meeting. This
week’s edition of The Economist notes that the recent fall in inflation might
be a “false signal”; it notes that while goods prices have declined,
services prices continue to edge up, with many rising more quickly than the
pre-pandemic trend, while even house prices saw a rebounded in 2023 (as
mortgage rates now fall back, it leaves risks that house prices could pick-up
further), while an easing in financial conditions as the Fed cuts rates would also
feed into renewed price pressures. “If inflation rebounds the Fed would
have little choice but to keep interest rates elevated, perhaps reviving the
fears of a recession that have all but vanished,” The Economist said.
US Corporate Earnings (Fri):
According to FactSet, Q4 earnings growth for the
S&P 500 is estimated to be +2.4%, which would mark the second straight
quarter of Y/Y growth for the index. It also notes that these estimates have
been falling as we approach Q4 reporting: in September, analysts expected the
S&P 500 earnings growth rate to be +8.1% Y/Y. Ahead of earnings season,
FactSet’s data shows 72 S&P 500 companies issued negative EPS guidance, 39
issued positive EPS guidance. Looking ahead, a longer-term poll from Reuters
finds that analysts expect US corporate earnings to improve at a stronger rate
this year as inflation and interest rates fall, though concerns surrounding
slower economic growth cloud the outlook. The Reuters poll says that analysts
expect S&P 500 earnings to rise +11.1% this year after +3.1% in 2023. But
analysts want to see solid earnings growth to support lofty equity valuations,
which are currently around 19.8x forward 12-month earnings estimates for the
S&P 500, significantly above the long-term average of around 15.6x. “The market trading where it is at current levels demands earnings to show
strong growth next year,” Wells Fargo said. Accordingly, analysts will be eyeing the Q4 earnings report for signs on how higher rates are impacting the
economy and corporate earnings. It will also be interesting to see how
analysts’ views evolve after Q4 earnings, as some predict Q1 earnings will
weaken at a quick pace.
UK GDP (Fri):
Expectations are for GDP to rise +0.1% M/M in
November (vs. the 0.3% contraction seen in October, despite consensus expecting
an unchanged outcome, the release reported falls in every sector, with services
sector the main contributor for the declines. This, combined with the negative
Q3 GDP print has stoked some concerns over a potential H2 2023 recession. For
the November release, analysts at Investec note that their forecast of +0.2%
would be “too small to prevent a technical recession,” albeit, such a recession
would be “as mild as they come.” In terms of the drivers for a rebound in
production, the desk cites strong retail sales volume growth, lack of NHS
strike action and cooler weather prompting an increase in heating needs. That
said, upside could be capped via the pressure on households and firms from
higher interest rates. Beyond the upcoming release, Investec expects lacklustre
activity to continue into Q1 before recovering later as inflation declines.
From a monetary policy perspective, the upcoming release will likely have
little sway on market pricing for the BoE, with the MPC more concerned about
services inflation and wage growth. However, a particularly soft release could
see markets bring forward current expectations of the first BoE rate cut from
June to May. As a reference point, markets currently price around 120bps of
cuts by year-end.
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