Weekly Economic And Market Update

 | Sep 23, 2016 13:01

h2 Investment markets and key developments over the past week
  • With central bank announcements from the Bank of Japan and the Fed out of the way and benign, share markets rallied over the last week, bond yields fell sharply particularly in Europe with German bond yields back below zero, commodity prices rallied and the US dollar fell. With the $US down and “risk on” the AUD/USD rose above $US 0.76.
  • The past week has been all about central banks and the news was clearly far better than feared – certainly nothing to support the “out of bullets” fears of a couple of weeks back.
  • First up, while the Bank of Japan’s announcement lacked the “shock and awe” seen in the early days of Abenomics it dramatically ramped up the effort of getting inflation expectations up by committing to overshooting on its 2% inflation target and expanding its monetary base (mainly via quantitative easing) until this is achieved. In other words it’s now locked into quantitative easing indefinitely. And in an effort to help Japanese banks, it committed to preventing a flatter yield curve. The BoJ also stressed it’s not out of options for additional action. I remain sceptical that without the adoption of “helicopter money”, the BoJ will continue to struggle to meet its inflation target, particularly with the USD/JPY remaining around 100 to the $US. But the BoJ’s announcement was more aggressive than investors expected and is a long way from the central bank surrender that some had feared.
  • While the Fed was on hold as expected, perhaps the big surprise was that its comments were only mildly hawkish. On the one hand it judged that the case for a rate hike has “strengthened” and that the risks to the economic outlook are now “roughly balanced” and there were three dissents in favour a rate hike. On the other it is still waiting for more evidence of progress towards its objectives, Chair Janet Yellen repeated that the Fed can more effectively respond to rising inflation than to falling inflation as a reason for caution, the Fed continues to refer to only “gradual” increases in interest rates and the Fed’s “dot plot” of Fed meeting participants’ interest rate expectations continues to decline. The dot plot is now showing just one hike this year, only two hikes next year and expectations for the long run natural rate have fallen further to 2.9% (from 3% in June).