CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Wages overshadow jobs growth

Article By: ,  Financial Analyst

Both the US dollar and bond yields head lower as stocks extend losses following a mixed US jobs report, which is ultimately supporting the disinflation theme, further alleviating expectations of a 2015 rate hike (which remains our view). 

US non-farm payrolls slowed to 252K in December, from an upwardly revised 353K, following a net two-month upward revision of +50k.

The unemployment  rate fell to 5.6% (the lowest since June 2008) from 5.7%, with the underemployment rate also hitting a fresh seven-year low at 11.2%. 

The labour participation slipped back to 62.7% from 62.9%, helping to explain the ongoing fall in the jobless rate.

Slow wages growth not strictly European

On the pay front, average hourly earnings contracted by 0.2% m/m, translating into a 1.7% rise y/y  - the lowest since October 2012.  The decline in pay was spread across most industries, highlighting that the deflation story on the wages front may not be strictly a European phenomenon.

As deflation broadens further, we ought to get used to the idea of falling price of capital (interest rates and yields) and the falling price of labour (slowing wages).  Falling prices in land (rents and home prices) may soon follow.

Report underscores Fed shift

Interestingly, the report comes two days after the Fed minutes highlighted its more forceful emphasis on low inflation at the December statement, indicating it will “monitor inflation developments closely”, which suggests this is now the Fed’s top priority. The emphasis served to offset the Fed’s visible upgrade of labour market conditions.

The unexpectedly low wages figures also justify the Fed’s “patient” guidance. While the majority of market observers appear to agree on June 2015 as the most likely date for a Fed move, not only do I disagree with such forecast, but I continue to see a Fed hike as unlikely in 2015.

You can fight the Fed, but not the bond market

The old market cliché of “don’t fight the Fed” remains valid in highlighting its authority to limit violent market instability and prolonged recessions, but do not confuse it with Fed members’ hints of rate hike intentions; especially at a time of rampant lack of visibility by Fed researchers with regards to the new equilibrium rate of unemployment – and at a time of flashing deflationary pressures.

The bond market chart below reminds us that the bull market in bonds (bear market in yields) has never left us, and a retest of 1.38% in 10-year yields is upon us. Any bounce above 2.45% would be reversed and the next Fed hike signal will be promptly received by falling yields as growth concerns – not inflation- take over.

The “dollar strength” story will continue, albeit, enduring intermittent speculative blows along the course of H1 2015 as the predominantly dovish FOMC highlights incorporates slowing pay growth to its guidance.

As long as equity indices believe the Fed will raise rates in an increasingly disinflationary climate, the reaction will be that of several violent rebound-capping declines to the benefit of the Japanese yen.  The only way for the latter to pursue a fresh selling momentum is another April increase in Japanese QE.

Until that, weak yields & resurging yen shall remain.

 

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