A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike
Dolan
An event-packed but shortened week stateside kicks off the
second half of 2024, with European markets rallying on Monday as
the first round of French assembly elections points to a hung
parliament and policy gridlock.
Although French far-right coalition parties got the largest
share of the vote at Sunday's first round as expected, the
percentage was shy of last-minute opinion polls and the grouping
looks short of an overall majority when the process is over.
In part due to the high turnout, next Sunday's second phase
of voting will see more than half the parliamentary seats
contested by three candidates - which means tactical voting to
shut out the far right will likely affect their overall tally.
That suggests an outcome of messy parliamentary maths that
stymies significant policy initiatives, not to mention another
three years of "co-habitation" with the powerful presidency.
Viewed against "worst case" concerns of a wave of unfunded
tax cuts from the former National Front and its allies, not to
mention tense battles with Brussels, investors breathed a
partial sigh of relief that it all looks muddier than that.
The benchmark CAC40 French stock index jumped more
than 2% on Monday - clawing back losses seen since the snap
election announcement almost a month ago and returning to
positive territory for the year to date.
The risk premium on French 10-year government bonds over
German equivalents fell back to as low as 72 basis points, from
12-year peaks of about 85bp on Friday.
The euro jumped more than half a cent against the
dollar, to its best levels in more than two weeks.
That's knocked the dollar back across the board -
with the French results perhaps delaying the reaction to the
soft U.S. PCE inflation report for May.
This saw U.S. core inflation come in at slightly less than
the 0.1% expected for the month, and the annual core rate drop
to 2.6% for the first time in three years.
German states' inflation numbers for June point to further
easing of national price pressures too.
Still, Federal Reserve officials seem in no mind to take one
month's return to disinflation at face value and several have
insisted they need to see months of such data to be convinced
it's safe to cut interest rates.
The European Central Bank has already reduced rates this
year and looks set to act at least one more time before the Fed
makes its first move.
ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks at the bank's annual
forum in Sintra, Portugal later on Monday and will be joined by
Fed chair Jerome Powell there on Tuesday.
A hawkish message was sent by the Bank for International
Settlements on Sunday, warning that rising government debt
levels amid a number of major elections this year could roil
global financial markets.
"They (governments) must cut short the rise in public debt
and accept that interest rates may not return to the
pre-pandemic ultra low levels," he said. "We need a solid
foundation to build upon," said BIS General Manager Agustin
Carstens.
Otherwise, the U.S. week is broken up by the Independence
Day holiday on Thursday but is packed with big labor market data
- some of which is frontloaded a day early because of the
holiday. The JOLTs job openings release is due on Tuesday, for
example, and the weekly jobless report on Wednesday - but the
national payrolls report will be on Friday as usual.
Elsewhere, the UK holds its general election while the U.S.
is away on Thursday.
Sterling and UK stocks were firmer on Monday,
with opinion polls still pointing to a huge majority of more
than 200 seats for the opposition Labour Party.
Japan's yen, meantime, continued to flirt with
38-year lows above 161 per dollar - with no sign yet of any
official intervention.
U.S. stock futures and bond yields were higher ahead of
Monday's open.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S.
markets later on Monday:
* US June manufacturing surveys from ISM and S&P Global
* New York Federal Reserve President John Williams speaks;
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde speaks at
ECB's annual forum in Sintra, Portugal
* US Treasury sells 3-, 6-month bills
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Mark Heinrich