RobertTimper

563 posts

RobertTimper

RobertTimper

@RobertTimper1

Se unió Ağustos 2020
333 Siguiendo372 Seguidores
RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@VKMacro When the BoC talks about aggregate demand not consistent with 2% inflation they mean too low, right? Right? 😅
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VKMacro
VKMacro@VKMacro·
@RobertTimper1 But BoC has said similar stuff too, and I think in the end, if you care enough about inflation you can say anything to back up the message you want it to come down.
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VKMacro
VKMacro@VKMacro·
I think aside from the Fed, other CBs with US level inflation would basically say something like: Yes, higher rates won’t kill AI boom, but we care about demand at the aggregate level being too high to be consistent with 2% inflation, and our job is to bring that back in line.
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@IanRHarnett Yes, fully agreed. Since you mentioned claims. Continuing claims point to lower UR and some retightening of the labor market
RobertTimper tweet media
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Ian Harnett
Ian Harnett@IanRHarnett·
@RobertTimper1 @RobertTimper1 - they are usually linked - and with initial claims also remaining at subdued (ie below 300K) levels, there has to be that risk - which would also validate the equity market & credit market optimism that we are currently seeing. Ian H
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
Can't get a recession with profit growth like this. Instead could hiring pick finally pickup again?
RobertTimper tweet media
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@VKMacro To be fair its not totally contradictory. 2y reals have moved in almost opposite directions. But hard to call UK real yields tight...
RobertTimper tweet media
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VKMacro
VKMacro@VKMacro·
BoE Taylor: by keeping rates on hold, FCIs are tightening BoJ Koeda: By keeping rates on hold, monetary accommodative via low real rates is rising
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
While Koeda's speech from May 21 also strongly suggest a hike "the Bank needs to continue to raise the policy interest rate and adjust the degree of monetary accommodation" Markets are assigning 80% odds to a hike but only see one more after that for this year.
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
Masu was extremely clear in his May 14 speech: "I believe it is desirable to raise the policy rate at the earliest stage possible"
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
A BoJ hike in June now seems all but certain. April's meeting saw a 6/3 hold/hike vote split. Recent speeches suggest there are now enough votes on the Policy Board for a hike in June. Both Masu's and Koeda's comments suggest they joined the hawks, making it 5 votes to hike.
RobertTimper tweet media
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@lhcarsandcats Very much agree on the demand worries. Ugly services PMI today is more evidence of that
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Luca SleepyFish
Luca SleepyFish@lhcarsandcats·
@RobertTimper1 Beating the Eurozone on inflation isn't a benchmark, I'd call it a participation trophy. That 3-month wage print is through the floor. Demand compression is the story now.
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
Does the UK still have an inflation problem? After yesterday's wage growth data and today's inflation data, the underlying inflation picture at least doesn't look different from DM peers.
RobertTimper tweet media
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@JeremyWS Actually only 0.1 but I am not super confident in the mom SA numbers. 3m annualized roc SA I have at ~2%
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Jeremy
Jeremy@JeremyWS·
@RobertTimper1 What do you have for today’s core CPI seasonally adjusted ? Smth like 0.3? Thanks mate
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@Frencheconomics As you say not too surprising given the Renters Rights Act but some divergence from HomeLet and Zoopla which track rent growth at ~2%
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Simon French
Simon French@Frencheconomics·
One to watch over the coming months amidst all the debate over price controls. Rent inflation has started to inflect higher again with a significant April jump ahead of the Renters Rights Act which has elements of price control embedded within it.
Simon French tweet media
Simon French@Frencheconomics

And finally, amidst the bond market yield debate (where QT, Gilt issuance, political risk, Brexit, and inflation expectations are all playing interdependent roles) the cumulative picture of UK price growth - versus benchmark economies - helps the additional yield premium demanded on GBP debt. Consumer prices have risen 31% since January 2020.

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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@VKMacro And no employment growth… but doesn’t help when the Governor ties the policy outlook to oil prices …
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VKMacro
VKMacro@VKMacro·
Meanwhile cad belly pricing in restrictive rates above 3.25%
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VKMacro
VKMacro@VKMacro·
Six straight months of boc core at 0.2% mom or below.
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@AndreasSteno There is a relationship here but I think fertilizer prices are the bigger worry when it comes to food prices at the moment
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Andreas Steno Larsen
Andreas Steno Larsen@AndreasSteno·
When all-in tech bros talk Famine and El Nino, you just know it's not gonna be a big deal.
The All-In Podcast@theallinpod

David Friedberg: El Niño Could Trigger a Global Food Crisis “This Science Corner is about the dreaded El Niño season that is coming up. Ocean temperatures are going to exceed anything we have seen in recent history. Why does this all matter? The reason is the oceans are the battery of weather. And at this point, there is so much excess energy stored up in the oceans, it's about 11 million terawatt-hours. That's 500 years worth of human energy in this ocean. And over the next few months, that energy's going to be released into the atmosphere. 99% confidence that will make the upcoming year the hottest year on record by far that humans have ever experienced. Southern Argentina, Chile, Brazil could see record-shattering heat waves, and this is where things start to get a little nasty, because when that happens, the crops start to fail. Hundreds of millions of people depend on the exports out of Brazil, Brazil is the world's largest ag exporter. And the scariest one of all is if the monsoons fail, which is now a very high probability event in India. 150 million farmers in India, and 1.5 billion people that depend on that food. If you think about the second and third order effects of this, over the next year you could see energy prices spiking, and electricity spiking, and the grid failing in parts of the Southwest. Commodity prices spiking all over the world. And then you would see places like India, the Philippines, Vietnam starting to face some sort of unrest if there isn't enough food supply that's coming into those markets. And then the question in India is a really nasty one because there isn't a really good solution.”

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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
Despite the political turmoil and headlines in the UK, the gilt market has barely reacted to the risk of more fiscal spending. Yields have risen globally due to higher oil prices. The US/UK yield differential has been stable and largely driven by relative policy expectations.
RobertTimper tweet media
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@aRishisays Median CPI ~= shelter so next month should look better again for those who want to hang their hats on it 😉
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RobertTimper
RobertTimper@RobertTimper1·
@Frencheconomics Do we know whether a centre-right government would lead to less issuance/inflation?
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Simon French
Simon French@Frencheconomics·
One of the challenges for UK Gilt investors is how to interpret what seems to be a strong Reform UK result, but also a likely reaction by the PLP urging an economic move to the left. Do you price the probable short term impulse of greater issuance/ inflation - or the longer term signal that a centre-right vote share of ~45% provides? Such a mixed narrative suggests UK markets won’t move decisively over the next few trading days.
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