Dean Popplewell of MarketPulse shares his global perspective of the markets—as well as several currency pairs—given that he thinks this new month of March will be dominated by Central Banks, either by rhetoric or monetary policy moves.

Tuesday is the first trading day of a new month. In US equities, March has a recent record of 14 up and 7 down, similar to its 1950 track record (S&P 500 (SPX) has risen 43 times while falling 23 times). Overall, March is the fourth best month of the year for the S&P 500 with an average +1.2% gain (although less in a Presidential election year).

This month will be dominated by Central Banks, either by rhetoric or monetary policy moves.

Monday, ahead of the US open, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced its eight cut to its reserve ratio (to +17%) since June 2011 effective March 1. It’s been seen as a reversal of strategy, Chinese authorities are relying on short-term cash injections ($100b of long-term cash) to stem capital outflows.

Central Bankers will be a focus over the next fortnight; the Bank of Canada March 9, the ECB March 10, Bank of Japan March 15, and FOMC March 16. Currently, the odds of a cut by the BoC are running at about +15%. For the FOMC, the markets see only a very small chance (+10%) of a rate hike, while the ECB could see more cuts into negative rates territory and/or extension of its QE. The BoJ’s Governor Kuroda reiterated that Japanese policy makers stand ready to lower NIRP further if necessary (¥113.05).

(In the overnight session, Japan sold 10-year debt with negative yield for the first time as the bond market there continues to react to the BoJ’s announcement of negative rates at the end of January. In Europe, yields on German debt remain negative out to eight years with Spanish and Italian debt yields falling Tuesday morning. Negative yields held for too long will eventually alter future savings and investments).

1. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Stands Pat

RBA left rates on hold as expected, although the following communiqué was somewhat more neutral than anticipated given the recent uptick in unemployment and reduction in growth forecasts. Governor Stevens held rates at a record low (+2%) for a ninth consecutive meet, but has left the door ajar if the Aussie economy happens to slow later this year.

The Governor basically copied and pasted last month’s statement with a notable exception being a warning that “low inflation would provide scope” for easier policy…the RBA previously had inserted “may” provide.

Many believe that Aussie policy makers will have to eventually cut rates, inline with other Central Bank policies, otherwise it could drive the AUD (A$0.7140) higher and erode their hard fought progress in rebalancing the economy after a decade long mining boom.

Ahead of Tuesday evening’s Aussie Q4 GDP data, Australia’s current account was weaker than expected (-A$21.1b vs. –A$19.8b). This has prompted a slight revision in consensus for quarterly growth to the downside (+0.5%e).

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2. Traders Focus on China Official PMIs and Yuan

China’s official PMIs hit a four-year low for both manufacturing and services in the overnight session.

In the world’s second largest economy, manufacturing PMI registered its seventh consecutive month of contraction (49.0 v 49.4e), while non-manufacturing PMI (services) printed 52.7 vs. 53.5 prior. However, it’s worth nothing that a number of key manufacturing components—new-export orders and input prices measuring external demand and inflation trends—remain somewhat resilient. Orders rose to 47.4 from 46.9 and input prices bounced to 50.2 vs. 45.1, m/m.

The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) Deputy Governor Chen remarked that the yuan is basically stable against the basket of currencies, with no reason for continued depreciation. Chen added weaker CNY has had no impact on exporters. Interestingly, after five-days of weaker setting, the PBoC has set its currency firmer overnight (¥6.5385 vs. ¥6.5452 prior), presumably to solidify their FX policy as a two-way trade.

Thus far, it seems that the market has also shrugged off China’s Required Reserve Ratio (RRR) cut Monday as a long-overdue necessity to counter ongoing capital flows.

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3. Oil Prices Moving Higher; Aids Overall Risk Appetite

Crude prices are testing their highest levels since early January as reports circulated Monday that the Saudis are out telling markets that they plan to work with other producers to limit oil market volatility. To see entire article, click here...

By Dean Popplewell, Director of Currency Analysis and Research, MarketPulse