Take Five: Dollar signs | Reuters

1/GREENBACK GAIN

FILE PHOTO: A man displays US dollar notes after withdrawing cash from a bank in Harare, Zimbabwe, July 9, 2019. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo

The dollar bounce is confounding some who bet on a multi-year downtrend. Fed officials’ bullish prognoses for 2021 growth and Democrats’ determination to push through big-time stimulus may herald more gains.

U.S. data hints at an economic rebound gathering steam — jobless benefit claims have declined three weeks straight, factory orders beat expectations and fourth-quarter corporate earnings bucked earlier gloomy forecasts. Inflation numbers on Wednesday will show if core CPI can continue to top expectations.

But dollar gains are euro woes. Comprising over half the dollar’s index, the euro has been pressured by central bankers’ jawboning and a sluggish vaccination rollout.

The moves have not yet wrecked markets’ risk party. That may change if those holding $34 billion of short dollar bets decide to throw in the towel.

-“Dollar smile” meets “dollar short”; greenback bounce threatens bears

(Graphic for dollar positions: )

2/NEW YEAR, NEW POLICY?

A lunar year like no other draws to a close, and it is not just the largest annual human migration that’s facing disruption.

Chinese money markets are missing the annual dose of liquidity, which the People’s Bank of China normally injects to satisfy cash demand for gifts and travel.

Short-term rates have eased after leaping to almost six-year highs, but stocks are jittery and investors are wondering if the squeeze represents de-facto policy tightening, especially given authorities’ recent warnings on debt and bubble risks.

To gauge where the economy and policymakers stand, watch PBOC action on money markets, along with loan and money supply data due from Feb. 10.

-China’s seven-day repo hits near six-year high despite PBOC cash injection

(Graphic for New Year, new policy?: )

3/PROFIT PUSH

S&P 500 companies have been beating analyst estimates for fourth-quarter earnings at a blistering pace and coming days will put that trend to the test.

So far, 83.3 of results have posted profits above expectations, according to Refinitiv I/B/E/S data — far above the historic 65% rate. S&P 500 companies are now expected to post an overall 1.6% increase in fourth-quarter earnings, compared with a double-digit fall predicted on Jan 1.

Results look even more rosy given the dismal picture in Europe where fourth-quarter earnings are seen dropping 23.9%.

Upcoming U.S. reports include Cisco Systems, Coca-Cola and Walt Disney. In Europe, banks UniCredit, Commerzbank and Societe Generale, oil major Total and travel firm Tui will publish numbers. The results could cement the transatlantic divergence.

-U.S. companies set to post profit growth for Q4, which would defy forecasts

(Graphic for Fourth-quarter earnings by sector: )

4/TO RUSSIA, WITHOUT LOVE

President Joe Biden has set out his foreign policy stall and the tone of conversation vis-à-vis Russia has cooled distinctly. There will be, he warned, no more “rolling over in the face of Russia’s aggressive actions”.

That could mean tough new sanctions on Russia after the poisoning and jailing of opposition politician Alexei Navalny and the Kremlin’s crackdown on protesters.

The rouble has already missed out on much of the recent emerging-market uplift. A sharp increase in food inflation is adding to social discontent.

These are all the risks central bankers will need to balance when they meet on Feb. 12. They probably have no option but to keep interest rates steady at 4.25%.

-Russian rouble feels the heat over Navalny pressure

(Graphic for Rouble oil and US politics: )

4/MARIO’S MAGIC

Guess who’s back: Mario Draghi. The former European Central Bank chief credited with saving the euro from collapse in 2012 is charged with forming Italy’s new government.

Markets’ joy was palpable. Italy’s 10-year bond yield premium over Germany dipped below 100 bps and Italian default insurance costs fell to 2018 lows on hopes Draghi will act fast to boost a recession-hit economy.

He has his work cut out. A fractious parliament means snap elections are a risk. And there’s a history: Mario Monti, an economist entrusted with leading Italy out of crisis in 2011, found lawmakers turn against him when they decided his economic medicine was too bitter.

But in the meantime, the fall in Italian risk helped push German borrowing costs to five-month peaks and the Germany-Italy bond flow may well accelerate.

– Draghi seeks party backing to end political turmoil

(Graphic for Draghi magic: Markets cheer prospect of former ECB chief as Italy’s next PM: )

Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee, Dhara Ranasinghe and Karin Strohecker in London; Tom Westbrook in Singapore and Lewis Krauskopf in New York; compiled by Sujata Rao; editing by Larry King

source: reuters.com