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Daily Market Commentary

Euro-Dollar Parity

For the first time in 20 years, the euro-dollar pair is trading below 1.00 (parity). As we share in a section below and in the Tweet of the Day, the price of natural gas and, ultimately, electricity and power are surging. Gas prices are rising worldwide, but the Russian/Ukrainian conflict is making it worse in Europe. As a result, European nations are experiencing higher, more persistent inflation than the U.S. and dampened economic activity. The euro-dollar has been weak for the last two years as the ECB has slowly acknowledged and acted on inflation. At the same time, the Fed has been aggressive in its inflation fight. Unless the ECB takes on a more aggressive monetary policy, the euro-dollar will likely continue lower.

A severe recession in Europe might not cause a recession in the US, but it certainly would depress the earnings of many US corporations… It would strengthen the US dollar further, which would also depress earnings of US companies with sales in Europe” -Ed Yardeni

euro-dollar parity

What To Watch Today

Economy

  • MBA mortgage applications
  • Durable goods orders, July (+0.8% expected, +2% previously)
  • Durable goods orders excluding transportation, July (+0.2% expected; +0.4% previously)
  • Pending home sales, July (-2% expected, -8.6% previously)

Earnings

Market Trading Update

In yesterday’s 3-Minutes On Markets & Money, I suggested that the early morning strength in the market was not likely to last and that the markets could trade lower by the day’s end. One of the overriding issues currently is the confirmed MACD crossover which suggests the markets could be under some selling pressure heading into Powell’s Jackson Hole Conference. The 100-dma provides the most significant support near term at roughly 4100. A failure there, and as noted yesterday, the 50-dma becomes critical.

With respect to the 50-dma, that moving average has turned from a negative to positive trend slope, which is historically bullish. The market has reached very slight oversold conditions, so a rally today will not be surprising. However, it should most likely be sold for the time being. Be patient and wait for the next buy signal to increase exposures significantly.

market trading update.

Flash PMI Points to Economic Contraction

The PMI Composite Flash is a preliminary reading of the coming PMI Manufacturing and Service surveys. The flash data is released ten days prior to the official release and contains approximately 85% of the survey results. As we share below, the initial index is well below consensus and the prior month’s reading. Manufacturing slipped slightly, but it appears the services sector is much more pessimistic about their respective economic outlooks. As we show in the second graph, the PMI survey has a strong correlation with economic activity. Readings below 40 are often accompanied by recessions.

flash pmi
pmi vs gdp

Two for the Bulls and Two for the Bears

The graph below, courtesy of Nautilus, shows four analogs with robust statistical correlation. If the bullish analogs hold, we would get a second dip to recent lows and then a ramp higher. Conversely, if the recent downdraft continues past the June lows, we may want to brace for a much larger bear market.

bull bear analogs

Natural Gas Prices Are Surging Worldwide

The price of natural gas in the U.S. topped $10, the highest level since 2008. Of more concern, natural gas prices are surging in Europe due to the Russia/Ukraine conflict. The first graph shows Germans are now paying over $50usd/MMBtu for Russian natural gas. That compares to a range of $4 to $8 before the invasion. Per Reuters, Russian natural gas accounts for about a third of Germany’s imported gas. If you priced electricity like oil, German electricity is expected to cost over $1,000 per barrel, as we share in the second graph.

The rising costs coupled with soon-to-be increasing winter demand may force some of the world’s largest chemical manufacturers to limit production this winter. Such an action would undoubtedly increase chemical prices globally. Today’s Tweet of the Day, shows the crippling rise of electricity prices for each European nation.

german natural gas prices
germany power costs

Tweet of the Day

europe natural gas power electricity

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