Ok, here comes CPI.
This is the headline data point this week and it comes as 10Y yields are looking to move sustainably above 3% and as the dollar is looking to extend a rally that's now in its fourth week.
Last Friday, payrolls and AHE missed, but the dollar's brief dip on the data was quickly bought, perhaps underscoring how difficult it's going to be to put the brakes on the greenback short squeeze. Here's BofAML:
This week, market focus will turn to U.S. CPI. Our economists expect another 0.2% m/m core CPI print on Thursday morning, unchanged from March. They anticipate core goods will see another slight decline, weighed down by apparel and autos. Though they look for positive prints in education and communication services. This should bring y/y core CPI up to 2.2% from 2.1% in March. PPI is also released this week, and we expect core to edge down slightly to 0.2% m/m.
“We estimate a 0.19% increase in April core CPI (mom sa), which would boost the year-over-year rate a tenth to 2.2% on a rounded basis, reflecting a slight pullback in apparel prices,” Goldman writes, while BNP notes that “expectations for April's CPI report sync with the FOMC's increasing confidence on the inflation outlook.” And that syncs with the market's perception that a total of four hikes is possible in 2018, which in turn is what's weighing heavily on EM sentiment.
You're also reminded that breakevens are slavishly following crude around and there's a chance that we end up in a self-feeding loop wherein higher crude drives inflation expectations higher and the Fed, spooked by that, is seen as being more aggressive, driving up real yields and further supporting the dollar.
Without further ado, it's a miss, perhaps providing some relief to those concerned about another inflation scare and a Fed that gets pigeonholed into more hikes thanks the combination of late-cycle dynamics and ill-timed fiscal stimulus.