AMERICAS OIL: Natural Gas Deliveries to US LNG Export Terminals Increase: BNEF

Feb-12 12:54

Natural Gas Deliveries to US LNG Export Terminals Increase: BNEF 

  • Total US Nat gas deliveries to liquefaction facilities rose today to 15.21 bcf/d from 15.11 bcf/d yesterday per the Bloomberg LNG Feedgas Model. The 30-day moving average is 13.95 bcf/d.
  • Deliveries to the Sabine Pass rose to 4.75 bcf/d from 4.68 bcf/d yesterday. The 30-day moving average is 4.79 bcf/d.
  • Deliveries to Cameron fell to 2.22 bcf/d from 2.24 bcf/d. The 30-day moving average is 2.17 bcf/d.
  • Deliveries to Freeport rose to 2.03 bcf/d from 2.02 bcf/d. The 30-day moving average is 1.66 bcf/d.

Historical bullets

BONDS: Some unwind off the earlier lows

Jan-13 12:54
  • Some unwind off the lows in Bonds futures throughout the early European and into the US session.
  • Both Yields noted for Germany and the US Tnotes have held today, this equated to 130.50 support in Bund and 107.04+ for US TYH5.
  • There's a notable pick up in Volume on the way back up, but nothing fast, more of a gradual move.
  • All order flow related, TYA was bought in 6k, FVA 3k, USA 2k, and on this side of the Pond, BTP in 3k, and Gilt 1k.
  • Resistance in Bund moves down to 131.37 initially.

UK: PM-Gov't To Stick To Fiscal Rules; Won't Explicitly Back CX To Stay @ No.11

Jan-13 12:48

Answering questions from reporters following a speech on AI, PM Sir Keir Starmer speaks on both the gov'ts commitment to fiscal rules, and his Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves. 

  • Robert Peston at ITV posts on X: "Starmer tells me - when I point out that the rise in interest rates paid by government means it has run out of money on the basis of the Chancellor’s fiscal rules - “we are going to stick to the fiscal rules”.
  • Christopher Hope at GB News posts on X: "Me for GBNEWS: “Yes or no - will Rachel Reeves be chancellor at the next general election?” PM Sir Keir Starmer declines to answer me directly, saying that he has “full confidence in my team”. The he says to the same question from [The Times'] Max Kendix: “Rachel Reeves has my full confidence and the confidence of the entire party.” He adds “I am 100pc confident that we we will get the growth we need.”
  • Amid the ongoing jitters surrounding the state of UK gov't finances, the lack of explicit backing for the chancellor to remain in place for the entire parliament will garner attention. As Jason Groves at the Daily Mail notes, "For reference, Starmer has previously said David Lammy will remain as Foreign Sec for the whole parliament."

CANADA: Analysts Not Deterred By Strong Canadian Jobs Report

Jan-13 12:47

As opposed to multiple analyst Fed view changes following Friday's payrolls report, a strong Canadian jobs report released simultaneously hasn't drawn the same response. There remain various views for terminal rates of 2.25% (bottom of BoC's 2.25-3.25% neutral estimates) or possibly below, in contrast to the market where OIS currently points to only 42bp of cuts to 2.86% in 2025. 

  • BMO: "The solid job gains will prompt some meaningful doubt on whether the Bank of Canada will cut again in January following the hyper aggressive 100 bps of cuts in Q4. The fact that the Fed looks to move to the sidelines for a spell, and the Canadian dollar is struggling mightily may also chill the BoC for now."
  • CIBC: "With rates still above the mid-point of the neutral range, unemployment elevated relative to a year ago, and huge uncertainty emanating from the threat of US tariffs, we continue to forecast a 25bp reduction at the January meeting and a 2.25% trough for the overnight rate later this year."
  • Desjardins: "We remain of the view that the Bank will cut the overnight policy rate by another 25 basis points later this month, then take a break in March. After that, it should continue a gradual pace of rate cuts through the rest of the year." 
  • GS: "While today's data was firm on net, we continue to expect four 25bp cuts for a 2.25% terminal rate by mid-year."
  • JPM: "We still look for another 25bp rate cut by the BoC later this month, but risks have shifted from continuing with 50bp moves to potentially pausing."
  • National: " Given these many uncertainties and the BoC's desire to create conditions conducive to above-potential growth (and a stabilization of the labour market), we continue to believe that the BoC will have to cut its policy rate to the lower end of its neutral range (between 2.25% and 3.25%) by the summer. This assumes that today's report is not the new norm for the Canadian labour market." 
  • RBC: "We continue to expect that ultimately the BoC will need to cut the overnight rate to slightly 'stimulative' levels this year - below the 2.25% to 3.25% the BoC currently estimates as the likely range for the current neutral rate.
  • Scotia: "If it were only up to jobs, the BoC would be on the sidelines but more important information lies ahead on tariffs and Canada’s response."
  • TD: "Today's report has shifted the discussion around the January BoC decision, but we do not believe it will keep the Bank from cutting another 25bps to 3.00%. The unemployment rate is still sitting well above NAIRU, and the 6m employment trend continues to lag reported population growth. The path from January onwards looks more uncertain with stronger momentum entering 2025, but with global trade risks set to intensify over the coming months we continue to look for the BoC to end the cycle below neutral."