Brexit Agreement Close But Now Comes The Tricky Bit

 | Nov 14, 2018 11:30

Market Overview

A “technical” agreement has been reached between the UK and the EU over a Brexit withdrawal agreement. However, as calamitous hotelier Basil Faulty would have said, “piece of cake, now comes the tricky bit”. Indeed that may actually be true, as it is one thing to agree a draft deal with the EU, but it is entirely another to win over what is a deeply sceptical UK Parliament. First of all though, Prime Minister May needs to convince her own cabinet in a meeting at 1400GMT and if she can get through today with no resignations it will be taken as a positive for Gilt yields and sterling. The sticking point will be the content of the deal (which as yet is not known but may come out in a series of leaks) and what Mrs May has had to give up to obtain what is likely to be some sort of time limited backstop over Northern Ireland. For all the political posturing, Brexit is possibly the hardest political problem to solve in modern European history, at least from a UK perspective. Now we will find out whether UK politicians understand they cannot have their cake and eat it and that compromise is the only possible solution. Sterling has rallied sharply in anticipation of the deal, but volatility will be elevated in the coming hours and days on newsflow of the political wranglings. In Europe, traders still await news of the Italian budget re-submission which was due yesterday. Suggestions are that the Italians are likely to alter growth projections, but spending plans are to remain much as previous. This will open them up to renewed criticism from the European Commission. It would also drive further volatility through the euro. Chinese data was mixed overnight with China Industrial Production ahead of expectations and improving to +5.9% (+5.7% exp, +5.8% last) whilst China Retail Sales disappointed at +8.6% (+9.1% exp, +9.2% last) whilst Fixed Asset Investment was slightly better at +5.7% (+5.5% exp, +5.4% last).

Wall Street closed a choppy session lower with the S&P 500 -0.1% at 2722 whilst the futures are a tick higher today. In Asia there was a mixed picture with the Nikkei +0.1% but the Shanghai Composite -0.8%. European futures are following the Wall Street lead and are slightly lower in early moves. In forex, there is a broadly mixed outlook forming on major pairs, with sterling edging higher again (but likely to remain nervous) but little other movers aside from some continued strong performance on the Kiwi. In commodities, gold continues to flirt with $1200 whilst oil is once again lower, as WTI falls early today conceivably for a thirteenth session in a row.

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Inflation is the name of the game for traders looking at the economic calendar today as the UK and UK release CPI numbers, although there is also a sprinkling of Eurozone growth for good measure. UK CPI is at 0930GMT and the market is expecting headline CPI to tick back higher a shade to +2.5% (from +2.4% in September) but core CPI is expected to remain steady at +1.9% (+1.9% in September). It is also worth watching the PPI Input Prices which reflect the impact of sterling on inflation further down the line, which is expected to drop back to +9.6% (form +10.3%). The preliminary reading of Eurozone Q3 GDP is at 1000GMT and is expected to dip to +0.2% on the quarter with the year on year number back to +1.7% (from +2.2%). US CPI is at1330GMT and is expected to increase to +2.5% (from +2.3% in September) whilst the core CPI is expected to remain flat at +2.2% (+2.2% in September).

Chart of the Day – USD/CAD

Dollar strength has been a trend through the major pairs. Even though the dollar suffered a corrective across the majors yesterday, the Canadian dollar still looks relatively weak. As the oil price continues to plunge, USD/CAD remains bullish and is a buy into weakness. Yesterday’s breakout above 1.3225 was the latest move through resistance to take it to a four month high. However it is the strength on momentum indicators which is the most interesting feature of the chart, with the RSI at its strongest since June and leading the price higher. The breakout has opened the July high at 1.3290 as the next test but the market is positioning for a move to 1.3385. The question on traders’ minds is whether to chase this run higher (for fear of a sharp technical rally on oil and dollar correction). With the uptrend of the past six weeks coming in at 1.3120 today and there is now a support band 1.3175/1.3225 as a near term buy zone into a corrective move. Key support is back at 1.3045.