Focus Turns Once More On Trade Talks Between U.S.-China

 | Feb 11, 2019 08:55

Market Overview

The tone of risk appetite on major markets is likely to be set by any signals coming out of the latest round of trade talks between the US and China over the coming days. For now there is a marginal risk negative vibe, associated with the fact that President Trump does not see a meeting with President Xi before the 1st March deadline. This increases the prospect of tariffs being ramped up and the trade dispute escalating once more. A move into safe havens is subsequently underway.

Bond yields are in retreat as equities and the oil price have been sliding. The US dollar is in favour, whilst the Japanese yen and gold are holding up relatively well in consolidation patterns. Unless any positive rhetoric comes from the trade talks in Beijing this week, the negative bias on global markets could begin to gather pace. For this morning, there is a mild rebound on risk, with European markets and the commodity currencies finding a bid, but it appears unlikely that these moves will be the start of any sustainable recovery. For that, we need concrete positive steps towards a US/China agreement.

Wall Street closed mixed on Friday with the S&P 500 a shade positive +0.1% at 2708, however, US futures are ticking back lower by around -0.1% today. Asian markets are difficult to get much from today as the Nikkei is closed and China is playing catch-up after a week of Lunar New Year holiday (China Shanghai Composite +1.3%). The European session is starting on a decent note with FTSE Futures and DAX futures both around half a percent higher.

In forex, there is a mild degree of dollar strength continuing, as EUR/USD edges ever closer to range support, whilst Dollar/Yen again gravitates to 110.00.

In commodities, with the dollar gains gold looks to be ticking slightly lower, whilst oil is again around half a percent weaker.

The economic calendar is once more fairly light today, with the UK Prelim GDP for Q4 at 0930GMT being the main focus. Consensus forecasts are looking at quarterly growth of +0.3% and YoY GDP growth at +1.4% (after Q3 saw growth of +0.6% QoQ and +1.7% YoY).

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

Ahead of the RBNZ on Wednesday, could it be that Euro/Kiwi is ready to turn a corner? During the month of January (as risk appetite embarked on a broad recovery) EUR/NZD formed a downtrend channel, but this channel is now being challenged. This test comes as momentum indicators have started to throw up a series of bullish signals. The Stochastics have crossed higher and are decisively climbing at four week highs and the MACD lines are posting the first bull cross since December. This is certainly an interesting crossroads, with the RSI is back around 50. Initial resistance to watch is 1.6840 which restricted the gains last week and would be a bull signal if overcome, whilst a move above 1.6940 would open the upside for the medium to longer term pivot at 1.7115. However, although the hourly chart reflects an improvement with a move above 1.6750, this is now a near term pivot and if the market consistently trades below here as momentum indicators become less positive it could suggest a failure in the recovery. A fall below $1.6650 breakout support would be disappointing now.

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