Major Markets Lacking Direction, Await Real Traction On Trade Talks

 | Feb 22, 2019 11:08

Market Overview

Markets have become somewhat marooned in recent sessions as traders are in wait and see mode for decisive progress to come out of the trade negotiations between the US and China.

The dollar has stabilised in the wake of the Fed minutes on Wednesday, but there is a lack of decisive direction to be taken out of recent data points, something which may now continue until next week’s Advance GDP.

In the meantime, the clock ticks down on the trade negotiations. Donald Trump is meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He today with a suggestion that there is traction being made. However, given that this has been the line for a few days now, this is something that markets seem to be priced for. Maybe there needs to be something more substantial for the trade story to decisively move the needle now.

There may also be some attention given to the swathe of Fed speakers today (four in total) who are all voters on the FOMC and could add something to the outlook for monetary policy. Something to give markets direction would be at least interesting.

Wall Street slipped back a touch last night with the S&P 500 -0.3% at 2775, with US futures a tick or two higher today. Asian markets were mixed this morning, with the Nikkei -0.2% and the Shanghai Composite +1.9%. European markets are also a touch mixed, with FTSE futures +0.2% whilst DAX futures are -0.1%.

In forex, there is a lack of any real direction, with the dollar mixed, euro a touch higher, sterling a touch lower and the Aussie recovery some of yesterday’s lost ground.

Commodities are also lacking real direction, with gold stabilising after yesterday’s corrective move and oil also holding ground once more.

On the calendar there is a big focus on Eurozone data this morning, with the German Ifo Business Climate being key as it is a lead indicator for German growth and by extension a key factor for the Eurozone. The release is at 09:00 GMT and is expected to continue to fall but by the slightest amount to 99.0 (from 99.1 in January), although this would still be a three year low and be a sixth consecutive month of decline.

The final reading of January Eurozone inflation is at 10:00 GMT with headline HICP expected to remain at +1.4% (+1.4% in December) with core Eurozone HICP expected to remain at +1.1% (from +1.1% in December).

There is also a clutch of Fed speakers today with John Williams (NYSE:WMB) at 15:15 GMT (voter, centrist), vice chair Richard Clarida at 17:00 GMT (voter, centrist), James Bullard at 18:30 GMT (voter, leans dovish) and Randall Quarles also at 18:30 GMT (voter, leans hawkish).

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It is also worth watching out for ECB President Mario Draghi who is speaking at 15:30 GMT.

Chart of the Day – EUR/JPY

The pair has been stuck in a sideways range for the past six weeks, however, the range is now set to test some key medium to longer term technicals. The market has been trending lower since the market turned down from 133.15 in October, and this trend is now coming under pressure (falling today at 125.75) as the market consolidates under Wednesday’s high of125.95 (which is also the early February resistance). This comes as the MACD lines unwind to neutral and the RSI is again in the id-50s (where the November and December rallies failed. Add to this, the resistance of the falling 55 day moving average (currently at 125.50) which also capped the November and December rallies. This all means that the market is at a key medium term crossroads. A Closing breakout above 126.00 would suddenly pull the market into a far more positive configuration, opening the recovery for a move towards the next pivot band 127.10/127.50. The hourly chart shows a band of near term support around 125.25/125.40 that is being built upon whilst a move below 124.80 would abort the move higher.