Markets Cautious But Stable Amidst Rising Geopolitical Risk

 | Apr 16, 2018 09:46

With the triumvirate of the US, France and the UK looking to bomb supposed chemical weapons plants in Syria over the weekend, geopolitical tensions have increased significantly in the region. This includes tensions with Russia and Iran. Under normal circumstances, financial markets would respond by a flight to safety, whilst higher risk plays would suffer. However, whilst the true success of the sorties are yet to be determined, it seems as though the highly targeted nature of the mission has perhaps come to mitigate the impact on markets.

Early on Monday morning there has not been a huge reaction and markets look cautious but stable despite the rising geopolitical risk. There has been a degree of yen outperformance, but gold has failed to gain ground, Treasury yields are actually a shade higher, and Wall Street futures are currently signalling a positive open. A sigh of relief from traders that perhaps it could have been a lot worse? Perhaps so, but there is still plenty of time for the geopolitics to deteriorate further. This should help to support the safe havens, even if they do not shoot higher for now.

Markets look cautious and it could take a number of days for this to play out. For now the reaction has been relatively well contained, but for how long?

Wall Street was lower into the close on Friday with the S&P 500 -0.2% at 2656, but with futures pointing mildly higher in early moves today there has been a mixed session in Asia, with the Nikkei +0.3%. European markets are also cautiously higher in early moves.

In forex, there is limited reaction today with slight dollar outperformance and the yen only marginally stronger.

The mixed reaction is also seen in commodities, with gold lower by $1 whilst oil is trading just under a percent lower after the US rig count rose again on Friday.

For a Monday this is a pretty action packed start to the week for the economic calendar. Although the European morning will be quiet, the week kicks off with a bang with US Retail Sales (ex-autos) to be announced at 13:30 BST. Consensus forecasts are pencilled in for another +0.2% month on month rise (+0.2% last month). The Empire State Manufacturing (New York Fed) is also at 13:30 BST and is expected to remain strong at 19.8 although this is a mild tick lower from last month’s 22.5.

The NAHB Housing Market Index is at 14:00 BST and is expected to improve a shade to 71 (from 70 last month). Finally traders will be on the lookout for comments of the Atlanta Fed’s Raphael Bostic (voter, mild dove) who speaks at 18:15 BST.

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

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Yet another major cross to show the euro under pressure comes on Euro/Kiwi. The pair has been busy breaking long term uptrends in recent weeks but also now has broken decisively below a key near term support at 1.6745 which has been a key floor over recent months. This has opened the low of a five month trading band at 1.6520. In the past two weeks the market has been trending lower with a run of lower highs, whilst the momentum indicators confirm the breakdown. The RSI had been previously supported above 40 but has been dragging to price lower over the past week, along with the MACD and Stochastics which are falling in increasingly negative configuration now. Friday’s slightly positive candle has pulled the market back towards the two week downtrend, which is being further tested today. However, whilst the resistance at 1.6830 remains intact this will continue to be a deteriorating chart. The hourly chart shows the rebound on Friday helped to renew the downside potential and merely unwound to a resistance band 1.6800/1.6830 which is a sell-zone now. The bulls need to pull above 1.6910 to change the corrective outlook around.