Markets Remain Under Pressure With Negative Risk Appetite

 | May 18, 2017 08:54

Market Overview

A wave of selling pressure has hit US markets with the negative risk appetite amidst the increasing concern over the implications of the latest calamity to hit Donald Trump’s White House.

Realistic discussions of impeachment are now being had and markets are rightly concerned that this is another significant spanner in the works for Trump’s legislative plans. If he struggled with healthcare reform how is he going to get through controversial plans over huge fiscal stimulus, banking reform and deregulation?

Treasury yields have tumbled, leading to significant dollar weakness. The VIX has jumped to over 15 having been below 10 a little more than a week ago. Equities have been sold off too. There is though a potential calming impact with the appointment of former FBI Director Robert Mueller as a special counsel for the Russia investigation. This seems to have driven a mild rebound in Treasury yields this morning and the dollar has stabilised. Global equities are still under pressure, but are they set for a bounce too as the bargain hunters move in?

Wall Street closed sharply down with the S&P 500 -1.8% at 2357, whilst Asian markets have also been under pressure with the Nikkei -1.3% on the significant strength of the yen. European indices are lower in early moves.

Forex markets show a degree of stability for the dollar today with the greenback performing well across the major currencies. The yen is unwinding yesterday’s gains despite Japan GDP growth for Q1 coming in better than expected with annualised growth of 2.2% (beating the 1.7% expected). One currency outperformer though is the Aussie dollar after positive Australian employment data, with falling unemployment to 5.7% (5.9% exp) but also better participation rate and increased employment.

Gold is seeing a degree of profit taking and is marginally lower, whilst oil is also slightly off.

With inflation going up and UK earnings growth falling away, the focus will certainly be on the impact on UK Retail Sales at 09:30 BST. After falling away sharply in the past few months (as inflation has started to spike higher), expectations is for ex-fuel retail sales to tick mildly lower to +2.5% (from +2.6% last month). US Weekly Jobless Claims at 13:30 BST are expected to be 240,000 (236,000 last week), whilst after the Empire State Manufacturing dropped to negative earlier in the week there will be added attention on the Philly Fed Business Index at 15:00 BST expected to only dip slightly to 19.5 (from last month’s 22.0). ECB President Mario Draghi is due to speak at 18:00 BST.

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Chart of the Day – DAX Xetra

Equities are under pressure as a sharp reversal in sentiment has kicked in. This is reflected in a deterioration in the technical as the market has peaked at 12,841. The concern is that after the opening gap lower rallied to fill the intraday gap yesterday, the bears resumed control to sell the market down into the close. The market has also now breached the near term support at 12,662. Whilst there is no obvious pattern breakdown, the market could take the strength of yesterday’s bear candle to turn corrective for the near term at least. The potential is now growing for a retracement back towards the key breakout support at 12,375.

The momentum indicators are now deteriorating with the MACD and Stochastics lines crossing lower. There is room for the RSI now to unwind back to 40/50 which is where the near term corrective moves tend to return to. The hourly cahrt shows the market is now into a more corrective mind-set on momentum, meaning that resistance in the 12,662/12,700 is a chance to sell.