Oil Gains Driving Equities Higher As Dollar Sags

 | Nov 22, 2017 09:47

Market Overview

Oil prices are pulling higher again ahead of the OPEC meeting next week which is expected to see OPEC and Non-OPEC countries (driven mainly by Russia) look to push for an extension to production cuts. Coming with the API announcing a larger than expected drawdown in US oil stocks, suddenly the recent highs on oil are back in range. This jumped has helped to support improved sentiment which along with recent positive US economic data has driven equity markets to rise once again. However there is a confusing factor for markets to consider as longer dated US yields stubbornly refuse to take part, and the dollar is being impacted.

Tax reform is increasingly crucial to the shape of the US yield curve and despite President Trump insisting that there would be a tax cut in time for Christmas. Bond traders seemingly either disagree or just don’t care. With markets increasingly pricing in shorter term rate moves by the Fed and factoring for increased shorter dated issuance by the Treasury, the yield curve continues to flatten at a significant rate. This is hampering the dollar which remains subdued ahead of the Fed minutes tonight. Sterling is in focus on Budget Day in the UK.

Wall Street closed at all-time highs yesterday with the S&P 500 +0.7% at 2599, whilst Asian markets were also positive overnight (Nikkei +0.5%). European indices are subsequently starting the day on a positive note again.

In forex, the weaker dollar is still evident, with the greenback underperforming across the majors with the mild exception of the Aussie.

In commodities, gold is again supported by a weaker dollar, whilst oil has been boosted once more in early trading, with WTI hitting multi-year highs again.

With Thanksgiving in the US on Thursday this is a packed day of data to get through for traders. After a quiet European morning, the UK Annual Budget is announced at 12:30 GMT. This is a speech that goes on a while and will contain fiscal changes, spending pledges and economic forecasts. Sterling could be choppy throughout.

US data kicks off at 13:30 GMT with the Durable Goods Orders which is expected to show the ex-transport, or core data, rising by +0.5% for the month (down from +0.7% last month).

The weekly jobless claims are also at 13:30 GMT and are expected to be 240,000 slightly better than last week’s 249,000. The revised reading of Michigan Sentiment is at 15:00 GMT and is expected to be slightly upwardly revised to 98.0 (from 97.8 at the flash reading).

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Weekly EIA oil inventories are at 15:30 GMT, with crude oil stocks expected to drawdown by -2.2m (after a second week of inventory build last week of +1.9m barrels), distillates are expected to also drawdown by -1.9m (-0.8m last week) and gasoline stocks are expected to build slightly by +1.0m barrels (+0.9m barrels last week). Finally the market also gets a look at the FOMC minutes for the November meeting at 19:00 GMT, with traders keeping an eye on the prospects for future rate hikes in 2018.

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

The euro rally has stuttered in recent days and is now threatening a correction against the Kiwi. The market has been in an uptrend channel in recent months but has posted a high at the top of the channel of 1.7410 and now is closing in on a near term top. Calling a top within an uptrend channel before it happens is always speculative but the two strongly negative candles suggests that the pressure is growing now. The Stochastics have posted a sell signal similar to the two from October, but still needs confirmation. That is why waiting for a break below the support at 1.7115 would be key. This would complete a 290 pip top pattern and imply another retreat within the trend channel towards 1.6825. The hourly chart is already reflecting the deterioration with a seven day uptrend broken, the RSI failing at 60 today, whilst the MACD lines failed under neutral and the hourly moving averages are turning lower in bearish sequence. There is a band of support 1.7115/1.7150 but after 1.7060 there is little real support until 1.6900. A close below 1.7115 would confirm the breakdown.