Risk Appetite Improves As Bond Markets Look To Stabilise

 | Mar 26, 2019 09:42

Market Overview

With bond markets settling down, a degree of calm has begun to form. The flight into safety that arose from fear of the implications of a key part of the US Treasury yield curve inverting (the 3 month to 10 year spread went negative for the first time since 2007) has just dissipated slightly. However, there will still be keen emphasis on economic data releases out of the US, with the focus today on US Consumer Confidence.

According to Chicago Fed President Charles Evans there is just a 25% probability of a US recession, but a deterioration in consumer confidence (the consumer is around 70% of the US economy) could begin to stoke fears once more. For this morning, equities are relatively stable in support, whilst there is little real direction on forex markets (aside from a shade of improvement on risk appetite).

The calamity of Brexit took another step forward last night as the UK Parliament voted to take control away from the shambles of a Government in an attempt to find a solution to the conundrum. The next day of Parliamentary volatility is likely to be Wednesday now. The fact that over 70% of the House of Commons MPs is made up of “remainers” suggests a softer Brexit is still a likely direction. Sterling holding around $1.3200 against the dollar ($1.3000 seems to be a line in the sand for traders) would suggest so too.

Wall Street closed mixed with the S&P 500 a couple of ticks off at 2798 whilst US futures are ticking back up again by +0.2% today. Asian markets have been mixed overnight with the Nikkei +2.1% whilst the Shanghai Composite was -1.7%. European markets are showing stabilisation to follow Wall Street, with FTSE 100 Futures and DAX futures both around +0.2% higher.

In forex majors, the main mover is a slip back on the safe haven yen, whilst the euro and sterling trade around the flat line and the higher risk Aussie is ticking stronger. Better risk appetite is showing across the commodities, with gold a touch lower and oil finding its feet again.

It is a US heavy day for the economic calendar which does little until the US Building Permits for February at 12:30 GMT which are expected to drop back to 1.30m (from 1.32m in January), with US Housing Starts down to 1.21m (from 1.23m in January). The S&P Case Shiller House Price Index at 14:00 GMT is expected to drop back to 4.0% in February (from 4.2% in January). The key data point will be the Conference Board’s US Consumer Confidence at 1400GMT which is expected to improve slightly to 132.0 (131.4) which would be a four month high. The Richmond Fed Composite Index for March is at 1400GMT and is expected to drop back to +12 (from +16 in February).

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Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

Once more the range continues. This tight range between 77.50/79.80 has been in place now for ten weeks, however, on a near to medium term basis there is an increasing negative bias within the range which is putting pressure on support. The failure of the rally last week at 79.40 under 79.80 comes with a deterioration in the outlook on momentum signals. The market may have bounced from 77.50 (the range low) yesterday but the RSI fell recently below 40 to a ten week low, whilst the Stochastics are posting sell signals at lower levels (currently in decline). How the market responds now to the pivot line around 78.70 will be interesting, but as the market has rebounded another lower high between 78.70/79.40 would likely be seen as another chance to sell. The market is still positioning for increased pressure on 77.50 again and a close below would be a key outlook changer.