Sterling Gains Strongly On Apparent Brexit Breakthrough

 | Nov 29, 2017 10:23

Market Overview

Sterling has shot higher after finally there seems to be some signs of potential agreement over the UK/EU negotiations on Brexit. The contentious divorce bill looks close to being agreed now with the UK increasing their offer to €50bn. Sterling has been very reactive to the prospects of a hard or soft Brexit and signs of positivity have been supportive once more.

After a corrective move in the past few weeks, could it be that the dollar is on the brink of another turnaround in fortunes? The strong economic data continues to flow, with Consumer Confidence yesterday storming to a 17 year high, backed up by extremely encouraging Richmond Fed manufacturing data too. Focus will be on the second reading of Q3 growth today, with an upward revision expected too. Jerome Powell’s first public grilling also seemed to reflect a steady hand on the monetary policy tiller whilst equity market bulls were also cheered to see his views on regulation of the banks suggest a lighter touch than current Fed chair Yellen. However the game changer this week is still likely to be tax reform, and there was good news there too.

The Senate Budget Committee passed through the tax reform bill last night to pave the way for debate on the floor of the Senate this week and possibly a vote as early as Thursday. This move does not guarantee a successful vote by any means but now gives Senate Republicans a huge decision to make. It was interesting though that despite a significant jump on Wall Street on the news of tax reform, there was little real move on Treasury yields. In fact the yield curve continues to flatten, suggesting that there is either still concern over tax reform passing, or over the potential for the bill to be a game changer at all. There has though been a rebound in the dollar, which has pulled higher against the euro and the yen. However, the reaction back lower this morning would suggest real progress has yet to be seen, for the currency markets anyway. We will have to wait some more for the dollar rally to take hold, it would seem.

Wall Street closed sharply higher on the news of progress on tax reform, with the S&P 500 over 1% higher. Asian markets have been a little less bullish though, with a more mixed look and the Nikkei +0.5% higher. European markets are mixed, with gains on the DAX, whilst FTSE 100 is suffering from the strength of sterling.

In forex markets, the dollar is giving back some of yesterday’s gains, whilst sterling remains strong.

For commodities, gold is consolidating with the news of another North Korean missile launch sure to help sustain the safe haven demand. Oil is consolidating ahead of OPEC.

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With regards to economic data, the main focus will be on the second look at US third quarter growth today. However, first up we look at Germany inflation which is released throughout the morning at a state level with the countrywide reading at 13:00 GMT. Consensus expects German HICP to pick up slightly to +1.7% from +1.5% last month. US Q3 GDP (Prelim) is at 1330GMT and is expected to show an upward revision to 3.3% (from the Advance reading of +3.0%). This should confirm that US growth is chugging along very nicely now.

Pending Home Sales are at 15:00 GMT and are expected to improve by +1.1% on the month having been flat last month. The EIA oil inventories are at 15:30 GMT and are expected to show crude stocks drawdown by -3.1m barrels (-1.9m last week), distillates flat (+0.3m barrels last week) and gasoline stocks building by +1.4m barrels (last week +0.1m).

Aside from the data releases, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney is speaking at 14:00 GMT whilst outgoing Fed chair Janet Yellen testifies before the Joint Economic Committee at 15:00 GMT.

Chart of the Day – AUD/USD

Is the latest rally another chance to sell? Since the market began trending lower in September there has been a consistently corrective outlook forming. The support around $0.7620 had held for a few weeks towards the trend of October, however this downside break continued the move lower. Now the market has rebounded to the overhead supply of this old breakdown and the rebound is starting to roll over again. The fact that this is a confluence of resistance form the nine week downtrend adds to the potential to sell. Momentum indicators have been negatively configured to see rallies as an opportunity to sell for several weeks now but there is still a slightly mixed look to them now, with the RSI and Stochastics still trending lower, however the MACD lines have broken the downtrend. This would be a problem if the RSI also looked to break the downtrend, but for now the outlook is still negative on balance. The fact that the market has failed to close above $0.7620 on each of the occasions the resistance has been tested is interesting, whilst Monday’s high at 0.7645 also came within an old “sell zone of $0.7620/$0.7650. The hourly chart shows consolidation but the continued failure around $0.7620 is still in play. The likelihood remains for a retest of the recent low at $0.7530.