Sterling Strong On Brexit News; Markets Look To Mid-Terms

 | Nov 05, 2018 10:25

Market Overview

Markets are likely to become increasingly cautious as the US mid-term elections come this week.

Right now there is still a legacy of Treasury yields positive/dollar strength playing out from the solid Non-farm Payrolls report that was announced on Friday, but this will not last long as the fallout from the mid-terms come ever sharper into focus. Jobs growth in the US remains strong, unemployment low and falling (at least on U6) and, most importantly, wage growth jumping to 3.1% which is a nine year high. Subsequently, we see Treasury yields back higher again (back over 3.2% on the 10-Year yield) which is dollar supportive.

All things remaining equal this should drive continued dollar strength, but there are two key factors preventing this more. One is short term, in the uncertainty of the US mid-terms, whilst the other is the ongoing uncertainty over US trade policy with China. Rhetoric over trade seems to ebb and flow, with a mildly less positive tone over the weekend pulling the reins slightly on the enthusiasm of a potential agreement.

The big mover of the day so far is sterling which has again jumped after a weekend where more press reports suggested increased potential for a Brexit deal in the offing.

As US sanctions on Iran come into force today there seems to be little real impact seen on the oil price. Oil has been falling back in recent weeks as the Iran sanctions have approached and the waivers have started to come through. Perhaps an interesting feature to watch being the WTI/Brent spread which has widened out to around $10 again.

Wall Street closed lower on Friday with the feeling that the earnings growth in the payrolls report would give the Fed a little nudge more towards a more hawkish stance, something that would be equities negative. The S&P 500 closed -0.6% lower at 2723. With US futures lower early today by around -0.2% this has pulled Asian markets lower (Nikkei -1.5%, Shanghai Composite -0.5%). European markets are mixed in early moves today.

In forex, there is very little direction on dollar pairs, whilst there has been a positive start to the week for sterling (usually Brexit related to some degree) as positive reports over a deal continue to surface.

In commodities there is a slightly negative position that has formed on gold and silver today, whilst oil is lower once more as the Iranian sanctions kick in today and eight countries are set to get a waiver.

The big focus on the economic calendar today is on the services PMI for the UK and US (Eurozone data is a day delayed due to last week’s public holidays). The UK Services PMI is at 09:30 GMT and after the big negative surprise on manufacturing data there will be added emphasis on the services data picking up the slack. The market consensus is forecasting a slip to 53.4 (from 53.9 in September).

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US data announcements are back in sync again with Europe after the Daylight Saving Time shift over the weekend, meaning that the US ISM Non-Manufacturing is at 15:00 GMT. Consensus is forecasting a mild drop back to 59.3 (from a huge 61.6).

Chart of the Day – EUR/JPY

The yen suffers when risk appetite improves. If the US administration does indeed push on with an agreement with China over trade then this should certainly help to settle many nerves that have jangled over the prospect of a US/China trade war. This would be a drag on the yen. And so it was interesting to see on Friday the chart of EUR/JPY breaking a corrective downtrend of the past month and starting to take on an improved outlook on momentum configuration. This comes with the Stochastics tracking higher and MACD lines close to a bull cross. The RSI and Stochastics are now back around neutral medium term configuration and need to push through in order for this outlook of recovery to really take hold. There could be a choppy road to recovery for EUR/JPY in the meantime but the higher low at 127.60 above the 126.60 October low will now be seen as a near term gauge. The bulls need to push through 130.20/130.50 resistance to regain decisive upside momentum.