Tax Reform Concerns Hit The Dollar; Brexit Focus For Sterling

 | Nov 09, 2017 12:46

Market Overview

Markets have moved into a fairly quiet stage of trading. With little real move on Wall Street, equities are drifting to an extent. However with the lack of tier one economic data, markets are focusing on political developments.

Focus is on US tax reform which is a drag for the US dollar, whilst sterling traders will be looking towards Brexit negotiations for a steer. The outlook for and progress of tax reform is an issue for traders which is just stemming the positive moves on the dollar. With traders questioning the longer term implications of the political struggles in Congress for tax reform, the US yield curve continues to flatten. With the Fed pushing ahead on short term interest rate hikes, shorter dated yields are climbing, but the same could not be said for the longer end which continues to struggle. This is hampering the advance of the dollar, which is broadly weaker in early moves today.

Traders will also be keeping an eye on developments in the latest round of Brexit negotiations between the UK’s David Davies and the EU’s Michel Barnier. Leaks and announcements will be a key driver of sterling in the coming days.

Overnight we saw Chinese inflation coming in slightly ahead of expectation with CPI improving to +1.9% (+1.8% YoY exp, +1.6% last), and PPI up to +6.9% (+6.6% exp, +6.9% last).

Wall Street saw a tepid close last night with the Dow just 6 points higher (yet another all-time high) and the S&P 500 +0.1% higher at 2594. Asian markets have been choppy, with the Nikkei closing -0.2% lower having been more than 2% higher and over 1% lower at stages during the session. European markets are mildly cautious in early moves.

The forex majors show the dollar under mild corrective pressure across the pairs, with sterling and the yen performing relatively well. The Kiwi is consolidating after decent gains last night on the RBNZ holding rates steady with a slight hawkish tilt.

In commodities the weaker dollar is helping gold higher by $3 (or c. +0.3%) whilst silver is around +0.7%. Oil is mildly higher, settling down after yesterday’s surprise EIA crude inventory build.

Once more it is a quiet day for economic announcements, with little of any note in the European morning session. As the US comes on line, the US Weekly Jobless Claims are at 13:30 GMT which are expected to tick slightly higher to 232,000 (up from 229,000), and is broadly the limit of the important US data. The SNB’s chairman Thomas Jordan speaks at 16:30 GMT and subsequently the Swissy may be impacted by this.

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Chart of the Day – EUR/JPY

Is Euro/Yen finally ready to break down? After several weeks of ranging in a 280 pip band between the support of an old breakout at 131.70 and resistance formed at 134.50, the creaking support seems to be close to a decisive breach. After Monday’s bearish engulfing candle left resistance at a lower high of 133.10, yesterday’s intraday breach of the 131.70 support has seen a multi-week intraday low posted. This shows the bears are increasingly testing the waters for a sell-off now. This comes with the RSI consistently now around 45 (the range lows) whilst the MACD lines and Stochastics are both in decline too. Notably also the market has been supported by the rising 55 day moving average (currently 132.19) since August but the market is now closing below this basis of support. The downside pressure is growing and another bearish candle today could seal the breakdown. The hourly chart shows lower highs and negative configuration on hourly momentum now meaning the rallies are increasingly being sold into now. The hourly chart shows resistance at 132.15/132.40 initially being a chance to sell now. A closing break below 131.70 completes the top pattern and implies 280 pips of downside in the coming weeks. Subsequent support is initially at 130.60 and then 129.35.