The Glass Becomes Half Empty But Is It Just A Knee-Jerk Move?

 | Jan 21, 2020 08:10

Market Overview

With the US taking a day off yesterday, suddenly the glass has gone from being half full to being half empty this morning. Looking around, the dark clouds have gathered and trading outlook has taken on an increased edge of risk aversion. Ratings agency Moody’s has cut the outlook for Hong Kong, whilst the IMF has cut its forecast for global economic growth which it sees as remaining “sluggish”. Add in the coronavirus that is spreading through China that is being talked of in the same breath as the SARS outbreak of 2002 and we have a risk outlook in retreat this morning.

This is driving bond yields lower (US 10-Year yield off almost -5 basis points from Friday’s close), whilst the starkest move to reflect risk aversion has been a sharp move higher on the Dollar/Yuan rate above 6.9000 again. Add in a stronger yen, a mini breakout on gold and equities dropping back and there is pretty much the full set. Quite how far traders take this is another matter though. Reaction to the Moody’s downgrade and IMF forecast is more likely to be knee jerk and short term. This seems to be a fly in the ointment rather than a broader malaise setting in this morning.

The potential fallout for China of the coronavirus though is as yet unknown. Back in Europe, eyes on the German ZEW this morning for the outlook of the Eurozone’s major economy.

Wall Street was shut for Martin Luther King Day yesterday but futures have resumed around -0.4% lower today. This has dragged Asian markets lower, with Nikkei -0.9% and Shanghai Composite -1.4%. In Europe, the reaction is equally negative, following US futures, with FTSE futures -0.4% and DAX futures -0.6%.

In forex, the main mover is JPY recovering lower ground, with the commodity currencies (AUD, NZD and CAD) underperforming by around -0.2%.

In commodities, gold looked to be breaking higher, but is just paring those earlier gains, whilst oil is approaching -1.0% lower.

There is a European focus to the announcements on the economic calendar today. The UK Unemployment numbers for November are out at 09;30 GMT and are expected to show the headline rate sticking again at 3.8% (3.8% in October). UK Average Weekly Earnings are expected to slip slightly to +3.1% (from +3.2% in October).

The German ZEW Economic Sentiment for January is at 10:00 GMT and is expected to show an improvement to +15.0 (from +10.7 in December), which would be the highest since March 2018. Furthermore, the whilst the German ZEW Current Conditions component is expected to improve to -13.5 (from -19.9 in December) which would be a third consecutive month of improvement and the first time this has happened since the end of 2017.

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Chart of the Day – GBP/AUD

The latest drop back to $1.2900/$1.3000 on Cable has sterling bulls having their control questioned. However, that is not the only sterling cross which is at a key crossroads as Sterling/Aussie has also been at a key level in recent sessions. For the past six months, sterling has been building a very well-defined uptrend, which has been used on several occasions as a basis of support. In recent weeks, this trendline has again come back in as support for sterling weakness. However, now as a five week downtrend converges, this is a key moment. This is a key crossroads for GBP/AUD. Momentum indicators are taking on a more neutral configuration though which reflects the crossroads. The RSI has been around 40/60 over the past few weeks whilst MACD and Stochastics lines have moderated around neutral. The six month uptrend and 89 day moving average both sit around 1.8815 today and are supportive. The candlesticks have been slightly more positive in aggregate in the past week meaning that support at 1.8765 is initially key. A move above 1.9000 (last week’s rebound high) would suggest the bulls winning the battle (especially on a closing basis).