Trade Dispute Still Key For Sentiment With Traders Cautious

 | Sep 23, 2019 12:20

Market Overview

Risk appetite took a knock on Friday as everyone’s perception of the recent upswing in the cycle of the trade dispute was given a shot across the bows. The playbook of the trade dispute has been that the two sides exchange pleasantries in the run up to face to face talks. China has deviated slightly from this path, in pulling of some scheduled visits to US farms in Montana. This could be a sign that perhaps China and the US are not all that close to an agreement. Subsequently, risk appetite has come under renewed negative pressure. Treasury yields lower, gold and the yen strengthening, whilst the Aussie was hit and Wall Street also slipped.

It was interesting to see China looking to calm the waters again over the weekend by claiming that “constructive” talks were held between trade deputies of the two countries. However, this should serve as a warning that complacency in the run up to planned October meetings between top level trade delegates. Just like a feral pet, it always has the ability to turn when least expected. There is an air of caution this morning across markets. Traders appear wary with cautious positivity, but they have been warned.

Wall Street closed lower into Friday’s close (S&P 500 -0.5% at 2992) but a rebound on US futures of +0.4% early today hints at a bounce back. With the Nikkei closed for a Japanese public holiday, Asian markets were mixed to slightly weaker (Shanghai Composite -1.4%). European markets are also mixed in early moves, with FTSE futures +0.1% and DAX Futures -0.2%. In forex, the majors are showing mixed performance against USD, with AUD and NZD rebounding slightly after recent weakness, whilst JPY is the main underperformer.

In commodities, the mild pick up in risk is hitting gold back by -0.1% and silver is rebounding well over a percent higher. Oil is starting the week on solid ground over a percent higher.

The flash PMIs for September are the big focus on the economic calendar today. The early European session is packed with French and German data, with the Eurozone wide data released at 0900BST. Eurozone flash Manufacturing PMI is expected to show signs of mild improvement but still at a contractionary 47.5 (from a final 47.0 in August). The Eurozone flash Services PMI is expected to slip back to 53.3 (from a final 53.5 last month), which should mean little real change to the composite number which was at 51.9 last month.

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Into the US session, the US Flash Manufacturing PMI is at 14:45 BST and is expected to drop back to a hair’s breadth in expansion at 50.1 in September (down from 50.3 in August). The US flash Services PMI is expected to improve to 51.2 (up from 50.7 last month) which should help to improve on the rather tepid 50.7 composite PMI reading from August.

Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

There has been an ebb and flow of performance on Aussie/Yen and now it seems that Australian dollar underperformance is coming to the fore again. This comes as AUD/JPY has swung lower and is now posting a series of sell signals just as a key band of support is tested. The old breakout band between 72.40/72.90 is under pressure. Two successive strong negative candles means that the bears come into the new week in the ascendency and a sense of rallies being a struggle. Subsequently, how the market responds to this morning’s early rebound could be key. Daily momentum indicators are now gathering pace, with a confirmed Stochastics sell signal, whilst MACD lines are close to joining them and RSI is accelerating lower. Furthermore, hourly indicators are also negatively configured. This all suggests that rallies are now a chance to sell. The hourly chart shows resistance 73.15/73.50. A closing breach of 72.40 would reopen the next support at 71.20 and the key August low at 69.97.