UK Stocks And GBP On Track For Another Weekly Gain

 | Sep 13, 2019 11:36

Compared to last week, the current one has been less eventful on the Brexit front, with UK assets stabilising as the heightened drama subsides a little - at least for the time being.

The pound is the best performing G10 currency once more, making the largest gains against the Japanese yen, and with talk of a possible compromise on the backstop that would cover just Northern Ireland the prospects of an agreement are improving slightly once more. The FTSE is also set for another weekly gain, with the leading UK benchmark looking to make it 3 in a row. The mining sector has been one of the main contributors to the gains, with Glencore (LON:GLEN) and Antofagasta (LON:ANTO) both rising as positive news on the US-China trade front has boosted sentiment.

Picking the bones out the ECB announcement

Thursday’s ECB meeting was one of the most eagerly anticipated events of the year and it didn’t fail to deliver with volatile moves seen across several asset classes. The central bank unveiled a large-scale stimulus package that was broadly in keeping with market expectations - while the size of the QE at €20B/month was less than expected this was more than offset by the term being described as indefinite, after most had expected a fixed programme of 9-12 months - and the initial reaction was what one would expect after another “Draghi bazooka”, as stocks and bonds soared while the euro tumbled. However, these moves reversed during the Draghi press conference 45 minutes after the initial announcement and while this could be attributed to a simple buy-the-fact-sell-the-rumour type of move there were 3 points from the presser which could be attributed to causing the reversal.

Firstly, Draghi was decidedly vague when asked during the Q&A session whether the decision was unanimous, with his reluctance to state that it was seen by many as an admittance that the package wasn’t supported by all the Governing Council (GC). When pressed on the unanimity of the decision, Draghi also revealed a second point by stating that one thing the GC were unanimous on was the need for a fiscal stimulus package to support the newly announced monetary one.

ECB members have hinted at this several times before but this is the most explicit statement yet on this front and could be seen to ramp up the pressure to act. This sort of package would be clearly positive for growth and bond yields began to recover, leading to a recovery in the euro.