5 Things Markets Are Talking About: U.S. Dollar Falls Expect To Be Limited

 | Feb 04, 2019 11:31

h2 Monday February 4: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities hover atop of their four-month highs while the ‘big’ dollar holds firm after last Friday’s solid non-farm payroll (NFP) report and this despite inconclusive Sino-U.S trade talks stateside last week.

Trading overnight was subdued with many of the Asian markets closed for the Lunar New Year.

On the Brexit front, European Commissioner Juncker said that PM Theresa May’s bid to reopen the U.K’s divorce deal with the EU has increased the chances of a “disorderly Brexit” and that EU leaders should prepare for the worst.

The EU has offered no signs of giving any concessions to the U.K over the next few weeks. Nevertheless, PM May is still planning on going to Brussels to make her case. The EU seems set “not” to offer her anything until after the U.K has another vote on February 14th.

The next move for investors’ risk appetite will likely be dictated by ongoing U.S corporate earnings for this week.

On tap, tomorrow, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), and on Thursday, the Bank of England (BoE) will deliver their respective monetary policy announcements. Also, on Thursday, investors will also see industrial production from Germany, which has been weak, and from France and Italy both out on Friday. Elsewhere, CAD trade balance & U.S ISM non-manufacturing PMI (Feb 5), U.S advanced GDP, retail sales & NZD unemployment (Feb 6) and CAD employment (Feb 8).

Note: Beginning today, the market can expect to start getting some of the U.S data we missed from the U.S government shutdown – GDP, personal income and spending.

Finally, tomorrow evening, U.S President Donald Trump will deliver his delayed State of the Union (9pm EDT).

h2 1. Stocks see green in thin trading/h2

Global equity markets performed strongly last week after the Fed pledged to be patient with further interest rate hikes, signaling a potential end to its tightening cycle.

In Japan overnight, the Nikkei booked moderate gains (+0.5%) amid strength in commodity and brokerage stocks and overcame a slump in electronics (Sony was down -8%). Elsewhere, all but one of the 33 Topix sectors rallied overnight following Friday’s strong U.S jobs report. The broader Topix gained +1.1%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks climbed to new session highs before the close, as investors took some late positions ahead of a long-awaited report on alleged financial-sector wrongdoing. The review has pressured both financial and insurance stocks for the past 12-months, the ASX 200 rallied +0.5%.

Note: China’s financial markets are closed all week, while those in S. Korea are shut until Thursday.

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In Hong Kong, equities edged a tad higher in half-day trading overnight, on the back of mildly positive data on the Chinese economy. The Hang Seng index closed up +0.2%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index fell -0.3%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade flat to slightly higher ahead of a busy week for corporate earnings as China is closed for the lunar New Year.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.11%).

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.02% at 359.76, FTSE +0.27% at 7,039.05, DAX +0.03% at 11,184.08, CAC-40 -0.23% at 5,007.57, IBEX-35 -0.23% at 8,998.80, FTSE MIB +0.29% at 19,633.50, SMI +0.08% at 9,005.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.11%

h2 2. Oil hits 2019 high on Venezuela sanction and OPEC, gold lower/h2

Oil hit a new 2019 high in Europe this morning as OPEC-led supply cuts and U.S sanctions against Venezuela’s petroleum industry offset forecasts of weaker demand and an economic slowdown.

Brent crude hit +$63.40 a barrel, the highest since Dec. 7, and is up +49c at +$63.24. Elsewhere, U.S crude (WTI) hit a 2019 high of +$55.68 and was later up +9c at +$55.35.

Analysts note that there are currently little signs of any overhang in the market now that the U.S has imposed sanctions on Venezuela, on top of the reduced supply from Saudi Arabia.

Note: Last week, the U.S administration announced export sanctions against state-owned oil firm Petroleos de Venezuela SA (approx. +500k bpd) – this has led to some disruption for oil refineries on the Gulf coast. They have had to seek alternative heavy crude supplies from Canada.

OPEC supply fell this month by the largest amount in two-years, which has helped to offset limited compliance so far by non-OPEC Russia.

While OPEC cuts, the U.S continues willing to expand its supply. However, data on Friday showed a drop in the number of U.S oil rigs on line to their lowest in eight-months, lending temporary prices some support.