U.S Dollar Moves Exaggerated In Twilight Zone Hand-Over

 | Jan 04, 2019 05:24

Thursday January 3: Five things the markets are talking about

The U.S dollar fell aggressively on Wednesday evening (17:30 pm EDT), causing a brief currency crash in the U.S/Asian desk handover, on risk aversion rising due to falling equities in the U.S and after Apple’s warning that sales in China have been weak.

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) cut its Q1 guidance for the first time in 20-years, citing an unforeseen slowdown in China and fewer upgrades to its flagship mobile device.

Coupled with weaker Chinese manufacturing data this week, Trump’s U.S protectionist confrontation is starting to have an impact on economic activity, and this despite U.S President implying, via rhetoric and social media, that a Sino-U.S trade deal is within grasp.

The dollar fell outright versus the safe-haven yen to a nine-month low of ¥104.79 and is last trading down by -0.8% at ¥107.73. EUR/USD is up by +0.2% at €1.1370.

The lack of market liquidity – Tokyo has been on holiday all week and does not return until this evening – and some assertive short-yen positioning, has helped to push some aggressive currency moves in what is know as the ‘twilight zone,’ as trading shifted from the North American session to the open of the Australasian markets. Also, various algorithmic programs exacerbated the moves.

Elsewhere, U.S Treasuries trade steady, while most Euro sovereign bonds have climbed. WTI crude futures have again slipped as it reversed some recent gains on the back of Saudis’ lowering exports. Gold prices have rallied.

On tap: PM Theresa May will today meet with EC President Tusk, German Chancellor Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Rutte. She is reportedly hoping to win concessions on the Irish border backstop.

1. Apple earnings warning rocks global shares

Asian and Euro equities have fallen sharply, led by a sell-off in the tech sector, and U.S stock futures point to a weaker open on Wall Street this morning, after Apple cut its revenue forecast, its first downgrade in nearly a dozen years, citing weaker iPhone sales in China.

Note: In Japan, the Nikkei was closed in observance of the four-day Bank Holiday.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed +1.4% higher overnight as a ‘flash crash’ in the AUD (AUD/JPY fell -8% at one point) boosted the appeal of export-oriented stocks, with gold stocks topping the gains. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index fell to a two-month low, down -0.81%, on Apples Q1 forecast news.

In China and Hong Kong, regional bourses falter as economic concerns take over. The Shanghai Composite index ended nearly flat, while the blue-chip CSI300 index fell -0.2%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index edged down -0.3%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index closed flat.

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In Europe, regional indices are trading mostly lower across the board with the tech sector in focus following Apples cut in Q1 revenue forecasts for iPhone sales in China.

U.S stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-1.65%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.69% at 334.50, FTSE -0.50% at 8,410.50, DAX -1.06% at 10,468.56, CAC-40 -1.02% at 4,641.50, IBEX-35 -0.39% at 8,517.00, FTSE MIB -0.81% at 18,182.50, SMI -0.20% at 8,410.50, S&P 500 Futures -1.68%