5 Things Markets Are Talking About: U.S. Dollar Under Pressure

 | Feb 13, 2019 11:44

Asian equities reached a four-month high overnight, supported by optimism that the world’s two largest economies would be capable of reaching a deal to resolve their nearly year-long trade dispute. President Trump indicated that he is open to moving the March 1 deadline to hike tariffs on Chinese products if the two sides are near an agreement.

Also aiding investor risk is the announcement of a tentative U.S congressional spending deal to avert another partial government shutdown.

In Europe, aside from trade talks, the fact that earnings growth forecasts were no longer falling in Q4, after a steep downward revision, is giving the greenlight to own some stocks.

Elsewhere, oil is extending its rebound from a two-week low after the Saudi’s pledged to deepen output cuts.

On the central bank front, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) was ‘less dovish’ than anticipated and this provided the Kiwi dollar a massive boost outright against market expectations, while Sweden’s Riksbank bank left their repo rate unchanged and maintained their rate path outlook.

And in Spain, the minority Socialist government said it plans to hold an early general election after its expected defeat in a budget vote today.

On tap: Chinese VP Liu He is to join U.S Trade Representative Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin in high-level trade talks Feb 14-15 and U.S data out this morning (08:30 am EDT) is expected to show U.S consumer prices rose +0.1% in January.

h2 1. Stocks on the move/h2

In Japan, the Nikkei rallied to trade atop of its two-month high overnight on optimism that Sino-U.S trade talks may be nearing a deal to end their trade dispute. The index surged +1.3%, the highest closing level since Dec. 17. The broader Topix gained +1.1%.

Down-under, Aussie shares fell overnight, dragged lower by drug maker CSL after posting a disappointing H1 profit rise. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.3% at the close of trade. The benchmark had rallied +0.3% yesterday. In S. Korea, stocks moved to session highs amid broader strength in Asian equities as the Kospi moved back towards its 2019 high. The benchmark rose +0.5% as memory-chip makers Samsung Electronics (LON:0593xq) climbed more than +2%, which helped to offset the -1%-plus declines in construction stocks and investment banks.

In China and Hong Kong, stocks rally after President Trump hinted at a Sino-U.S trade truce extension. The Shanghai Composite index closed +1.8% higher, a level not seen since October, while the blue-chip CSI300 index rose +2% to its highest point since late September. In Hong Kong, stocks hit their highest close in six-months. The Hang Seng index ended +1.2% firmer, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index closed +1.4% higher.

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In Europe, regional indices trade slightly higher across the board following on from a strong close stateside yesterday.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.12%).

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.28% at 363.78, FTSE +0.44% at 7,167.06, DAX +0.10% at 11,137.19, CAC-40 +0.23% at 5,067.98, IBEX-35 -0.06% at 8,978.00, FTSE MIB +0.62% at 19,928.50, SMI +0.15% at 9,134.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.12%

2. Oil gets a boost from Saudi output pledge, declining U.S stocks, gold higher

Crude oil prices have rallied overnight, after Saudi Arabia said it would cut crude exports and deliver an even deeper cut to its production, while U.S futures gained on a decline in domestic oil inventories.

Brent crude futures have rallied +88c to +$63.30 a barrel, while U.S crude oil futures gained +66c to trade at +$53.76 a barrel.

Crude has traded under pressure in recent weeks, hindered by a plethora of downside risks –
Both Sino-U.S trade tensions and geopolitical uncertainty has dented the crude “bull’s” faith in owning the stock.

However, a helping hand has come from OPEC+, who said yesterday that it had cut its output by almost -800K bpd in January to +30.81M bpd.

Note: Most of that reduction has come from the Saudi’s – Energy minister Khalid al-Falih indicated that production would fall below +10M bpd in March, more than half a million bpd below the target it agreed to as part of a global deal to limit supply.

Also, U.S restrictions on Venezuela’s energy sector have crippled their exports and threaten to remove some -330K bpd in supply from the market in 2019.

Note: Year-to-date, oil prices have risen by +20% in 2019, yet most of that increase occurred in early January, before U.S sanctions on Venezuela.

However, capping crude prices is an IEA report yesterday indicating that “output would still likely outstrip demand this year, despite OPEC’s efforts and U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela.”