Wall Street Sells Off Again To Question Buying The Dip

 | Oct 19, 2018 08:28

Market Overview

Risk appetite has deteriorated once more as a series of factors have come at the same time to dent investor confidence. However, not all has been taken negatively. From last night, questions over the viability of US equity valuations have pulled growth stocks lower in the US, leading to sharp falls on Wall Street. This suggests that blindly buying the dip may not be the correct strategy.

European political risks remain a factor, with Brexit woes hitting sterling and concerns over the Italian budget plan also having taken a further leap forward. The initial response from the European Commission being that Italy was in “particularly serious non-compliance” with the EU’s budget rules. Italy now has until Monday to justify its significant deviation from the rules. This is driving yields on Italian BTPs higher, which are stretching further in their spread over German Bund yields, putting pressure on the euro.

Furthermore, overnight Chinese GDP growth disappointed and fell to +6.5% in Q3 (+6.6% exp, +6.7% in Q2) which is the lowest in ten years. However, this is backward looking data and the market knows that China is slowing its economy within the scope of economic re-structuring.

The other key data out of China reflects the economic rebalancing of the two (nigh on) halves of the economy with the (old economy) Industrial Production missing estimates at +5.8% (+6.0% exp, +6.1% last) but (new economy) Retail Sales beat at +9.2% (+9.0% exp, +9.0% last). It is interesting to see a mixed reaction on Asian markets overnight, with the Nikkei -0.6% but China’s Shanghai Composite (arguably an indicator for risk appetite) is +1.9% higher. It is interesting to see that after the strong risk negative moves from yesterday there is a mild unwinding of this. The inference for all of this is that the risks out there remain high and the volatility of recent weeks may have settled quite yet.

Wall Street closed strongly lower (S&P 500 -1.4% at 2767) but the futures have ticked back higher again today by +0.3%. With a mixed Asian session, European markets are also looking a mixed in early moves today.

In forex, after the risk negative moves yesterday (a stronger dollar and yen outperformance), there is a mild reversal of this today, but will it last?

In commodities, the support for gold continues to build, whilst oil is also ticking a shade higher today.

It is a relatively quiet end to the week, with UK Public Sector Net Borrowing at 09:30 BST (+£4.5bn exp, which is down on the +£5.3bn borrowed in September 2017).

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Canadian inflation at 1330BST is expected to be flat in September after falling -0.1% in August, with a drop to +2.7% YoY (+2.8% in August). US data is restricted to the Existing Home Sales at 1500BST which are expected to fall by -0.7% to 5.30m (from 5.34 in August).

There are a couple of central bankers speaking today too, with the FOMC’s Raphael Bostic at 1700BST (voter, leans dovish) and the Bank of England Governor Carney (centrist) at 1710BST.

Chart of the Day – EUR/NZD

In the past couple of weeks the Kiwi has been performing relatively well on the major currency pairs. This move is now making significant ground in pulling Euro/Kiwi decisively lower (a weaker euro has certainly helped too) and back to a key medium term crossroads. Six consecutive bearish candles in a row have broken a two month uptrend as the market has corrected back for a serious test of a key long term breakout at 1.7480, which now looks to be breaking today. This support held back in late September but after a series of bear divergences on the RSI and MACD lines the momentum in a correction has grown. A closing break below 1.7480 would complete a top pattern and imply around 350 pips of further correction, a move that would bring it back towards the July/August lows. If the MACD lines were to close negative on a medium term basis (below neutral) and RSI close below 40, it would be a confirmation of a real shift towards an increasingly corrective outlook. The bulls have to fight hard now to quell the selling pressure now, as intraday rallies are already being sold into, something that hourly momentum also reflects. There is resistance now around 1.7530/1.7550 with 1.7600 a reaction high.