Asia Pauses For Reflection

 | Oct 07, 2015 02:50AM ET

After five days of gains in the likes of the FTSE 100 and S&P 500, it seems the momentum is waning somewhat. If we focus specifically on the European open, then the recent positive price action should come to a temporary halt.

Asian markets have been mixed on the day, but on the whole the momentum is running out of steam. A number of traders have been asking whether the 6.1% and 5.8% intra-day rally in the MSCI World index and S&P 500, respectively, were premised prominently on short covering. We know the leveraged community have been running the largest net short positioning on S&P futures since 2011 and, if you look at what’s been working in the last five days, it’s been the names with high short interest.

Correlations in global indices are about as high as you will ever see and a rising tide is moving more boats than at any stage. Stock picking is about as tough as it has been in recent memory, although it is not going to surprise anyone that there have been some very constructive flows into energy names.

Here in Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 energy sub-sector has put on a further 6% today, taking the gains on the last five days to 12%, and the only sector trying to keep pace is the materials space (+7% in the last five days). Keep in mind the energy sector is still down 21% for the year and, but with some $10 million in short interest in the sector, the rally could still have legs.

Moves in oil have been very much in focus and the majority of client flow has been on the long side, positioning for further upside. There seems a strong technical focus here, with the WTI crude breaking a key triangle consolidation pattern, which would be targeting a move into the $55 to $56 area. A closing break of the 31 August high and through $50 would be positive and suggest adding to long positions. Of course, in this environment we are seeing upside in petro currencies with USD/CAD lower for the sixth day in a row, something we haven’t seen since mid-2013.

(Daily chart of WTI)