Assorted Bremain Vs. Brexit Outcomes

 | Jun 21, 2016 06:14AM ET

Tuesday June 21: Five things the markets are talking about

Current market sentiment remains highly correlated to Brexit speculation. Global bourses are relatively mixed in the overnight session; a day after a strong risk rally was supported by U.K weekend referendum polls.

Earlier this morning, Sterling (£1.4784) rallied to a new seven-month high, on the perception of diminishing risk that the U.K. referendum on Thursday will result in a vote to leave the E.U.

Two opinion polls overnight put ‘remain’ ahead of ‘leave’, although a YouGov poll still has ‘leave’ in front.

ORB/Telegraph saw the ‘stay’ camp momentum building with a +53% for remain, +46% for ‘leave’ breakdown vs. +48% to remain, +49% to leave last week. YouGov poll: +42% for remain, +44% for leave – two-point lead for ‘leave’ vs. prior seven-point lead.

In reality, polls remain very close, leaving the pound and markets vulnerable to any opinion polls putting ‘leave’ in front. The price moves across the various asset classes can at times be volatile due to a lack of liquidity as most investors stay sidelined before the referendum.

1. Dollar Index remains vulnerable

For many Brexit-wary investors, the mighty ‘buck’ has been the safe haven of choice. This choice has helped to support the dollar over some fundamental weaknesses in the past few weeks.
Nevertheless, if the chances of a UK departure from the E.U really begin to fall, the dollar’s fundamental flaws may become even more exposed.

Already this month, weaker May U.S jobs data have dashed rate-hike hopes, and Fed-fund futures show only a +12% probability of an increase in July. Without expectations of tighter U.S monetary policy near-term or a rush to safe havens, there are fewer reasons for investors to own the dollar.

The U.S Dollar Index is down -0.7% at 93.55, and if safe-haven flows continue to abate, the index risks a return to last months low of around 92.