Australian, Indian Elections Provide Risk-On Flows On Mixed Asian Open

 | May 20, 2019 12:27AM ET

Australian markets are getting a nice start to the trading the week after Prime Minister Scott Morrison surprised election analysts with Australians deciding to stick with conservative leader for a third term. The Australian currency opened 1% higher in early trade. India’s election is also providing a nice bid for their respective markets as PM Modi appears set to stay in power. Trade this week will have many events that will drive central bank policy outlooks along with more elections. On Monday, we hear from Fed Chair Powell as he gives the keynote speech at the Atlanta Fed’s annual markets conference. Tuesday, we hear from BOE’s Carney as he testifies on the May inflation report. Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Mnuchin testifies before the house financial services committee and the FOMC minutes are released. Thursday marks the beginning of the EU Parliament elections.

Australia – A$ gains paired as shorts re-enter bets

OPEC & Oil – Rhetoric remains to keep supply constrained year round

India – Modi to return to power; possible majority; results Thursday

Gold – Focused on trade and Iranian tensions

Australia

Election analysts got another election wrong, mirroring the surprise we saw with Brexit and Trump, as pollsters were calling for Morrison’s right-leaning coalition to lose for months. Bill Shorten, the opposition leader conceded and stepped down as Labor’s leader. In his concession speech, he once again brought up climate change and pushed for the country to resist right-wing populism.

Australian’s chose to ignore turmoil that saw Morrison’s coalition go through three prime ministers in six years. His promise for lower energy costs, help for first-time homeowners and criticism of Labor’s initiatives and the effects on the budget appeared enough to win over voters. Tax relief is expected to be implemented early as next month.

The Australian dollar fell to the January lows last week and this morning’s election bump is being faded by short-sellers.