Big Dollar Dips Amid Lack Of Trading Clues

 | Oct 26, 2016 07:20AM ET

Wednesday October 26: Five things the markets are talking about

Despite the tight trading ranges scattered across the various asset classes, investors remain vulnerable to some unwelcome pockets of volatility ahead of an upcoming busy fortnight. Again, most of the market price moves have been instigated right at the top, from central bankers.

Yesterday it happened to be sterling; it fell to its lowest level (-1.5% £1.2105 intraday) since the infamous “flash crash” on October 7. Why? BoE Governor Carney cautioned that investors would demand a higher premium to buy U.K assets, if his or his bank’s independence was questioned. Expect the Governors tenure and independence will be the focus of much attention for sterling traders for the remainder of this year.

The pound's partial recovery this morning (£1.2207) can be attributed to Carney’s comments on exchange rates and how they need to be taken into account for policy consideration and on the suggestion that no further rate cuts were likely.

Also hitting the wires yesterday was ECB President Mario Draghi, who launched a strong verbal defense of the his own banks easy-money policies, stressing that his central bank is committed to keeping interest rates low until its hit its inflation target. However, his words were a tad hollow and only managed to temporarily move the needle on the single unit, which happened to print an eight-month low intraday print (€1.0851).

Next week investors have to contend with a plethora of central banks (RBA, BoJ, FOMC and BoE) and a number of employment reports (non-farm payroll) before 2016’s main event, the U.S Presidential Election.

1. Global stocks fall on disappointing earnings

Euro and Asian bourses have been in retreat mode along with U.S. equity index futures as energy prices slump and Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) results after the bell yesterday disappointed.

Following on from the U.S’s disappointing session on Tuesday, South Korea’s KOSPI dropped -1.25%, the Aussie ASX 200 ended the day down -1.5%, China’s Shanghai Composite index pulled back -0.5%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost -0.8%. The outlier was Japan’s Nikkei reversing its earlier losses to close up +0.15%.

With investors remaining nervous given the U.S. election, next week’s Fed meeting and China’s property market, the above average seasonal earnings reports are finding it difficult to keep global indices in the black.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index has pulled back -0.7% in early Euro trading, led by a -1% drop in the U.K.’s FTSE 100 index and a -0.7% decline in Germany’s DAX.

U.S futures are set to open on the soft side, down -0.4%

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Indices: Stoxx50 -0.4% at 3,072, FTSE -1.0% at 6,949, DAX -0.7% at 10,683, CAC-40 -0.7% at 4,511, IBEX-35 flat at 9,137, FTSE MIB -0.1% at 10,207, SMI -0.5% at 7,888, S&P 500 Futures -0.4%