BoE’s Carney Slams The Pound; Canadian Inflation, Retail Sales Eyed

 | Apr 20, 2018 04:08AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:
· FOREX: The US dollar index is practically unchanged on Friday, after it posted solid gains earlier on Thursday on the back of rising US Treasury yields. Sterling/dollar was 0.3% lower, with the British pound extending the losses it posted yesterday, after BoE Governor Mark Carney hinted that a rate hike in May is not actually a done-deal.
· STOCKS: US markets closed lower, pressured by a notable rise in longer-term US bond yields, something that usually curbs demand for stocks. The Nasdaq Composite led the way down on the back of concerns that the handset boom was taking a breather (Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) was a notable decliner), falling by 0.78%, while the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones dropped by 0.57% and 0.34% respectively. The slide looks set to continue today, as futures tracking the Dow, S&P, and Nasdaq 100 are all currently pointing to a slightly lower open. Asian markets were lower on Friday as well, for the most part. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell 0.68%, while Japan was mixed, with the Nikkei 225 falling by 0.13% but the Topix managing to close 0.05% higher. In Europe, futures tracking almost all the major indices were flashing green. The exceptions were the Euro STOXX 50, the German DAX and the Italian FTSE MIB.
· COMMODITIES: Oil prices are slightly lower on Friday, with both WTI and Brent down by 0.2%. That said, both benchmarks touched fresh highs last seen in 2014 yesterday, and despite the latest pullback, they remain elevated. Speculation that Saudi Arabia is aiming for prices closer to $100 was the key trigger for the recent surge, with surprising drawdowns in inventories enhancing the bullish sentiment. Today, the focus will turn to the Baker Hughes rig count, for a fresh indication on US production. In precious metals, gold is 0.1% lower, last seen near $1342 per ounce, extending losses from yesterday. The yellow metal’s underperformance is likely owed to the recovery in the greenback. Since gold is denominated in dollars, an appreciation in the currency makes the metal less attractive for investors using foreign currencies, weighing on its demand.