Canadian Jobs To Hog The Limelight

 | Sep 09, 2016 06:56AM ET

Friday September 9: Five things the markets are talking about

Policy inertia by Tier 1 central banks so far this month is contributing to a lack of meaningful price movement amongst the various asset classes.

Yesterday, the ECB came and went, insisting that the market move on as Draghi failed to provide any new tweaks to their stimulus measures as some had hoped – seven-day refinancing rate unchanged at +0.00%; left the deposit facility rate unchanged at -0.40% and marginal lending facility at +0.25%, while maintaining its monthly asset purchase target at +€80b.

Investors must now shift their focus to the Bank of Japan (Sept 19) and the Fed (Sept 20). Governor Carney’s “Old Lady” (Sept 15) is not considered to be apart of the equation this time around. Despite the markets constant chatter on the timing of the next Fed hike; the greatest market uncertainty appears to relate to Japanese financial markets and intentions of the BoJ. It’s not the dollar that investors need to worry about, but the yen moves over the next fortnight that may cause a few dealers some problems.

1. Equities see red

No real surprise to see Euro bourses struggle amid continued disappointment over the ECB decision not to ease policy further this month.

Currently, Stoxx Europe 600 is trading down -0.2% in early trade, led lower by shares of health care and real estate companies. Finding some reprieve are financial stocks on the “no” rate announcement. Softer crude prices are weighing on the FTSE 100.

Elsewhere, news of a fifth North Korean nuclear test weighed on shares in Asia, with stocks in Shanghai, South Korea and Australia all ending lower. The exception was China; its markets fared better, with soft CPI data potentially renewing the case for additional policy easing by the PBoC.

Futures point to a -0.1% opening dip for the S&P 500.

Indices: Stoxx50 flat at 3,084, FTSE -0.1% at 6,851, DAX -0.1% at 10,663, CAC 40 -0.1% at 4,537, IBEX 35 +0.1% at 9,111, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 17,345, SMI +0.1% at 8,321, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%