Central Banks Key To Dollars Short Term Direction

 | Jan 22, 2018 06:57AM ET

Monday January 22: Five things the markets are talking about

Despite the distraction of a U.S government shutdown, the focus of capital markets this week will return to the more upbeat message of the global growth upswing and a couple of G7 central banks monetary communications.

The Bank of Japan (Tuesday) and the European Central Bank (Thursday) both hold policy meetings and both are expected to leave their respective policies unchanged. Nevertheless, the market will be listening to governor Kuroda and president Draghi for hints of possible policy changes going forward as growth picks up.

In North America, Canada release retail sales Thursday and inflation numbers Friday, while stateside, the U.S will release its initial Q1 estimates of GDP Friday.

Overnight, global equities traded mixed, while sovereign bonds halted a recent selloff as investors assessed the impact of the U.S federal government’s partial shutdown.

Note: The Senate is to vote on later today to try to reopen government and fund it through Feb 8.

The U.S dollar is steady as we enter the third day after Senate leaders failed to end the impasse on the weekend. The EUR has gained on optimism that Germany’s Merkel has made a breakthrough towards her fourth term after the Social Democrats backed formal coalition talks with the Chancellor after their divisive party convention Sunday.

Note: The SPD voted to support the opening of formal coalition talks with Chancellor Merkel’s conservative bloc with vote by 362 to 279.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, stocks produced small gains on Monday, with strength in securities and insurers offsetting falls in resources-related sectors. The Nikkei index was flat, while the broader Topix added +0.1%.

Down-under, afternoon selling took Aussie shares to a fifth consecutive loss and the benchmark to a seven-week low. Settling at the session low, the S&P/ASX 200 dropped -0.2% as the major banks in particular weighed. In S. Korea, the Kospi was down -1.05%, pressured by worries over the U.S government shutdown.

In Hong Kong, equities traded close to flat in the overnight session. Chinese H-shares listed in Hong Kong eased -0.02%, while the Hang Seng Index was down -0.04%.

In China, stocks rose overnight to new two-year highs, helped by gains in the defensive consumer and healthcare firms. The Shanghai Composite index was up +0.22%, while China’s blue-chip CSI 300 index was up +0.75%.

In Europe, regional indices trade mixed this morning, with outperformance in the Spanish Ibex ahead of a busy earnings week.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index have dipped -0.1%.

Indices: STOXX 600 flat at 400.7, FTSE +0.1% at 7735, DAX -0.1% at 13423, CAC 40 -0.1% at 5520, IBEX 35 +0.4% at 10519, FTSE MIB +0.1% at 237773, SMI -0.2% at 9494, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%

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