Compass Directions: Afternoon Report For November 17, 2011

 | Nov 17, 2011 03:56AM ET

The majors eased in early trade today as the Fitch report highlighting the risks of the European debt crisis to the American banking system prompted a sell-off. The People’s Bank of China release a statement that “the foundation of price stability is not yet solid” signalling continued vigilance with inflation controls. Overnight, the market will be focussed on the outcome of a sale of EUR 12.2 billion of French and Spanish debt. Yields on US 10 year notes fell one basis point to 1.99%. After trading to as low as 1.3420, the common currency is closing the afternoon at 1.3480.

New Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti has named his new cabinet which includes no politicians in a move that is seen by many investors as a positive move. Maybe non-politicians will have more success in tackling the debt crisis that is bringing the nation to its knees? The Fitch report showed that the six biggest US banks have a combined risk of $50 billion to Greece, Italy, Ireland, Portugal and Spain and an even bigger exposure of $188 billion to France. The Australian dollar slumped to within 20 points of parity after the release of the Fitch report before recovering to close the afternoon above 1.0100.

Stocks in Asia were volatile in trade today as investors remain on edge over the European debt crisis, global growth prospects and new concerns over the exposure of US banks to Europe. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index swung between a loss of 0.8% to marginal gains while the MSCI China Index fell for the third consecutive day to record its longest run of losses in more than 6 weeks. The Nikkei is flat at 8,462 while the Hang Seng is down 0.88% to $18,793. The ASX 200 has closed higher by 0.3% to 4,261 in a rollercoaster day of trade.

Commodities fell in trade today. WTI Crude Oil is down by 0.3% to $102.25 falling from five month highs. Precious metals were mixed with gold lower by 0.67% to $1,762 while silver rose marginally by 0.22% to $33.90. Soft commodities were broadly lower and copper is down by 0.3% as base metals eased. Overnight, we have the release of UK Retail Sales, Swiss ZEW Economic Expectations and US building permits, unemployment claims and the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index.