USD Advance Halted By Fed Signals; UK Retail Sales, ECB Minutes In Focus

 | May 24, 2018 04:09AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

  • FOREX: The US dollar index is down by 0.1% on Thursday, after the Fed minutes downplayed expectations for three more rate increases this year. Note though, that the index touched its highest level for 2018 yesterday, before the minutes triggered a pullback. The yen continued to advance, while both the euro and sterling retreated following soft economic data.
  • STOCKS: Wall Street closed higher yesterday despite signals from the White House that more tariffs may be coming, boosted by the Fed minutes which played down expectations for aggressive rate hikes this year. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.64%, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones climbed by 0.32% and 0.21% respectively. Futures tracking the Dow Jones 30 Futures, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100, are all currently in negative territory, pointing to a slightly lower open today. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and the Topix plunged 1.1% and 1.2% correspondingly, as the latest surge in the yen dampened the prospects for Japanese exporters. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng was up, but only by 0.07%. In Europe, futures tracking the major indices were all in the green, with the only exception being the German DAX 30.
  • COMMODITIES: Oil prices edged down on Wednesday and are trading lower today as well, after the weekly EIA crude inventory data surprisingly showed a massive build in stockpiles, instead of the anticipated drawdown. WTI fell by 0.35% and Brent by 0.4% today, though both benchmarks remain elevated close to the multi-year highs they achieved recently. Some talk that OPEC is considering to “open the taps” soon and offset any declines in output from Venezuela and Iran may have aided the pullback. In precious metals, gold is up by nearly 0.2% today, extending gains from yesterday. The metal is currently trading near $1,296 per ounce, and looks to be headed for a test of the psychological $1,300 level.