Dollar Bruised, But Not Battered Just Yet

 | Dec 19, 2016 07:05AM ET

Monday December 19: Five-things the markets are talking about

The dollar and sovereign yields fell overnight while Asian shares printed a new monthly low as the market cashed in some of their recent bets on Trumponomics and the ‘reflation’ trade.

This will be a light week on many fronts – liquidity and fundamentally.

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) meets this evening to complete the latest round of global central bank meetings. With growth improving and yen weakening, expectations are for no change in Japan’s domestic monetary policy. Governor Kuroda may give a clue to policy going forward in his post comments.

Note: The BoJ is expected to make no change to its twin targets of -0.10% on excess reserves and the zero percent 10-year government bond yield.

Elsewhere this week, final estimates of Q3 GDP will be reported for France and the U.K. In the U.S it’s a light week for key indicators starting Wednesday with existing home sales. Personal income and spending data on Thursday are expected to show moderate gains, while durable goods orders, are expected to fall sharply, however, ex-aircraft, are expected to hold steady. Thursday’s U.S jobless claims are not expected to stray too far from expectations while Friday’s new home sales will complete the final week before the holiday season.

1. Global stocks lower on China worries

Asia equities were lower overnight as China’s markets continued to be rattled by a bond selloff and by fresh signs of a slowdown in the domestic property market.

Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average slipped -0.1%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index closed down -0.9% and Korea’s Kospi was off -0.2%. The Aussie ASX 200 was the outlier, closing up +0.5% even as a threat of a downgrade to the country’s AAA rating hung over markets.

Chinese stocks edged down amid fears that capital was fleeing the country amid a selloff in sovereign debt (China’s 10-Year bond prices were down -1.1%). The Shanghai Composite closed down -0.2%.

Also putting pressure on global bourses were plummeting Chinese metal prices. Why? Authorities are trying to curb potential asset bubble and this has local speculators liquidating.

In Europe, the Stoxx 600 edged lower after reaching the highest point of the year on Friday, while the FTSE 100 is little changed in quiet trading.

U.S futures have rallied +0.2%, taking back all of Friday’s losses.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.3% at 3,242, FTSE flat at 6,998, DAX flat at 11,366, CAC 40 -0.2% at 4,809, IBEX 35 -0.4% at 9,307, FTSE MIB +0.6% at 19,112, SMI -0.1% at 8,203, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%