Dollar Direction Depends On ECB Rhetoric

 | Jul 20, 2017 06:39AM ET

Thursday July 20: Five things the markets are talking about

Investors are trying to calculate whether company earnings will be strong enough to warrant such lofty equity prices, and if their own domestic economies can handle higher interest rates.

Overnight, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) pushed back its forecast for reaching +2% inflation while keeping its policy settings on hold (see below), further highlighting Japan’s struggle to achieve stable price growth. The next clues come from the ECB’s policy rate announcement this morning (07:45 am EST).

The market is not expecting any changes from the ECB interest rate policy, but is looking for any signs of the outlook for the bank’s quantitative easing (QE).

Its +€60B a month asset program expires at the end of the year and everyone wants to know what comes next. An announcement regarding the next steps is more likely in September when Euro policy makers will also release their new macro-economic projections, however, ECB’s Draghi may provide further insight at today’s press conference (08:30 am EST).

The not so ‘mighty’ dollar continues to trade atop of its 10-month low as the U.S health-care reform bill crashed this week, casting further doubt on President Trump’s policy agenda.

The pound is under pressure following this week’s demise on yesterday’s disappointing U.K inflation print, while the Aussie dollar strengthens on the go-to ‘carry’ trade and overnight job numbers (+14K). Global bond prices have weakened, while gold and oil trade lower.

1. Stocks get the green light

Stateside yesterday, stocks continued their rally; bypassing the markets concerns on timely implementation of U.S economic reform policies. The Nasdaq and S&P hit new all-time highs. This momentum was carried through to Asia and Europe.

Note: investor volume is lagging again for the NYSE, -17% below its three-month average, while the Nasdaq volumes remain in line. The VIX index continues to fall, dropping -2%, to 9.70 Wednesday.

In Japan, the Nikkei ended +0.6% higher, while the broader Topix rose +0.7%, its highest closing level since August 2015.

In Hong Kong, stocks finished higher for a ninth straight session, its longest winning streak since April 2015, as technology stocks powered through. The benchmark Hang Seng index ended up +0.3%, its highest level since June 2015. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index was -0.1% lower.

In China, their major stock indexes rose for a third consecutive day, led by the blue-chip CSI300 index reaching a fresh 18-month high (+0.5%), with sentiment lifted by expectations of robust first-half corporate earnings. The Shanghai Composite Index added +0.4%.

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In Europe, most indices trade modestly higher, led by the DAX. Corporate earnings and the ECB are expected to set the tone for their afternoon session.

U.S stocks are set to open little changed.

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.2% at 368, FTSE +0.4% at 7457, DAX +0.4% at 12506, CAC-40 +0.3% at 5233, IBEX-35 flat at 10590, FTSE MIB flat at 21481, SMI -0.1% at 9018, S&P 500 Futures flat