5 Things The Markets Are Talking About

 | May 24, 2016 06:56AM ET

Tuesday May 24: Five things the markets are talking about

With “hawkish” Fed rhetoric remaining equities' biggest hurdle, coupled with ‘little’ new U.S economic data, the end of the North American earnings season and significant event risk in the coming month has investor sentiment shifting cautiously in favor of “wait and see.”

This approach continues to have a profound effect on forex trading ranges. Again this morning, the “big” dollar seems confined against most of its major pairs as we head to the open stateside, with the notable exception of the yen (¥109.53) and the pound (£1.4605).

Due to a lack of decisive trading cues, investors are shifting attention to U.S. May jobs data due June 3 and Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen’s speech on June 6.

1. Japan’s Aso repeats intervention pledge

Last weekend’s G7 finance leaders’ meeting did not yield any surprises ahead of this week’s upcoming leader summit. Naturally, finance officials discussed some of the most pressing issues in the financial system – reliance on negative interest rates, need for FX stability, and risks related to Brexit.

Friction between Japan and U.S on FX was particularly notable – Japan’s Finance Minister Aso described the recent spike in yen as a “disorderly” move that leaves the door open to government intervention, while U.S Treasury Secretary Lew suggested the “volatility was normal and not disorderly.”

Overnight, Aso tried to deflect the criticism from U.S Treasury’s Lew, noting different countries will have various views on the FX market, but reiterated that Japan has “no” intention to further lower FX. He also said he should generally tone down his remarks on FX going forward. The yen has since appreciated on his comments.