Dollar Needs Fed And BoJ Guidance

 | Sep 16, 2016 07:11AM ET

Friday September 16: Five things the markets are talking about

U.S retail sales and industrial production data yesterday supports the case that the Fed is not going to tighten next week, with many remaining sceptical whether the Fed could pull the trigger at all this year. According to fed fund futures it’s a coin toss for the December hike.

If it’s a ‘no go’ on Sept 21, expect the Fed to continue to signal that a hike remains on the table in 2016 while portraying an even shallower path for the tightening cycle. This rhetoric alone should be capable of capping U.S bond yields, including those on the long end of the curve.

With stocks, bonds and commodities having all lost ground this week amid concerns that the ECB and BoJ are becoming more hesitant to boost their stimulus the focus now shifts to this morning’s U.S CPI data at 08:30 EDT. A benign report will see the dollar once again playing defense.

1. Equities pressured by financials and commodities

Asian bourses were higher overnight, helped by gains in Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) suppliers.

However, volumes were thin, as investors remained cautious and refrained from trading aggressively before monetary policy decisions from the BoJ and the Fed.

Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average was up +0.5%, but posted a weekly loss of -2.6%. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was up +1.1% and down-0.8% on the week. New Zealand’s NZX-50 was +0.8% higher and Singapore’s Straits Times Index was up +0.8%.

(Note: Markets in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea and Malaysia were closed for the mid-Autumn festival).

In Europe, indices are putting a halt to the overnight rallies. Bank stocks are adding weight to the losses seen after it was reported the U.S Justice Department said to have asked Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) to pay +$14B to settle probe into mortgage securities (DB were expecting +$2-3B). Lending its weigh to the FTSE 100 loss are commodity, mining, and energy stocks also trading lower.

U.S futures are set to open down –0.3%.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.7% at 2,956, FTSE 100 -0.2% at 6,715, DAX -0.5% at 10,380, CAC 40 -0.5% at 4,350, IBEX 35 -0.7% at 8,661, FTSE MIB -1.3% at 16,382, SMI -0.2% at 8,168, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%