Dollar Reaches New Heights; Bank Of England At The Center Of Attention

 | Jun 21, 2018 04:15AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

· FOREX: The US dollar index is 0.3% higher on Thursday, touching a fresh high for 2018. Safe-haven currencies such as the yen and the Swiss franc are on the back foot, down by nearly 0.3% and 0.2% respectively against the greenback as trade concerns have moved to the background for now. Commodity-linked currencies like the loonie, aussie, kiwi, are also on the retreat, with the first two trading at one-year lows versus the dollar.

· STOCKS: US markets closed mixed on Wednesday. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.72%, bringing the tech-heavy index to a fresh all-time high, propelled higher by the likes of Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) (+2.3%) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) (+2.9%). Meanwhile, the S&P 500 managed to gain 0.17%, but the Dow Jones Jones fell by the same percentage. Futures tracking the Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ 100 are also pointing to a higher open today. Markets in Asia, though, were mostly in the red. Japan was mixed, as the Nikkei 225 climbed by 0.61% while the TOPIX fell 0.12%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng dropped by 1.23%. Finally in Europe, futures suggest that all but one of the major indices are set to open higher today. The only exception is the German DAX 30.

· COMMODITIES: Oil prices are lower on Thursday, amid signals that the “resistance” to raise OPEC production this week is fading. WTI is down by almost 0.5% and Brent by 0.9%, following comments from Iran’s oil minister on Wednesday that his nation could compromise and agree to a small increase in OPEC output – something he had ruled out in previous days. So the conversation now appears to have shifted from whether or not there will be an increase, to how much that increase will be, weighing on prices. In precious metals, gold is down by 0.4% on Thursday, touching fresh lows for 2018 as a stronger US dollar is exerting downward pressure on the dollar-denominated metal. The fact that even the increasingly realistic risk of an “all out” US-China trade war was unable to lift gold suggests that buyers are in short supply right now, and unless tensions escalate much further or the US dollar reverses course, the current pattern may continue.