Dollar Retraces Some Of Trump’s Intervention Loss

 | Jan 18, 2017 07:09AM ET

Wednesday January 18: Five things the markets are talking about

Yesterday saw the biggest drop in the dollar across the board since last June on comments from the U.S President elect that the dollar was “too strong.”

Without a doubt, the election of Trump is making the dollar moves much more volatile. The current market focus onto the President elect’s more protectionist trade policies is challenging investors initial view that dollar will strengthen on the back of looser fiscal policy and tighter monetary policy in 2017.

With the lack of details thus far from the Trump team, the market is open to many interpretations – Does the President elects currency rhetoric suggest that the new U.S administration is about to adopt a weak U.S. dollar policy and attempt to talk down the currency to support the U.S. manufacturing sector?

Either way, dollar volatility has just become more pronounced.

Ahead of the U.S open, the dollars fall from grace has eased and with that the flight to haven assets overnight with moves in the yen, Treasuries and gold steadying ahead of Friday’s Presidential inauguration.

1. Equities mixed as investors seek guidance

In Asian, the markets lacked direction as investors deal with the uncertainties of ‘Trumponomics.’

It seems that the market prefers to take more of a neutral stance ahead of Trump’s inauguration speech on Friday. Will Trump tackle China in his first week and label the country a currency manipulator?

Japan’s Nikkei closed up +0.4% on the back of a weaker yen (¥113.14) during the session. Korea’s KOSPI closed down -0.1% while the Aussies S&P/ASX 200 finished the day down -0.4%.

Elsewhere, gains in financials helped Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index breach the psychologically 23000 mark overnight, with the benchmark closing up +1.1%. In China, Shanghai rose +0.1% after the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) injected massive liquidity into the market (this was done to address continued nervousness following Monday’s sharp intraday sell-off sparked by the pace of approvals for initial public offerings).

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed, but generally higher after U.K PM Teresa May’s speech yesterday and as earnings releases start to pick up across the region. Financial are trading mixed on the Eurostoxx 600, while commodity and mining stocks are trading lower on the FTSE 100.

U.S futures are set to open in the red (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3,287, FTSE +0.1% at 7,230, DAX +0.1% at 11,556, CAC 40 -0.3% at 4,844, IBEX 35 +0.2% at 9,410, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 19,259, SMI flat at 8,301, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%

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