Dollar Succumbs To Profit Taking Ahead Of Event Risks

 | Nov 28, 2016 06:56AM ET

Monday November 28: Five things the markets are talking about

Expectations that a OPEC production deal would unravel, a possible defeat in Sunday’s referendum in Italy and elections in Austria, coupled with the U.S presidential transition challenge of polls in battleground states by Clinton is dominating early trading.

Consolidation in bonds and equities has been relatively muted compared with the forex market – the U.S dollar has started this week, succumbing to profit taking after recent strong gains in the wake of Trump’s election victory and on expectations of Fed rate increases.

The drop in oil prices is hitting U.S. inflation expectations, which is pulling down U.S. Treasury yields and finally knocking back this lengthy dollar rally.

A raft of U.S. economic data is due this week – ISM manufacturing data and nonfarm payroll (NFP) – is also strengthening the case for selling dollars as stimulus-driven Trump presidency appears to have run its course for now?

Don’t be surprised to see many adopt a “wait and see” approach, at least until there is some greater market clarity.

1. Fall in U.S yields aids EM stocks

The prospects of reduced upward pressure on inflation from oil prices, is putting pressure on U.S rates and bringing some relief to Asian indexes. To date, they have been underperforming on worries about capital flight to higher-yielding U.S assets.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares ex-Japan rallied +0.6%, led by gains in Hong Kong and Taiwan.

Elsewhere, Japan’s Nikkei 225 closed down -0.1% on the back of a stronger yen (¥112.00), while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was off -0.8%.

In Europe, both the Stoxx 600 and FTSE 100 are off more that -1%, pressured mostly by commodity and energy stocks.

S&P futures are set to open down -0.4% after the benchmark set a new all-time high Friday.

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.0% at 3,018, FTSE -0.9% at 6,781, DAX -1.0% at 10,589, CAC 40 -0.9% at 4,507, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 8,627, FTSE MIB -2.0% at 16,190, SMI -0.5% at 7,844, S&P 500 Futures -0.4%.