U.S. Dollar Yields To Higher Rates

 | Apr 25, 2018 06:45AM ET

Wednesday April 25: Five the markets are talking about

With US Treasury yields backing up, fixed income dealers are pricing in the possibility that there will be four Fed rate hikes this year and not the three they signaled in March.

Given US economic growth and signs that domestic inflation could be picking up, fed fund futures are pricing a +53% chance of four hikes, up from +48% on Monday and +33% a month ago.

Expectations for tomorrow’s European Central Bank (ECB) meeting are for a ‘low key’ event. The central bank’s ongoing forward bias would suggest that there is no chance of any change in the overnight base rate.

Since last month’s ECB’s meeting, the eurozone real economy has show signs of cooling – industrial production has extended its monthly declines to three, while retail sales is expected to eat into Q1 GDP growth and even investor and business sentiment has fallen to new six-month lows.

At the obligatory press conference, expect Mario Draghi to highlight some of the downside potential inherent in a strong EUR (€1.2200) and the increased threats of a trade war.

Elsewhere, the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) two-day policy meeting begins tomorrow; decision and forecasts are expected on Friday (April 27).

1. Stocks are on the back foot

In both Asia and Europe, equities have been tracking yesterday’s Wall Street decline.

In Japan, the Nikkei ended -0.3% lower, pressured mostly by Takeda Pharmaceutical stock plummeting -7% as investors fretted about the company’s ability to finance the Shire cash and stock deal. The broader TOPIX dropped -0.1%.

Down-under, Aussie shares rose overnight, driven by banks as benign inflation data backed expectations interest rates will remain accommodative for some time, but gains were capped by losses in materials on an extended slide in aluminum prices. The S&P/ASX 200 index ended up +0.6%, while in South Korea, the KOSPI fell for a fourth consecutive session.

In Hong Kong, equities followed the Asian market lower. The Hang Seng index fell -1.0%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.2%.

In China, stocks closed down on Wednesday as gains in healthcare firms were offset by losses in real estate and energy shares. Both the blue-chip CSI300 index and the Shanghai Composite Index fell -0.4%.

In Europe, regional indices trade lower across the board following on from a sharp drop on Wall Street and Asia.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.4%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.80% at 379.9, FTSE 100 -0.5% at 7387, DAX -1.5% at 12353, CAC 40 -0.5 at 5419, IBEX 35 -0.7% at 9813, FTSE MIB -0.8% at 23854, SMI -0.6% at 8748, S&P 500 Futures -0.4%

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