Dollar’s Winning Streak is Over

 | Feb 16, 2017 07:01AM ET

Thursday February 16: Five things the markets are talking about

Waiting too long to tighten would be unwise; more policy adjustments will likely be needed if the economy remains on track.

A number of Fed officials chimed in Tuesday and Wednesday to reinforce Ms. Yellen’s message that they expect to raise short-term interest rates in coming months, perhaps as soon as March.

In two days of congressional testimony, Yellen said the Fed likely would raise its benchmark fed-funds rate at one of “our upcoming meetings” if the economy continued to improve as expected.

The argument for a rate hike in March has gained this week, supported by yesterday’s U.S. CPI and core retail sales printing double the market consensus. The OIS market has lifted pricing for a March 15 rate hike to +42% from +30% a couple of days ago.

Surprisingly, this week’s “big” dollar gains have been almost been wiped out in the overnight session as the reflation trade rally that has sent stock prices to record highs has been cut short as the yen jumped and Treasuries prices climbed for the first time in five-days.

h3 1. Mixed results from Stocks
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Technical indicators are showing that global equities are currently “overbought,” especially in the U.S. and some Asian markets, and this has given some investors food for thought in the overnight session.

In Japan, stocks retreated as a pause in the weakening of the yen (¥113.66) has given some investors an excuse to book profits, though financials extended their outperformance on rising U.S. yields. The Nikkei share average fell -0.5% after scaling near six-week highs earlier this week.

In Hong Kong, stocks closed at an 18-month high on demand from China. The benchmark Hang Seng index added +0.5%, the highest since August 2015, while the Hong Kong China Enterprises Index gained +0.2%.

Note: Chinese investors, including mutual funds and major insurers, have been steadily increasing their allocations, as regulators on the mainland tighten investments in wealth management products and other risky assets.

In China, stocks posted modest gains as higher commodity prices and infrastructure spending continued to boost shares of firms in the materials sector. The Shanghai Composite Index added +0.5%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading lower after a raft of corporate earnings pre-market, and a relatively mixed session in Asia overnight. Banking stocks trading mixed in the Eurostoxx; while commodity and mining stocks are trading notably lower in the FTSE 100.

U.S. futures are set to open in the red (-0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.4% at 3,315, FTSE -0.4% at 7,273, DAX -0.2% at 11,777, CAC 40 -0.3% at 4,912, IBEX 35 -0.3% at 9,559, FTSE MIB -0.4% at 18,978, SMI -0.4% at 8,449, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%

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