ECB To Turn On The Dollar

 | Jul 17, 2017 10:14AM ET

The markets focus this week shift away from Yellen’s testimony and disappointing U.S. data to the ECB meeting (Thursday, July 21), which is expected to result in a further modest adjustment in its risk assessment.

Last week, the Fed chief seemed to hint that she was starting to second-guess whether the recent softness in inflation was just due to ‘transitory’ factors.

Friday’s disappointing U.S. CPI and retail sales prints again provides the Fed a mixed picture that is likely to leave the Fed cautious, and it is little wonder markets have lowered the odds of further rate hikes this year (40% for a Dec. hike). Will it delay the start of the Fed’s balance sheet normalization as well?

The market will be looking for signs that the ECB (July 20, 07:45 am EDT) will follow the Fed and begin to curtail its stimulus. No change is expected from the Bank of Japan either early Thursday (July 19).

Elsewhere this week, in Canada, traders will be looking for strength from the consumer in May retail sales data Friday. Australia’s RBA on Tuesday will release minutes of its July 4 gathering and labor market data is due Thursday. In the UK, round two of Brexit talks get underway in Brussels today.

h3 1. Stocks mixed results/h3

Fed Chair Yellen’s remarks were interpreted as evidence of continued accommodative monetary policy, and from there, global stocks have record multi-month highs.

Note: Japan was closed for a National holiday.

In Hong Kong, stocks rallied for the sixth consecutive session, closing at fresh two-year highs, with sentiment aided by robust China economic growth data (see below) and signs Chinese money inflows are accelerating. The Hang Seng index rose +0.3%, while the China Enterprises Index gained +0.5%.

In China, the Shanghai Composite Index was down -1.4% amid concerns over the implications of a weekend meeting where President Xi Jinping indicated that the PBoC would play a greater role in defending against risks.

Note: At one point the intraday losses were greater than -5%, but he loses were later reversed when Q2 GDP, June industrial production and retail sales came in strong.

Elsewhere, South Korea’s KOSPI rallied +0.4%, while Australia’s S&P/ASX was down -0.2%.

In Europe, most indices have reversed earlier gains trading largely lower across the board with the exception of the FTSE 100. Earnings have been the dominant theme this morning and will be in the U.S. all week.

U.S. stocks are set to open in the red (-0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 flat at 3,527, FTSE -0.3% at 7,388, DAX -0.1% at 12,637, CAC 40 -0.1% at 5,240, IBEX 35 +0.2% at 10,677, FTSE MIB flat at 21.531, SMI %+0.2 at 9.026, S&P futures -0.1%

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