EUR Takes Flight, Pound Supported By Inflation Data

 | Mar 21, 2017 06:58AM ET

Tuesday March 21: Five things the markets are talking about

The ‘mighty’ buck remains on the back foot, pressured by concerns that change to U.S trade policy could hamper growth. It has slumped as much as -1.8% since last week’s Fed rate hike now that policy makers did not accelerate the timeline for future tightening.

Market volatility remains low across the different asset classes as investors attempt to assess how sustainable the hopeful global economic recovery is. On the weekend, G20 members struggled to find common ground on trade, however rookie U.S Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin did convince finance officials to drop a denial of protectionism from their policy statement.

The group’s communiqué now ensures the U.S can still use sanctions or other policy tools to punish trade partners and stop economic policies that Trump’s administration deems to be unfair.

In Europe, the EUR has found support after last nights French Presidential debate. An overnight poll shows independent candidate Emmanuel Macron emerging as the most convincing of the five contenders, ahead of anti-euro candidate Marine Le Pen.

Elsewhere, Fed speakers continue to dominate the airwaves. Yesterday, Fed member Kashkari (dove, dissenting vote) indicated that the job market is showing more signs of slack and remains short on inflation. Fed’s Evans (dove, voter) said that three rate hikes this year are “possible,” while Fed member Harker (hawk, FOMC voter) would not rule out more than three rate hikes this year.

1. Stocks record mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei share average fell to a two-week low overnight (-0.3%) as financial stocks continue to underperform as U.S. yields fall. The broader Topix dropped -0.2%.

In Hong Kong, equities climbed to a near 20-month high, boosted by continued inflows from Chinese investors. The benchmark Hang Seng index rose for a fourth consecutive day, adding +0.4%.

Note: The index is the world’s best performing in Q1, having gained nearly +12%.

In China, stocks closed slightly higher in thin trading. Investors’ risk appetite remains restrained amid growing signs of tighter liquidity in the banking system. The blue-chip CSI 300 index rallied +0.5%, while the Shanghai Composite Index added +0.3%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed, but generally higher across the board. Financials are supporting the Euro Stoxx 50 while commodity and mining stocks are lower in the FTSE 100.

U.S equities are set to open in the black (+0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.2% at 3,447, FTSE -0.2% at 7,413, DAX flat at 12,050, CAC 40 +0.3% at 5,025, IBEX 35 +0.7% at 10,283, FTSE MIB +0.9% at 20,143, SMI -0.1% at 8,684, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%

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