Euro Bears To Sell On Rallies

 | Dec 09, 2016 07:53AM ET

Friday December 9: Five things the markets are talking about

An expansive monetary policy buys time for reforms, but too much stimulus creates an unstable financial market.

The ECB’s decision to reduce their monthly bond-buying rate as of April next year sends the market the correct message, especially after the disappointing result of last weekend’s Italian referendum.

By reducing and extending, the ECB is giving itself the latitude to even increase QE again if inflation turned out to be lower than forecast next year. The prospect of tapered monthly purchases and lower-for-longer negative yields means that the ECB’s “reflation” channels have definitely moved in favour of a weaker EUR and higher equity markets.

1. Stocks trade atop of record highs

Global equities are set to close out this week near their 16-month highs, again supported by an extended monetary policy push by the ECB.

The MSCI World index is up +0.1%, on track for a gain of +2.7% this week. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei closed up +1.2%, aided by a weaker yen (¥114.52); Australia’s ASX 200 gained +0.3% and Taiwan’s Taiex was up +0.2%. The outlier, Korea’s KOSPI closed down -0.3% ahead of lawmakers’ vote to impeach their President.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed. Banking stocks are weighing the Euro Stoxx down while the energy and commodity sector is providing some support for the FTSE 100.

U.S futures are trading little changed ahead of the open stateside.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.3% at 3,179, FTSE flat at 6,934, DAX -0.3% at 11,149, CAC-40 flat at 4,738, IBEX-35 -0.5% at 9,099, FTSE MIB -1.2% at 18,213, SMI +0.6% at 8,001, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%