Fed Focus Trumps Moody’s China Downgrade

 | May 24, 2017 06:45AM ET

Wednesday May 24: Five things the markets are talking about

It’s been a busy overnight session for capital markets.

Global equities are mixed after China’s sovereign credit rating is downgraded by Moody’s (see below). The fallout has the AUD dollar being the worst performing G10 currency as the downgrade has spilled into a much weaker Dalian iron ore price, so the result is a softer Aussie (A$0.7456).

The ‘mighty’ USD and bond yields are steady, with fixed income dealers more confident that the Fed will raise U.S interest rates next month (June 13-14), while oil has rallied for a sixth consecutive day in anticipation of an OPEC-led output cut may be extended to the Q1 of 2018.

Note: OPEC officially meets in Vienna tomorrow, however, informal meeting are taking place today.

The markets focus is switching to today’s FOMC minutes, even though inflation has been softer and other U.S economic data on the weak side, the minutes of the Fed’s last meeting, will be released at 2 p.m. EST today, are expected to point to another rate hike in June.

Investors will also be looking for any new information about the Fed’s plans to shrink its balance sheet.

Expect the Fed to emphasize that the economy remains on pretty solid footing, highlighting continued improvement in the labor markets, solid consumer confidence data, mostly positive data on housing along with some signs of improvement in the manufacturing sector.

Offsetting the positives, the FOMC may point to continued uncertainty in Washington, and modest gains in wages.

h3 1. Equities produce mixed results/h3

In Japan, the Nikkei share average (+0.7%) rallied to a one-week closing high helped by exporters after the USD gained against the yen (¥111.93), while financials outperformed as U.S Treasury yields backed up. The broader Topix index increased +0.6%.

Down-under, despite China’s downgrade, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index rose +0.2%, while South Korea’s KOSPI index advanced +0.2%.

In China, the Shanghai Composite rose +0.1%, reversing an earlier drop of -1.3%. The Hang Seng slipped less than -0.1%.

In Europe, indices are trading mostly lower across the board with the exception of the FTSE 100 helped by strength of some Q1 earnings reports.

U.S. stocks are set to open little changed (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3593, FTSE +0.2% at 7498, DAX -0.1% at 12643, CAC 40 flat at 5347, IBEX 35 flat at 10916, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 21363, SMI -0.1% at 9055, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%