Banxico Takes Market By Surprise, Raises Rates Overnight

 | Feb 18, 2016 06:29AM ET

Thursday February 18: 5 Things that the markets are talking about

Despite a holiday shortened trading week, investors are having to deal with many moving parts – OPEC/Iran, EM Central Banks, EU/Brexit talks – to keep ahead. Market volatility is here to stay for some time, even the OECD and World Bank are concerned.

1. Chance for oil production deal drive markets

Hopes for an OPEC/non-OPEC crude production bargain continues to drive global equities higher. Oil prices are still trending upward, as Iranian officials appear to have given a “nod” to efforts to stabilize the market. Post-close API inventories in the U.S yesterday also showed a surprising draw. Even U.S treasuries have been sold off (10’s backed up +5bps to +1.84%. They are now +20bps higher from last week record low yields).

No sooner had Saudi Arabia, Russia, Qatar and Venezuela penned a provisional agreement to freeze oil production on Tuesday, OPEC ministers from Qatar and Venezuela went to Tehran to convince the Iranians to go along with the deal.

After the meet, the Iranian Oil Minister said his government “supports any effort” to stabilize oil market and prices, and supports cooperation between OPEC and non-OPEC countries, but it would “wait and see” what impact the meetings between OPEC and non OPEC countries have on oil prices before formally joining any deal. This was music to any crude bulls ears – but for how long?

For commodity currencies like the CAD, it has once again hitched itself to the oil wagon for the time being. The loonie surged yesterday as the dollar shred more than -1% (C$1.3670) as WTI ($31.27) found a bid. Dollar bulls continue to scratch their heads regarding CAD – if it’s not M&A, not oil, and not rate differentials its has been a lottery when plotting the loonie’s direction so far this year.