Geopolitics To Guide Dollar This Week

 | Jun 05, 2017 06:49AM ET

Geo-political risk is set to dominate capital markets this week; it will be supported by a handful of central bank monetary policy decisions.

In the Gulf, the Saudi’s, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt said they are suspending all travel to and from Qatar, citing Qatar’s support of “terrorist groups aiming to destabilize the region.”

In the U.K, citizens are dealing with the outcome of the weekend’s terrorist acts as the political parties enter the final three-days of the nation’s election campaign. The British snap election will be held on Thursday, June 8. In France, the French election will take place in two-rounds beginning on June 11.

In the U.S, fired FBI Director James Comey is set to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday about his conversations with President Trump regarding suspicion of Russian interference in the 2016 election. His testimony is expected to drive further moves in equities and the dollar in a recurrence of market swings last month.

The RBA, RBI and the ECB announce their respective monetary policy decisions on June 6, 7 and 8 – all three central banks are expected to leave their policies unchanged, however, the market is looking for guidance on QE reduction from Draghi.

Germany will release its April data for both manufacturing orders and output, while Canada will report its labor force survey and key housing starts, both for May.

h3 1. Global equities questioning growth/h3

Friday’s underwhelming non-farm payroll (NFP) is testing market bets on improving global growth that’s helped drive the value of global equities this year.

In Japan, the Nikkei’s share average barely changed overnight, keeping close to a 22-month high scaled last week as the yen’s rise stalls (¥110.48), while the broader Topix index fell -0.1%. The gauge closed Friday at the highest point in two-years.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell -0.4%, while the Shanghai Composite Index slipped -0.5%.

Elsewhere in the region, the Malaysia’s benchmark gained +0.6% and Indonesian stocks climbed +0.2%, while Taiwan’s Taiex increased +0.7%.

With the Saudi-led alliance cutting diplomatic ties with Qatar, Doha’s QE Index dropped -7.7%, the most in three-years. While in Dubai, the DFM General Index fell -1.3%.

Note: Germany, Switzerland and France all have a bank holiday.

In Europe, indices are trading slightly lower in light trade due to bank holidays. The market reaction to this weekends terror attacks in London is having little impact, although travel and leisure names seeing some downside pressure on the FTSE 100.

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

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Indices: Stoxx50 -0.3% at 3579, FTSE -0.2% at 7530, DAX Closed, CAC 40 -0.6% at 5312, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 10850, FTSE MIB -1.0% at 20724, SMI Closed, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%