Gobble Gobble – Dollar In Trouble

 | Nov 23, 2017 06:47AM ET

Thursday November 23: Five things the markets are talking about

While investors believe the Fed will raise rates in December, many are trying to gauge how aggressively the central bank will tighten monetary policy next-year.

Yesterday’s FOMC minutes showed that most Fed policy makers saw a near-term rate hike as appropriate. Some members were opposed citing weak inflation; with several others noted that a move was hinged on data. Most participants continued to think tighter labor markets would ultimately produce higher inflation

This ‘dovish’ sentiment is leading markets to reduce their expectations for interest rate increases next year. Growing consensus is beginning to expect only two rate increases in 2018, instead of the three hikes implied by the dot plot.

The dollar has steadied after tumbling yesterday in the wake of the more dovish sentiment. This may weigh further on the USD, especially if we start to see a broader correction develop in U.S. rates markets. 



Note: The U.S is out for Thanksgiving today, so liquidity is expected to be significantly lower into the weekend.

German politics continues to hog the spotlight, with the Social Democrats ready to talk with Chancellor Merkel and are prepared to offer her limited support for a fourth-term.

1. Stocks see red

The biggest slump in Chinese stocks in almost two-years is taking some of the shine off another record high in the global equity bull-run.

Tighter liquidity enforced by the Chinese government stepping up ‘deleveraging ‘is causing the massive swings in Chinese asset classes.

Note: Japan was closed for a bank holiday.

Overnight in China, consumer and healthcare firms led the fall and dragged the CSI 300 index down sharply by -2.93%, its biggest fall in percentage terms since June 2016. The broader Shanghai Composite Index lost -2.26%, its worst day since December.

In Hong Kong, stocks also ended sharply lower, pressured by the mainland’s soured sentiment. The Hang Seng index fell -1.0%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.9%, to its lowest level in a month. Investors took profit in sectors including financials, IT and consumer goods.

In Europe, regional indices are trading off their lows, with most indices in the ‘black’ following strong PMI data in Europe where manufacturing PMI’s registered a near 18-year high in the Eurozone (see below). Trading activity is light as the U.S markets are closed today.

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.2% at 386.5, FTSE -0.3% at 7397, DAX -0.1% at 13004, CAC 40 +0.2% at 5366, IBEX 35 +0.4% at 10058, FTSE MIB +0.3% at 22385, SMI flat at 9293, S&P 500 Futures flat

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