Kiwi Tumbles; BoE Decision And US Inflation In Focus

 | May 10, 2018 04:12AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

  • FOREX: The US dollar index was practically flat on Thursday, ahead of the release of the US CPI data for April at 1230 GMT. Kiwi/dollar plunged nearly 1.0% overnight, after the RBNZ kept its policy unchanged but shifted to a more dovish bias, keeping the possibility of a rate cut on the table. Sterling/dollar traded 0.2% higher, as investors awaited the BoE’s rate decision today at 1100 GMT.
  • STOCKS: Wall Street closed higher yesterday, with energy shares leading the way higher amid a surge in oil prices. The Nasdaq Composite climbed by 1.0%, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones followed in its tracks, rising by 0.97% and 0.75% respectively. Futures tracking the Dow Jones, S&P, and Nasdaq 100 are also pointing to a higher open today. That said, the performance of these indices today may depend to a large extent on the upcoming US CPI data. Most indices in Asia were in the green as well. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix indices rose by 0.39% and 0.27% correspondingly, while in Hong Kong, the Hang Seng gained 0.96%. In Europe, futures tracking the major benchmarks were also signaling a higher open today, especially for the UK FTSE 100.
  • COMMODITIES: Oil prices posted another day of spectacular advances on Wednesday, and continued pushing higher today as well, with WTI and Brent crude climbing by 0.8% and 0.7% respectively. Both benchmarks touched fresh multi-year highs. The US decision to leave the Iran nuclear accord, a surprising drawdown in the EIA weekly crude inventories, and reports of armed conflict between Israel and Iran appear to be the main forces behind oil’s latest gains. In precious metals, gold is higher today but by less than 0.1%, recouping some of the losses it posted yesterday. It has been trading in a very narrow range so far this month, between $1,301 and $1,318, largely overlooking reports of rising tensions in the Middle East