OPEC To Save Face With A Disappointing Deal

 | Nov 30, 2016 07:03AM ET

Wednesday November 30: Five things the markets are talking about

No more jawboning – is there a deal? Will they or won’t they announce a production cut? It’s all that dealers and investors want to hear from OPEC in Vienna this morning.

Should a barrel of crude be trading above +$50 or below +$40? Whatever the outcome, the move will be temporary at best, at least until the next production market share squabble over prices.

Both Fixed income and forex markets remain close to home on the final day of the month, waiting for direction from Austria as a potential decline in crude prices will likely put pressure on U.S. bond yields, and in turn, on the dollar, or visa versa on inflation expectations.

Stateside, the market will focus on today’s U.S ADP release (08:15am EST), as well as personal income and spending figures and the core PCE price index (08:30am EST), the Fed’s preferred inflation measure. There are also three Fed officials speaking today – Kaplan, Powell and Mester.

Note: with a Dec. rate hike priced in, U.S data is unlikely to offer much more upside.

1. Equities have a solid month

Global equities inched mostly higher overnight despite anxiety over commodity prices, and are on track to close out a solid month with gains.

Note: new worries associated with China’s efforts to support its own currency, the yuan, could potentially cause liquidity concerns and push up domestic borrowing costs and affect the speculative boon the market has experienced this month, particular in the commodity sector.

Overnight, Chinese indices were the worst performing stock market in the region with a drop of -1%. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares ex-Japan traded up +0.2%, while Singapore’s benchmark climbed for a seventh day, rising +0.7%. Elsewhere, Aussies ASX 200 Index fell -0.3%, with sub-gauges of raw materials producers and energy stocks down at least -1.9%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading higher led by energy, commodity and mining stocks as optimism grows for an OPEC deal. Financial stocks are trading generally lower across the region after the U.K’s Financial Stability Report found RBS (LON:RBS) failed the BoE’s stress test (needs to add +$2.5B in capital), while Standard Chartered (LON:STAN) did not meet its Tier 1 minimum capital requirement.

U.S futures are set to open +0.1% higher.

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.4% at 3,047, FTSE +0.3% at 6,794, DAX +0.2% at 10,644, CAC 40 +0.3% at 4,567, IBEX 35 -0.2% at 8,650, FTSE MIB +0.8% at 16,697, SMI +0.2% at 7,860, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%