Opening Bell: Dollar Holds Gains As German Politics Sinks Stocks

 | Nov 21, 2017 07:00AM ET

by Pinchas Cohenh2 Key Events/h2

Yesterday, though Asian stocks—except for Chinese shares in both Hong Kong and the mainland—fell to start the trading week, European and US stocks climbed.

The news that current Fed Chair Janet Yellen would also leave the Fed's board of governors in early February once her successor takes over as Fed Chairman, was met with indifference by the market. Considering the uncertainty that hit investors when her second-in-command, then Vice Chair Stanley Fischer suddenly announced his early resignation in October, that's certainly an unexpected reaction.

Under Yellen's watch the unemployment rate has fallen from 6.7% at the beginning of 2014 to 4.1% today. As well, the US's economic expansion continued during her tenure. It currently ranks as the third-longest period of growth in history for the nation's economy.

The S&P 500 advanced after two consecutive weekly declines. However, traders punched out after prices failed to maintain their session highs, on the news the US Justice Department filed a lawsuit yesterday to prevent AT&T (NYSE:T) from completing its $85.4 billion takeover of Time Warner (NYSE:TWX), alleging antitrust issues.

h2 Global Economic Affairs/h2

While investors are taking the departure of Yellen in stride, notwithstanding that her position on the Fed's board of governors wouldn't have expired until 2024, there may still be a market reaction ahead. When the realization dawns that her departure creates a fourth Fed vacancy for President Donald Trump to fill, next year's interest rates could become less predictable.

Wednesday's release of the Fed Minutes will open a window into policy makers’ commitment to higher interest rates in December. The Fed's tasks include the challenge of supporting long-term Treasuries—such as the 10-year—currently seeing the narrowest gap with short-term Treasuries—including the 2-year—in a decade.