Opening Bell: Dollar Climbs; Oil Slides; Powell Testimony Boosts Stocks

 | Jul 18, 2018 07:15AM ET

  • USD starts rallying ahead of Powell's speech, consolidating afterwards and resuming its climb today

  • The Fed Chair's portrait of a Goldilocks environment props up equities

  • WTI prices keep sliding for a third day on reports the US may tap into emergency supplies

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European stocks as well as the US dollar extended their rallies this morning. The former benefited from a two-day slide in the euro while the latter won favor with FX traders even before Fed Chair Jerome Powell testified before the US Senate yesterday. His outlook for US economic expansion was broadly seen as bullish.

    Powell's portrait of a Goldilocks economy, where unemployment is near an 18-year low and inflation is hovering around the Fed's 2-percent target, would support the Fed's current trajectory for tightening. It also sent the NASDAQ Composite and the NASDAQ 100 to new record highs.

    Currently, however, futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 are mixed. Which suggests that this morning traders may still be weighing a broader variety of triggers.

    Conversely, it seems that there were only buyers trading the STOXX Europe 600, setting it up for a strong opening. They bid prices up 0.3 percent from yesterday’s close in order to find willing sellers, thereby creating a rising price gap. The rally then extended to 0.55 percent, registering higher prices than the preceding June 11, 386.87 high. The higher peak extended the uptrend within the rising channel since late June.

    The concurrent euro selloff made the region’s exports more competitive, contributing to the strong stock performance. This followed a volatile, mixed session in Asia. Here, traders initially channelled the upbeat outlook posted by the previous US session, sending local shares vigorously higher. However, profit-taking and ongoing trade worries impacted the overall performance, which ended mixed.

    Japan’s TOPIX climbed 0.35 percent for a four-day 2.55 percent gain, though trimming a 0.88 percent intraday high. Technically, it retreated from a downtrend line since May 21.

    China mainland Shanghai Composite slipped a further 0.39 percent, giving up an earlier 0.75 percent rally and bringing its aggregate four-day slide to 1.75 percent. Technically, it remained above yesterday’s hammer, but below the uptrend line since the July 6 bottom.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng closed 0.23 percent in the red, at the lowest level since September 29. It lost 1.51 percent over two days.

    South Korea’s KOSPI edged 0.34 percent lower after the country's government dramatically cut its outlook for the job market, as well as revising its GDP growth forecast lower. The index still managed to post a positive 0.93 percent intraday high. Technically, its higher open, 0.7 percent above yesterday's close and higher than the two preceding sessions, formed a dominant bearish engulfing pattern. However, upon dipping onto the uptrend line since the July 5 low, the price rebounded slightly, demonstrating some demand.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 once again fared as the regional winner, posting a 0.68 percent rally. Technically, it bounced off a bullish flag, for the second time since Friday.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2
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