Opening Bell: EUR Down On ECB; USD Recovers, Zinc Near 10-Yr High

 | Aug 17, 2017 07:04AM ET

by Pinchas Cohenh3 Key Events/h3

Yesterday, US stocks and Treasuries advanced, while the dollar declined, after the release of the Fed minutes revealed that policymakers are worried about inflation weakening.

h3 Global Affairs/h3

Most Fed officials remained steadfast at the two-day FOMC meeting in July 25-26 on their outlook that inflation would eventually reach their 2-percent target “…over the next couple of years”, with only a few projecting it would shrink.

There is also a lack of consensus on the reduction of its $4.2 trillion balance sheet of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities.

While some are ready to set a date, others stated that it was “generally agreed…it was appropriate…relatively soon, absent significant adverse developments in the economy or in the financial markets.”

In the US markets the FOMC minutes saved the day for stock traders as it shifted focus away from news of President Donald Trump’s breaking up his business forum, after a group of CEOs quit in response to his remarks on race and violence. This in turn sparked additional fears of Trump policy failure which reversed an earlier loss in US markets which closed with a miniscule gain. On the other hand, dollar traders didn’t like what the minutes revealed, pushing the USD to a lower close, while Treasuries finished higher.

Equity investors favor a slower path toward interest rates, as it makes liquidity more available to continue to prop up equity valuations, which are as high as they were only in two other times in history—1929 and 2000—right before US markets crashed. In addition, a cheaper dollar gives the added benefit of making US stocks more affordable for foreign investors.

On the other end of the spectrum dollar speculators are against a slower rate process, as it means the asset will provide a smaller payout.

Finally, Treasury traders have a bigger incentive to buy now, as the current yield suddenly seems higher when compared to a lower-than-expected returns later.