Opening Bell: Do Markets Actually Like Trump?

 | Nov 10, 2016 05:10AM ET

by Eli Wright

Following yesterday's initial shock to markets caused by Trump’s surprise victory, traders seemed relieved that the election was finally over. Despite an enormous amount of uncertainty remaining as to how his presidency will affect global markets as well as the US's and the world's economy, financial exchanges appear to have recovered from yesterday's fear induced volatility – at least for now.

In Japan, the Nikkei closed 6.7% higher, at 17,344.42; the Hang Seng ended the day up 2.12%, at 22,891; and the Shanghai Composite, probably the least optimistic market given Trump’s stance on China, also managed to rise 1.33%, to 3,171.28.

In Europe, the FTSE, DAX, and Stoxx 50 are all up 1-1.5% since today's open.

The S&P 500, Dow, and NASDAQ all ended yesterday about 1% higher. The Dow in particular was an astonishing recovery, closing just a fraction off its all-time record close, after plummeting as much as 800 points lower in pre-market futures trading yesterday. In pre-market trading the S&P 500 is currently up 0.7%, the Dow is up 0.8% and the NASDAQ is up 0.9%.

The VIX is down 3.9% to 13.82, way below the 22.5 high it reached last week.

h3 Forex/h3

The Trump presidency does not appear to be an obstacle to a Fed rate hike in December; expectations are back to over 80%. Additionally, as risk-on trading returned, the flight to safe havens eased. One of the biggest gainers has been the US dollar.