Opening Bell: Oil Slips, Equity Markets Gain, ECB Eyed

 | Dec 07, 2016 03:37AM ET

by Eli Wright

US as well as global equity markets had no problem shrugging off the result of Sunday's Italian referendum vote, as equity markets, banks, as well as the euro, rose broadly through the day yesterday and early this morning in Asian trade. Oil prices, however, slipped off their highs from earlier this week as OPEC continues to try to convince non-members to join the production freeze bandwagon.

Since investors appear to continue to ignore the news, barring any surprises, general profit-taking or tomorrow’s ECB policy meeting could be the next drivers for markets.

In Asia overnight the Nikkei rose 0.74% to 18,496.69; the Shanghai Composite increased 0.69% to 3,221.64; and the Hang Seng bumped 0.54% higher, to 22,797.

In Europe midday, the FTSE is up 1.39% to 6,874; the DAX is up 1.45% to 10,932.5; the Stoxx 50 is up 1% to 3,133.

US markets closed higher yesterday: the Dow again set a new record, up 0.18% to 19,251.78; the S&P 500 added 0.34% to close at 2,212.23; and the NASDAQ Composite gained 0.45% to finish at 5,333. The Russell 2000 also rose 1.01%, to close at 1,351.09. Seems rumors of the Trump Rally coming to an end have been overstated...at least for now. With markets currently near all-time highs, it might be wise to take some profits now for use during the next swing low.

In pre-market trading, the Dow is up 0.06%, the S&P and NASDAQ are flat.

US bond yields remained steady. The 2-year note is at 1.124%, the 10-year yield is at 2.391%, and the 30-year yield is at 3.074%. For now the yield rally appears to be on track.

h3 Forex/h3

The US Dollar Index slipped a bit this week, but is still managing to remain above 100 – it's currently trading at 100.53.

The euro slipped 0.33% yesterday, but remained above $1.07. The single currency hasn’t lost much since the Italian referendum.

Nevertheless, the outlook for the EUR/USD remains clouded by the Italian banking sector, as well as by the ECB’s divergent QE program, whose continuation is expected to be announced tomorrow.

Sterling, which hit nine-week highs earlier this week, has fallen about 0.4% to $1.2624. Pullbacks should now find support down near the 1.2520 area.

Commodity currencies have been driven lower by oil prices dropping more than 2%. However the Aussie's decline had an additional impetus, Australia's Q3 GDP reading came in unexpectedly lower, -0.5% versus +0.3% expected.

Widespread rumors on social media yesterday that the Chinese yuan had plummeted 10% proved to be unfounded, reflecting an operational glitch in some trading systems. In fact, due to the Chinese governments tight currency controls, it's virtually impossible for the currency to drop that much without government engineering. China reports monthly trade balance figures this evening. Results are expected to be a net positive of $46.3 billion.

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Oil is losing its upward momentum, gained following the OPEC deal to cut production. After moving down this morning, Crude and Brent are each up a tad—about 0.25%. Several factors are contributing to the pullback:

  1. The freeze deal only covers a six month period and investors worry that’s not enough time to make a significant dent in the glut of oil supplies.
  2. In order for the cut to be truly effective , OPEC needs non-OPEC members such as Russia to join the deal.
  3. The OPEC deal was based on October production numbers, which were at record highs.
  4. US shale output is expected to increase now that the price per barrel has crossed the $50 threshold. Over the past few months, data from Baker Hughes has been showing consistently growing rig counts.

The downward movement in oil pushed Energy sector stocks down yesterday as a result, even as natural gas increased by 2% to $3.707.