Opening Bell: Will Markets Hit New Highs On Renewed Volume?

 | Jan 09, 2017 06:06AM ET

by Eli Wright

After two holiday-shortened weeks, marked by new highs for such key indices as the Dow, S&P 500 and NASDAQ we've arrived at the first full trading week of 2017. Volatility may drop as trading volume increases. The VIX is currently at 11.73, down 16.5% since the end of 2016.

In Asia overnight, markets played off Friday's US close, and pushed higher. The Hang Seng closed up 0.3% at 22,570 while the Shanghai Composite rose 0.51%, to 3,170.35. Keep an eye on President-elect Trump's news conference, scheduled for Wednesday, which could have a dampening effect on Asian stocks. His views on China and global trade in general are anticipated and will no doubt be heavily scrutinized.

In Europe this morning, the FTSE is up 0.3% to an all-time high of 7,231.75. However, the DAX and Stoxx 50 are both 0.50% lower, down to 11,539 and 3,301.50, respectively.

On Wall Street this past Friday, the Dow came within one point of 20K in intraday trading, before closing the day at 19,963.80. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ both closed at record highs, of 2,276.98 and 5,521.06, respectively.

Look for all three majors to try and extend gains in trading today. In pre-market trading, the Dow is up 0.04%; the S&P is up 0.06%; and the NASDAQ is up 0.17%.

US Treasurys are down across the board. The 2-year yield is 1.218; the 10-year yield 2.41%; and the 30-year yield is 2.994%.

h3 Forex/h3

Friday’s NFP report was neutral, as the headline figure of 156,000 came in lower than the expected 178,000, and US unemployment ticked higher to 4.7%. On the plus-side, U6 unemployment, which also measures part-time workers and those marginally attached to the labor force, improved to 9.2%. Average wages also increased, up 0.4%.

Providing further room for dollar optimism were hawkish comments by several FOMC members. Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said she would like to see the central bank raise interest rates more than the three quarter-percentage-points favored by most of her colleagues, while Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker said interest rates may need to rise “more briskly than markets anticipate.”

The US dollar moved higher after the NFP; the US Dollar Index is currently up to 102.30. The euro is up slightly this morning, to $1.0543, but the dollar has made strides against the British pound and Japanese yen.

A few notes on emerging markets: Following the New Year’s eve terrorist attack in Istanbul that claimed the lives of at least 39 people, Turkey fired 8,000 civil servants this past Saturday for alleged terror links. The lira is now down to 3.6982 against the dollar. Since the failed coup on July 15, USD/TRY has declined more than 26%.

At the same time, the Chinese yuan, which gained sharply versus the dollar last week, has fallen back 0.2% today to 6.953. Chinese CPI is due out this evening.

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Bitcoin, after massive gains earlier in the week, reversed sharply at the end of last week. It continues to slide today. The crypto-currency is down 2.24% this morning, to $889.59. At this rate, it could be headed toward $800 next.