Politics (Not Fundamentals) Guides The ECB

 | Dec 08, 2016 06:47AM ET

Thursday December 8: Five things the markets are talking about

Can Draghi afford to rock the boat today given what’s happened in Italy and what’s going on with the banks? The case for the ECB leaving policy unchanged centers around politics.

ECB officials will decide the fate of their €1.7T bond-buying program that expires in March in a few hours. With investors expecting at least a six-month extension, any move to scale back the program could cause large selling in the euro debt market and certainly spill over into the U.S treasury market.

Ahead of the ECB announcement (07:45 EST) and Draghi’s press conference (08:30 EST) the single currency is trading atop of its three-week high (€1.8000). With investors currently very short the currency pair, there is an outside risk possibility that the EUR has the stamina to trade a tad higher, mostly on profit taking, towards the psychological €1.0850-65 level where the market is expecting a new wave of fresh EUR sellers to appear again.

There is a range of possible ways in which the ECB’s bond-buying program can change beyond March, which could be interpreted initially as been somewhat hawkish by investors – this market is not positioned for any hints of tapering. Investors need to listen carefully to Draghi’s press conference, euro policy makers are expected to cushion any “hawkish” elements of its decision with dovish language and vice versa, which may mute the impact on the EUR.

1. Stock indices print record highs

Global equities are holding onto their recent gains overnight, supported by the possibility for more stimuli from the ECB and a firmer trend on Wall Street – on Wednesday, both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at new record highs.

In Asia, risk appetite found further support when China reported upbeat trade figures with exports and imports both beating forecasts.

The resource-heavy Aussie ASX rallied +1.2%, as did MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares ex-Japan. Korea’s KOSPI supported by electronics jumped +2%. Japan’s Nikkei has added + 1.45% despite a stronger yen, and a disappointing downward revision to its Q3 growth.

In Europe, equity indices are currently trading mixed across after opening sharply higher. Financials are weighing on the Stoxx 600, while commodity and mining stocks are underperforming and pressuring the FTSE 100.

U.S futures are set to open little changed.

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.3% at 3,148, FTSE -0.1% at 6,898, DAX +0.3% at 11,016, CAC 40 +0.1% at 4,698, IBEX 35 +0.6% at 9,015, FTSE MIB +0.3% at 18,192, SMI -0.2% at 7,914, S&P 500 Futures flat

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