Pound Eyes 'Flash Crash' Levels, But Will It Stay?

 | Jan 16, 2017 06:59AM ET

Monday January 16: Five things the markets are talking about

This is a busy holiday shortened week for capital markets. Today, U.S. banks will be closed in observance of Martin Luther King Day.

On Tuesday, U.K.’s PM May is expected to call on the country’s populous to reject the hostility of the Brexit referendum in a speech that being billed as setting the stage for a “hard” exit from the E.U. The pound’s plummet overnight to last Octobers ‘flash’ crash levels (-1.6% to £1.1987) seems to have got ahead of her.

The world’s eyes will be on Trump’s inauguration on Friday for any clarity on his economic plans. He disappointed the market during his first official press conference last week; there is no telling what he could say during this historic moment to appease the ‘concerned.’

In the U.S., inflation, industrial production and housing data will dominate, while the Fed’s Chair Yellen will have an opportunity to lay out her thinking with speeches on monetary policy on both Wednesday and Thursday this week.

Elsewhere, central banks begin to hold their 2017 policy meetings with both the Bank of Canada (BoC) and the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting midweek – no change in policy from either is expected. The U.K. will post inflation and labor market data. Expect dealers to scour the data for any Brexit signs of induced inflation and weakening in the labor market.

In Australasia, China reports Q4 growth data along with December output and retail sales.

On Friday we round off the week with the swearing in of the 45th U.S President.

1. Equities see ‘Red’

The Nikkei Stock Average closed at its two week lows while Chinese stocks saw a last-hour slump which some considered similar to panic selling as global investors continue to display caution ahead of U.S. President-elect inauguration this Friday and over fears of a ‘hard’ Brexit.

The Nikkei Stock Average closed down -1% as export stocks lagged amid the yen’s strength (¥114.04). Elsewhere in the region, Korea’s KOSPI ended off -0.6% while Taiwan and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index each fell -0.9%.

However, resisting the regional trend, the Aussies ASX 200 closed +0.5% higher, supported by strong gains in utilities stocks and higher commodity prices.

In China, the Shenzhen Composite Index fell -3.6% to the lowest point in seven months. Traders pointed to concern that regulators will accelerate the pace of initial public offerings, already at a 19-year high, diverting liquidity from existing shares. The Shanghai Composite fell -0.3% after paring a loss of as much as -2.2% in intraday trading percent.

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In Europe, equity indices are trading lower as U.K PM May’s scheduled speech on Tuesday is expected to signal a clean and ‘Hard Brexit.’ Financials are underperforming on most of the major indices, while homebuilder stocks are trading notably lower on the FTSE 100. Commodity and mining stocks are trading generally higher on the index.

U.S. Futures are trading in the red (-0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.5% at 3,304, FTSE 100 flat at 7,338, DAX -0.6% at 11,566, CAC 40 -0.5% at 4,896, IBEX 35 -0.9% at 9,425, FTSE MIB -1.1% at 19,303, SMI -0.7% at 8,390, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%