Pound Pummeled On Inflation Miss

 | Feb 14, 2017 06:44AM ET

h3 Tuesday February 14: Five things the markets are talking about

Risk-off is back in vogue as the dismay in the Trump administration is overshadowing optimism for an improving U.S. economy.

Trump’s promises that tax cut and infrastructure spending plans are coming, some good-tempered meetings with world leaders (Japan’s PM Abe and Canada’s Trudeau), as well as expectations of a more “dovish” Federal Reserve had temporarily rekindled investors’ appetite for risk. However, this has come to an abrupt end in the overnight session.

After lengthy DoJ investigations, Trump’s NSA advisor Michael Flynn has submitted his resignation after admitting he gave “incomplete” information regarding phone calls with Russia about U.S. sanctions – stocks have retreated, the dollar is under pressure, gold is better bid and U.S. yields a tad lower.

Investors will now turn their attention to Fed Chair Yellen’s testimony in Congress today for market guidance (10:00am EST).

Her testimony will be watched for hints on rates, deregulation and global concerns, fixed income dealers are pricing in a +30% chance the Fed will lifts rates at its March 15 meeting.

h3 1. Global stock indices see “Red”/h3

In Japan, stocks fell as investor sentiment soured after Toshiba Corp. (T:6502) delayed its earnings release, including details of a multibillion dollar charge related to cost overruns at its U.S. nuclear arm.

With Toshiba’s stock nose-diving -8% helped drag the Nikkei down -1.1%.

In Hong Kong, stocks ended little changed as growing profit taking after a two-month rally offset sustained inflows from main land Chinese investors.

Note: The Hang Seng has risen about +8% ytd, riding a wave of optimism that global economic growth is improving.

In China, the Shanghai Composite Index was largely unchanged after data showed the country’s inflation (see below) picked up to multi-year highs and reinforced a shift by Beijing to a more tighter policy stance.

In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index has slipped -0.1% in early trade, after a five-day rally that brought it to the highest level in more than a year. The FTSE 100 Index has lost -0.3%.

U.S. stocks are set to open in the red (-0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3306, FTSE +0.1% at 7286, DAX -0.1% at 11768, CAC 40 flat at 4889, IBEX 35 Futures +0.1% at 9494, FTSE MIB +0.3% at 19111, SMI -0.3% at 8442, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%