Pound Woes Continue, Focus On Fed And BOJ

 | Sep 20, 2016 07:10AM ET

Tuesday September 20: Five things the markets are talking about

Tomorrow’s double-header with the Fed concluding its meeting and the BoJ announcing something has potential to rock markets, especially FX which is still playing catch up with both bonds and equity price moves for this month.

In regards to sovereign yield curves, Fed expectations are controlling the front-end, while the BoJ and global QE expectations are driving the long-end. For investors, the BoJ is potentially the more important market-moving event despite a history of under-delivering on expectations.

Were the BoJ to deliver on backing away from QE to foster a steeper yield curve rather than go deeper into negative rate territory, the bear “steepener” will continue to be supported in fixed income.

Despite the odds for a Fed rate hike occurring being very low; if Ms. Yellen and company happened to surprise the markets it would be a massive wake up call for all asset classes.

Nevertheless, once the market is able to digest the last of the G3 rate policy action, investors’ attention should quickly shift to the U.S presidential race for forex direction.

1. Equities are a soft touch

Markets continue to blow hot and cold over the Fed and BoJ’s intentions, which remain far from clarified. The Fed is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged, but could signal a move in December. The BoJ seems to be the outlier as expectations are more mixed, with the market split on whether Governor Kuroda will deliver additional stimulus or signal a shift in monetary policy going forward.

Global equities overnight have softened slightly as a reversal in oil prices are weighing on shares of energy companies.

Asian bourses mostly closed with small losses; although Aussie stocks edged up just under +0.2% after the RBA suggested it would keep interest rates on hold, possibly until next year, to support growth.

In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 has inched down -0.3% in early trading, led lower by the financial sector. Commodity and mining stocks are providing mixed support to the FTSE 100 despite travel stocks trading notably lower in the index.

U.S futures are set to open in the ‘black.’

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.1% at 2,972, FTSE 100 +0.4% at 6,840, DAX +0.4% at 10,419, CAC 40 +0.1% at 4,399, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 8,676, FTSE MIB -0.9% at 16,255, SMI+0.4% at 8,226, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%]