South African Rand Higher On Expectations Zuma Is Removed

 | Aug 08, 2017 06:51AM ET

Tuesday August 8: Five things the markets are talking about

Capital markets appear to be in a holding pattern, with investors seeking an incentive amid the summer slowdown.

The focal point of this week looks set to be Friday’s U.S inflation data (CPI 08:30 am EDT), which could be key to the interest-rate outlook for the U.S.

Note: Two Fed officials (Kashkari and Bullard) indicated yesterday “soft U.S inflation remains a problem,” but played down the risk of market disruption when the Fed begins shrinking its balance sheet.

Last week’s stellar U.S jobs report is encouraging a number of renewed bets that U.S reflation is back in vogue.

Despite the odds for further tightening by the Fed remaining under +50%, dollar ‘bulls’ continue to search for evidence from Fed speakers this week to the contrary.

1. Stocks mixed results

Yesterday, the Dow posted an all-time high for the ninth consecutive session, touching 22,121, before closing slightly lower.

In Japan overnight, the Nikkei share average slid -0.3% as a stronger yen (¥110.55) hurt exporters, offsetting gains in the steel sector based on a solid earnings outlook. The broader TOPIX shed -0.2%.

In Hong Kong, shares rallied as strong company earnings and surging prices for steel and other building materials convinced the market that China’s economy remains solid despite weaker-than-expected trade data.The Hang Seng index ended up +0.6%, while the China Enterprises Index gained +0.2%.

Note: Trade data showed that China’s import and export growth slowed more than expected in July – ¥321.2B vs. ¥297.4Be; exports y/y: +11.2% vs. +15.2%e, imports y/y: +14.7% vs. +22.6%e

In China, stocks edged slightly higher overnight in quiet trading as investors shrugged off the disappointing trade data. The blue-chip CSI 300 index rose +0.2%, while the Shanghai Composite gained +0.1%.

In Europe, equities opened down, but have since turned around with support from commodities (gold and oil). It seems macro data is having little impact on direction, as too is risk sentiment.

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

Indices: Stoxx50 flat at 3,503, FTSE -0.2% at 7,520, DAX -0.1% at 12,250, CAC 40 flat at 5,206, IBEX-35 +0.1% at 10,690, FTSE MIB -0.1% at 22,011, SMI -0.1% at 9,146, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%