Sterling Battered On PM May’s Comments

 | Jan 09, 2017 07:01AM ET

Monday January 9: Five things the markets are talking about

Last Friday’s U.S. December employment increased less than expected (+156k vs. +176k), but the markets interpretation in a rebound in wages (+0.4% m/m) suggests a sustained labor market momentum that sets up the domestic economy for stronger growth and further interest rate increases from the Fed in 2017.

Currently, fixed income dealers are trying to price in the possibility of three-rate hikes for this year.

There are a plethora of Fed speakers appearing this week, starting with a pair of regional Fed presidents speaking later today (Rosengren and Lockhart), and there are no less than five speeches lined up for Thursday and the main one being Fed Chair Yellen who appears at a webcast town hall meeting. By the end of this week the market is hoping to get a better understanding of the pace of U.S. interest rates.

In Europe, economic data this week will focus on industrial output and merchandise trade. In the U.K, with investors continuing to look for a ‘Brexit effect’, both industrial output and international trade data should offer further clues.

In Australasia, consumer and producer prices in China and India will be the focus of attention – to date, improving inflation data has been taken as a sign of stabilizing growth in China.

In the U.S, the main economic release of the week is not until Friday, when retail sales figures for December are out.

1. Equity Indexes reach for records

Asia’s biggest stock indexes finished broadly higher overnight, with Australia’s benchmark hitting a 19-month high, as major markets in the region caught a further bid from Friday’s North American gains.

The advance also follows strength last week in the region, where the Hang Seng saw its biggest weekly gain in three-months and the Shanghai Composite snapped a five-week losing streak.

The star overnight was the Aussie S&P/ASX 200 finishing +0.9% higher, supported mostly by financials and energy stocks. Elsewhere, the kiwi NZX-50 ended up +0.6%, Korea’s KOSPI finished down -0.34%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose +0.2% supported by gaming stocks as the market continues to reverse its pre-Christmas slide (Hang Seng is now up seven of the past eight sessions).

In China, the Shanghai Composite Index rose +0.5% after last week notching its first weekly gain since November.

Note: Japanese stocks will resume trading Tuesday after a national holiday on Monday.

In Europe, equity indices are trading generally lower despite a positive end to the Asian session. The FTSE 100 is notably outperforming led by commodity and mining stocks despite oil and copper prices trading sharply lower intraday. Financial stocks are again trading generally lower across the board.

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U.S. equity futures are set to open little changed.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.4% at 3,307, FTSE +0.2% at 7,226, DAX -0.4% at 11,556, CAC 40 -0.6% at 4,883, IBEX 35 -0.4% at 9,482, FTSE MIB -0.5% at 19,599, SMI -0.1% at 8,406, S&P 500 Futures flat.