Sterling Bears To Disregard U.K Budget

 | Mar 08, 2017 06:48AM ET

Another solid jobs number this Friday could all but cement expectations for the Fed to raise rates next week and send the dollar even higher. However, investors can expect the lack of clarity on Presidents Trump’s plans to grow the U.S. economy through “bold” fiscal measures to cap the move.

Currently, Fed-funds futures show a +89% chance that the Fed will raise rates on March 15. A strong non-farm payroll (NFP) print this week (Fri. 08:30am) should make the Fed’s decision that tad easier. The market is anticipating that employers probably added around +190k workers to payrolls, in line with the average over the past six-months and a sign of steady job growth. A miss of substance and fixed income dealers will be hastily repricing their U.S. curve, while the dollar bulls will be cutting some of their positions. Investors will get a heads up from this morning’s U.S. ADP non-farm employment (08:15 EST).

ECB President is not expected to flinch at tomorrow’s ECB meeting (07:45 EST) even after headline inflation reached the banks desired +2% target last month. ECB policy makers are expected to keep QE going until the end of this year with underlying price pressures muted.

Today, the UK’s budget arrives in a few hours (07:30 EST). Chancellor Hammond pledged on the weekend to set aside money to cushion the economy from Brexit. With the pound sitting atop of its two-month low (£1.2165), will it get a reprieve?

h3 1. Global Stocks mixed, seek some policy clarity/h3

For global equities, trepidation is setting in after one of the steepest post U.S. election rallies in history. Investors require clarity and transparency and not Twitter policy innuendos.

In Japan, despite stronger Q4 GDP data (see below), the Nikkei eased slightly overnight (-0.5%) for the fourth consecutive session, as investors turned cautious ahead of a Friday’s NFP. The broader Topix fell -0.3%.

In Hong Kong, stocks extended their gains for a third consecutive session, helped by strength in mainland property developers. The benchmark Hang Seng index added +0.4%, while the Hong Kong China Enterprises Index gained +0.5%.

In China, stocks edged lower as small-caps pulled back amid lingering concerns over tighter liquidity. News that China unexpectedly posted a rare trade deficit (see below) last month did not have an impact. The CSI 300 index fell -0.1%, while the Shanghai Composite Index was unchanged.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed ahead of the UK Spring Budget. Financials are trading higher in the Euro Stoxx, while energy and commodities are the laggards in the FTSE 100.

U.S. stocks are expected to open little changed.

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.4% at 3,395, FTSE +0.1% at 7,344, DAX +0.4% at 12,009, CAC 40 +0.1% at 4,959, IBEX 35 +0.4% at 9,836, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 19,536, SMI -0.2% at 8,610, S&P 500 Futures flat

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