Sterling Marches Higher For Now

 | Jul 20, 2016 07:39AM ET

Wednesday July 20: Five things the markets are talking about

Capital markets are on the move despite the waiting game for monetary policy direction from Tier I central banks over the next few weeks (ECB tomorrow).

In yesterday’s session, the Dow ended slightly above its record high close for the sixth consecutive day, but the NASDAQ and S&P 500 were down as markets pared some of their gains required during last week’s ‘risk-on’ trading event. Treasuries are rallying as commodities decline, and the US Dollar Index straddles its four-month high on market expectations for a possible Fed hike this year.

The IMF has again entered the fray and cut its global growth forecasts for the next two-years, citing uncertainty over Brexit. The Fed aside, its either “lower for longer” or more stimuli required over the next few weeks from G10 central banks. Those decisions are expected to dominate trading direction.

1. Dollar gains across the board, but….

Trading ranges do dominate.

The mighty “buck” continues to find support and has gained broadly this week after recent firmer U.S. data makes a Fed rate hike more likely.

With the market continuing to reprice Fed rate hike probability (Fed funds for Sept +18%, Dec +39.8%) the dollar index has managed to hit its highest level in more than four-months.

Overnight, the EUR briefly probed its three-week low just under the €1.10 level. Nonetheless, the markets focus will now turn to tomorrow’s ECB meet where policy makers are expected to follow the BoE’s example and take a “wait and see stance” for now, but Draghi’s tone will be closely watched in the post Brexit environment.

USD/JPY (¥106.50) continues to trade up on rate differentials (BoJ expected to provide some stimulus on July 29), while sterling (£1.3183) has found some support after U.K. labor market data this morning showed a smaller-than-expected rise in the claimant count for June (+0.4k vs. +4.1k). The U.K unemployment rate for May also came in at +4.9%, below forecasts for +5%.