Sterling Pounds Brexit Bears

 | Nov 11, 2016 07:41AM ET

Victory for new President Trump has markets focusing on the prospect of substantial public spending lifting U.S inflation and prompting a rise in domestic interest rates. The odds of two Fed rate hikes by end of next year have risen to almost +90%, and it’s this potential rate differential that has the dollar in demand.

With a Trump win, perhaps the euro (€1.0870) may be the next currency victim? His victory this week certainly raises concerns about a massive shift towards “populist politics” before next year’s elections in France and Germany. The single unit, straddling atop of some key support levels, is at risk of medium-term bearishness given the numerous political risks facing the eurozone over the next few quarters. Trump’s loose and reflationary fiscal ideology should only add weight to the single unit.

The uncertainties surrounding the Republican win this week certainly strengthen the case for the ECB to extend its current asset purchase program by an additional six-months beyond March next year. This would be supportive for euro credit, and to a certain extent the currency.

1. Emerging equity rout persists

Emerging markets are feeling the heat; they sold off aggressively overnight as U.S. Treasury yields continue to back up.

With investors favouring U.S conditions, money continues to be pulled out of Asia and into the U.S and why regional currencies, bonds and stocks are underperforming.

Indexes from Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia’s plummeted on average a couple of percent.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index was down -1.4%, South Korea’s Kospi closed -0.9% lower and Taiwan’s Taiex fell -2.1%.

However, bucking the trend was Japan’s Nikkei rallying +0.2%, even as the yen (¥106.30) gained +0.3% outright. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 also rose +0.8%, lifted by the global commodity rally. In Shanghai, stocks entered a technical bull market.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed across the board as Brexit concerns resurface after market participants accept Trumps electoral victory. The banking sector is trading generally and weighing on Eurostoxx, while commodity and mining stocks in the FTSE 100 trading mixed.

S&P futures are trading little changed ahead of today’s Veteran’s Day holiday stateside.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.4% at 3,037, FTSE -1.2% at 6,748, DAX +0.1% at 10,645, CAC 40 -0.5% at 4,509, IBEX 35 -0.9% at 8,677, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 16,872, SMI -0.4% at 7,898, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%