Stocks, Bonds Or FX: Which Is Irrational?

 | Dec 21, 2016 07:10AM ET

Wednesday December 21: Five things the markets are talking about

Stocks, the dollar and U.S yields are trading at lofty heights on the “potentials” of Trump’s fiscal stimulus packages – details not yet disclosed. Nevertheless, one of these asset classes, more than the others, does seem to be out of sync with reality.

Last week, the Fed’s Yellen questioned the wisdom that fiscal stimulus will have on a ‘full employment’ economy by stating that “fiscal stimulus so late in the expansion cycle will almost certainly be met with more rate hikes.”

With the U.S economic slack near ‘non-existent,’ Trumponomics should be expected to support more inflation rather than growth. If so, this will force the Fed to up the ante and tighten monetary policy at a much faster pace than fed fund futures are currently pricing in – currently three-rate hikes by Q4. This justifies the reason why the mighty dollar is perched atop of its 14-year highs and why U.S 10-year treasury’s has +2.75% in its sight. It’s the risks to risky assets or stocks that remains the big unknown.

There is no doubt that human nature will push U.S equities to new highs, but how sustainable is that when accommodation is taking away at a much faster pace and while stimulus packages don’t meet expectations?

Is it prudent to considering take some of the “froth” off equities and bank it?

1. Mixed results from global stocks

With the DJIA closing out just shy of the psychological 20k barrier helped to push Asian indices higher overnight.

In APAC, Australia’s ASX 200 closed up +0.4%, while Singapore’s Straits index gained +0.1%. In China, equities rebounded from a six-week low amid optimism of a renewed reforms push – the Shanghai Composite ended up +1.1%.

In European, equity indices are trading generally lower as banking stocks weigh on the indices. The Spanish IBEX is underperforming after the EU’s ruled against Spanish banks over mortgage interest repayments. The FTSE 100 is being supported as energy stocks are generally trading higher across the board.

U.S futures are set to open flat.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.2% at 3,273, FTSE -0.1% at 7,040, DAX flat at 11,467, CAC-40 -0.3% at 4,386, IBEX-35 -0.8% at 9,335, FTSE MIB -0.4% at 19,174, SMI +0.1% at 8,252, S&P 500 Futures flat