Strap In, Capital Markets Are In For A Wild Ride

 | Nov 07, 2016 07:42AM ET

Monday November 7: Five things the markets are talking about

Market volatility continues with a risk-on rally gaining momentum overnight now that the FBI said Sunday that no new evidence was found to warrant charges against Clinton.

Last week saw global equities slide again, crude oil under pressure on doubts about OPEC’s ability to cut production at its next meeting in Vienna (Nov. 30). Economic data was mixed, as too were corporate earnings, while Friday’s non-farm payroll (NFP) provides a shout out for a Dec. Fed hike. The RBA, BoE, BoJ and Fed all met and left their respective policies unchanged.

The ‘mighty’ dollar is posting strong gains this morning on the perception of increased chances of a Clinton victory over Trump in tomorrow’s U.S. election. Ebbing risk aversion is also helping emerging market currencies.

Data is relatively light this week with releases centering around September industrial production and merchandise trade data. China releases its merchandise trade and consumer and producer price indexes.

Investors’ attention will be on the outcome of the U.S. presidential election.

1. Equities rally hard on FBI bombshell

Europe and the U.S’s nine-day equity loosing streak looks like it may come to and end in today’s session.

Global stocks and the dollar are posting some of their biggest gains in weeks after the FBI said Sunday it stood by its earlier recommendation that “no criminal charges were warranted” against Clinton in her e-mail saga.

The news should allow some investors to shift some of their focus back to U.S. economic fundamentals – solid job gains Friday and a rise in wages has a Dec. Fed hike on the radar.

Asian bourses ex-Japan have rallied +0.9%, its biggest rise in three-weeks. Japanese shares rose +1.2%, the biggest rise in seven-weeks.

In Europe, Euro stocks were up more than +1.3% in early trading. Euro Stoxx gains are being led by financials, while energy, commodity and mining stocks also trading notably higher in the FTSE 100.

S&P 500 futures are pointing to a rise of +1.5% at the open.

Indices: Stoxx50 +1.7% at 3,006, FTSE +1.3% at 6,782, DAX +1.7% at 10,431, CAC 40 +1.8% at 4,457, IBEX 35 +1.7% at 8,939, FTSE MIB +2.2% at 16,679, SMI +1.7% at 7,723, S&P 500 Futures +1.5%