Super Thursday: Politics and Monetary Policy Take Center Stage

 | Jun 08, 2017 07:00AM ET

Thursday June 8: Five things the markets are talking about

Pick your poison. Today is a pivotal day for capital markets with three major events – ECB monetary decision, U.K Parliamentary elections and Comey’s U.S senate testimony – expected to influence the directions of the various asset classes.

If today’s U.K election brings a hung parliament, some sterling bulls think that a Labour-led coalition could be the most ‘positive scenario’ for GBP (£1.2964).

Under this scenario, the pound is expected to plummet on the headline – PM Theresa May would have to resign, and the pending Brexit negotiations would have to be postponed. Pound “bulls” sees this type of price action as a potential buying opportunity. Why? It would require the Labour Party to negotiate with the pro-EU Scottish National Party and Liberal Democrats, which could result in a commitment to hold a second referendum and a greater likelihood of a softer Brexit.

However, if the Conservative Party increases its majority, it could be considered either positive or negative for the pound, depending on your timeline.

PM May winning more seats would provide GBP some short-term relief, but how high it goes, that depends on the increase in number of seats. The Conservatives held 330 seats when Parliament was dissolved on May 3. Some polls have suggested that the Tories are inline for a 74-seat majority, the biggest since Thatcher.

In the longer term, the Conservatives’ plan to take the U.K out of the single market is expected to weigh on GBP, in part due to tough Brexit negotiations, thus any meaningful rally may be considered to be short lived.

Note: The first big event is the ‘Exit Poll’ at 22:00 BST/17:00 EDT. In 2015, the first exit poll correctly predicted a Conservative majority – contradicting all polling – it turned out to be right. The second exit poll, 15 or so minutes later, predicted an even bigger majority and got the final number spot on.

This morning’s ECB policy decision – 07:45am EDT, no rate change is expected, but the central bank may drop the reference to “downside” risks to growth, while reiterating a weak inflation outlook – is followed by Mario Draghi’s press conference (8:30am EDT).

Stateside, ahead of his Congressional appearance today, the former FBI head James Comey released a prepared testimony yesterday saying the president asked him to end an investigation into the former national security adviser.

h3 1. Stocks mixed results/h3

The aforementioned geopolitical worries have many investors wading to the sidelines to seek sanctuary, at least until there is more market clarity.

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In Japan, the Nikkei and the broader Topix gave up early gains to close lower (-0.4%) overnight as the yen (¥109.89) rallied in a market already on tenterhooks. Data earlier in the day showed Japan’s economy growing less than the government initially reported for Q1. Final GDP was revised lower by its biggest margin since 2009, + 0.3% vs. +0.6%e q/q.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng and the Shanghai Composite Index each increased +0.3% on the back of stronger China data – exports rose +8.7% in May vs. +7.2% expected gain.

In South Korea, the KOSPI index increased +0.2% – North Korea launched a series of short-range missiles overnight.

In Europe, indices are trading higher across the board in thin trading as the markets await the ECB rate announcement and the U.K election results.

U.S stocks are set to open in the “black” (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.3% at 3561, FTSE +0.1% at 7483, DAX +0.3% at 12714, CAC 40 +0.2% at 5277, IBEX 35 +0.3% at 10909, FTSE MIB flat at 20743, SMI flat at 8880, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%