GBP Unfazed By U.K. Politics, Equity Markets Titled To Upside

 | Feb 19, 2019 12:22AM ET

The re-open of the S&P 500 futures today has been a low-key affair, although we still see the momentum in broad equity markets still titled to the upside.

When you see the key price-maker central banks, that being the Fed, the ECB and the PBoC, shift its communication full circle to support equity markets, or in the case of the PBoC, allowing the credit taps to be turned to the maximum - this is a green light for the bulls, and the bears will run for the hills. The question, we hear quite prominently here is whether to chase this rally in equities, and put money to work after an 18% rally, or wait for a pullback to buy.

Recall, only back in December the ‘buy the dip’ mantra in equity markets was supposed to be dead in the water, but perhaps this is no longer the case with so much cash on the sidelines and the trend very much on the up. Apparently, this is a market that once again has faith that central banks are here to bail us all out in times of strife.

That said, we are not out of the woods, and the risk of a ‘buy the rumor, sell the fact’ scenario playing out in the trade talks builds by the day and the market has priced in a decent outcome that if it doesn't shape up volatility will ramp up. But, at this juncture, the idea of better liquidity conditions excites equity traders and investors. So, whether we are talking about a new Target Long-Term Refinancing Operation, and ultra-cheap loans to European banks, set to be announced in the 7 March meeting. Or, the Fed providing a terminal level of its balance sheet, perhaps in the May or June meeting that signals an early end to its Quantitative Tightening (‘QT’) program, the equity market likes what it hears, and we see volatility sellers across asset classes.

Commodities are also finding buyers, with U.S. crude closing above the 38.2% retracement of the October to December sell-off at $55.55 and eyeing a test of the 100-day MA at $57.45. Copper is pushing to the top of its multi-month range at $2.83 p/lb and again, traders are asking whether this time is different or do we fade the metal here? And, should we see a close through this technical ceiling, is Dr Copper telling us the world is a happy place, or at least less bad? One to watch, but this is a function of China turning on the credit taps again, and I do not see the data that supports the notion prices should be headed higher. Of course, we need to remember that economic data lags credit.