AUD Sees A Solid Session As It Rallies Against G10 Currencies

 | Jun 06, 2017 05:36AM ET

If you like low volatility in equity indices then the overnight session took the first prize in delivering absolutely no move whatsoever. Tough times then for the traders who like a market that shows signs that market participants actually have an ability to move prices around, but what we saw was a measly five-point range in the S&P 500 and 56-point range in the Dow.

Looking within the S&P 500 sectors, we can see energy the best performer with a gain of 0.2%, while utilities fared the worst with a drop of 0.5%. While sitting in the office in Melbourne it feels as though there should have been tumbleweed in the New York Stock Exchange, although volumes were 16% below the 30-day average (on the S&P 500), which is low, but not terrible. Again, this is life as we know it with the US volatility Index (“VIX”) below 10%.

US data has come in largely below expectations, which is a theme we seem to be saying a lot at the moment. The May ISM service index came in at 56.9, which was a solid number and showing good expansion in the service sector, although it did miss forecasts and was a slight slowdown from the April print. Both the new orders and new export orders sub-component of the index detailed a strong slowdown in the pace of expansion, although we saw this being offset (to an extent) by a strong increase in employment component. Factory orders (-0.2%) and durable goods (-0.8%) were wholly uninspiring as well, but there has been a limited reaction across the US Treasury curve and subsequently no real move in the USD.

So the view remains unchanged that the Federal Reserve hike next week, but if this trend of deteriorating US data does not show improvement and the US yield curve subsequently continues to flatten then I really feel we are going to start to see a pick-up in equity market volatility. It seems unsustainable that this divergence between US data trends and continued all-time highs in US equities continues.