S&P 500 Starts The Week Near All-Time High Of 2597

 | Nov 20, 2017 02:05AM ET

We head into the new trading week, with the S&P 500 a mere 70 basis points from the recent all-time high of 2597, having found stability return after the US benchmark looked like it might build on the 1.5% pullback into 2557. However, with little to inspire this week, as there are limited economic data releases to focus on, again tax reform remains at the epi-centre of market considerations.

On tax reform, it was positive, albeit expected, to see the House vote through its own version of tax reform last week, but the Senate plan clearly faces greater hurdles and we now heard from a number of Senate Republicans (including Susan Collins over the weekend) that they have strong concerns about the bill, with some gripes ranging from increased tax treatments for small businesses, the inevitable blowout in the deficit and the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. Recall, the Republicans have a two-seat majority in the Senate, so in its current form the bill seems unlikely to pass and will clearly need some tweaks and further negotiations. US publication Forbes even went as far as saying (in an article released Sunday) that the GOP tax bill is the “end of all economic sanity in Washington”.

So tax reform is the one to watch through this week though, notably as the economic calendar is light, with leading index, November FOMC minutes and Janet Yellen’s speech to the Stern Business School (Wednesday 10:00aedt) the standouts. It’s hard to see the market keying off this data to any great capacity, so this may give scope for funds to sell volatility, with the US VIX index closing +1.2% on the week at 11.43%, although this masked what was a reasonable range of 11% to 14.51%. Another factor to assess is the market's pricing of future Fed hikes. With a 94% probability of a December hike now priced in the market feels a hike is a done deal and given the barrage of Fed speakers of late and the reluctance to push back on market pricing, you’d have to be the deepest of contrarians to feel they won’t go in December.

The greater focus then needs to be on what is priced in for tightening through to the end 2018 and 2019 and this is what markets are more interested in. Of course, there is so much focus on the US Treasury curve as well, with funds continuing to sell short-end Treasuries, with the two-year Treasury pushing up seven basis points last week to end at 1.72%, while staying positive on duration, with the 10- and 30-year Treasury closing the week at 2.34% (-3bp on Friday) and 2.77% respectively. We, therefore, see a further flattening of the 2’s vs 10’s Treasury curve and 5’s vs 30’s and this continues to be one of the big macro themes.

The other big story of late has been high yield credit, but a calmness has returned to this market and we see spreads largely unchanged on Friday, where a 2.7% rally in US crude would have certainly helped. Turning the focus to Europe, I thought it was incredible to see utility firm Veolia issue €500 million in 3-year debt with a negative yield of -0.026%. This is the first time ever a BBB-rated issuer (one of the lower rated investment grade debt) has effectively been paid by the market for issuing debt! What a world we live in and applying this same logic it would be great if I could take out a mortgage from an Aussie bank and be paid interest by that institution to do so.

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The moves in US 10-year Treasuries on Friday have largely weighed on the USD, with the USD index falling 0.3%, although it was USD/JPY which has attracted the bulk of the selling, closing -0.9% and taking the weekly loss to 2.8%. AUD/USD, on the other hand, fell 0.3% and the AUD continues to find little love and this feels fair from a fundamental standpoint, although AUD/JPY has been the bigger mover in G10 FX and is trading at the lowest level since June. Rallies in the AUD crosses should also be sold this week, with little on the economic docket to drive shorts to cover with any great conviction. I will be keeping an eye on the yield differentially between Aussie and US debt this week and one can see that the US two- and five-year Treasury yield may be above that of the Aussie government debt this week, for the first time since 2000.

(White line – AUS/US 5yr yield differentail, orange – 10yr differential)