FTSE Breaking Out To New All-Time Highs

 | Dec 28, 2017 02:04AM ET

In equity land, the story of the night has been the FTSE 100 breaking out to new all-time highs, although the 0.4% gain was hardly spectacular and even less so when one thinks the total value traded was 41% below the 30-day average.

US equities have barely moved across the major indices, with volumes also non-existent. Even if we drill into the multiple sectors there have been limited ranges, with utilities having the strongest upside move with a 0.2% gain, while energy succumbed to modest profit-taking with a loss of 0.4%. So a 60 basis point variance between the various sectors tells you all you need to know and the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 look to be closing out 2017 with gains of 19.7%, 25.3% and 28.9% respectively and one suspects these percentages won't deviate too greatly in the two remaining trading sessions.

Aussie SPI futures caught a bid just as US equity markets opened, gaining 20-odd points into 6033, but the move has been faded and at the time of writing the futures index are up just one point. Our ASX 200 opening call sits at 6060, so a modestly weaker open is expected, but this reflects the 11.6 points coming out of the market with 21 stocks going ex-dividend on open, so there is a headwind from this factor. Still, it’s hard to get too carried away with proceedings today, and participation will be extremely poor and an extension of what we saw yesterday with a pathetic, yet not unexpected, $2.78 billion of value traded through the market, which is just over half the value we’d usually trade over an average of a 30-day period. So slight tweaks to portfolios may eventuate today, but that’s about it.

We can also turn to the US markets and look at the lead from various Aussie equity ADR’s (American Depository Receipt) and see the flat lead from SPI futures are validated here too, with BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) Ltd ADR (NYSE:BHP), Commonwealth Bank Of Australia (AX:CBA) and Newcrest Mining Ltd (AX:NCM) all basically unchanged in their respective ADR’s.

Materials and energy provided the support for the ASX 200 yesterday, putting in 9.16 index points, but the catalysts are lacking here today, with copper down very modestly and looking ominously like it won’t make it 15 consecutive days of gains. Keep an eye on the monthly chart of copper (see chart below), where we can see a pronounced bullish outside month reversal in play, where we need to see a monthly close above $3.19 p/lb to complete. One suspects there are risks in January given price is quite extended here and pricing in a lot of good news, notably with China’s biggest copper producer recently ordered to cut production, so the bulls have to push for a move through $3.30 p/lb or the risk of a reasonable pullback is elevated here. US crude is lower by 0.7%, while spot iron ore fell 4.5%, although iron ore futures, which are lower by 0.3%, are probably the better lead.

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