World Markets Calming As Volatility Steadies

 | Feb 27, 2018 01:20AM ET

US trade has provided us with an extension of the positive flow we saw on Friday, with the S&P 500 pushing up a further 1%, and the Dow an even more impressive 1.5%. We can also look around the respective markets and see high yield credit working okay, with the HYG ETF) (iShares High Yield ETF) gaining 0.2% and looking to break above the key 7 February high of $81.61, which in my view would suggest short-term trading long positions. We also have US crude underpinning the move in risk, with a 0.5% gain in the barrel and we can see no major change to the USD, with fixed income markets sanguine ahead of tonight’s (00:30 aedt) testimony to the House by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

So, the world is a fairly happy and content place again, with S&P 500 implied Volatility falling and we can see US March volatility "VIX" Futures eyeing a move through 16, which could result in a test of 14.43, and the lows seen on the day of the huge volatility spike on 5 February - where VIX futures traded into 30 and the cash VIX index into 50. This more sanguine level of S&P 500 implied volatility (vols) may yet prove to be premature and there is no doubt that vols will almost certainly rise in the coming weeks and months and it will be a key feature of 2018. But for today, price action in US equities reeks of a market in no way concerned that the new Fed chair will say anything that materially moves the interest rate (such as Eurodollar or fed funds futures) or Treasury markets. In fact, we can see very modest buying in US Treasury’s across the curve, with the 10-Year sitting at 2.86%.